Putting design at the heart of services

noelito
2 min readJun 2, 2020

Beyond my own experience and case studies from elsewhere, I always find it important to get under the skin of how colleagues are designing their services. And it’s always a pleasure sharing experiences of service design with my old colleague @peterqbrook, Design Authority at Kent County Council. I asked him what what were his top lessons from designing services. Here they are!

When thinking about you can improve your service, ask yourself & colleagues: Would the customer pay for this activity if they saw us doing it? Would it add value to the organisation? Would it help the service discharge its duty?

  1. Understand whether audiences are static or dynamic (i.e. new parents)
  2. Build relationships with most senior manager to identify their aspirations & constraints and anticipate decision points needed further down the line
  3. Get directors to come with you to brief the managers who will be working with you
  4. Use workshops as platforms for getting people to discover design thinking and discussion around customer service policy
  5. Listen to recording of calls from people who’ve had multiple needs and contacts
  6. Use stories to complement customer experience data
  7. Use different channels to prepare people for face to face conversation (i.e. booking a face to face chat, what information they will be asked, etc.)
  8. Deep dive on what behaviour change is needed that people want to make
  9. Focus on improving online processes so people want to shift
  10. Think about how a service with existing infrastructure (i.e. contact centre) could connect with stand-alone services (a families information service)
  11. Bring on board staff and service users to deliver the improved service

What suggestions would you make to improve your services?

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noelito

Head of Policy Design, Scrutiny & Partnerships @newhamlondon #localgov Co-founder of #systemschange & #servicedesign progs. inspired by @cescaalbanese