QDDJ_Step3_C3L3_short

This lesson is Step 3 of the Quality during Design Journey Fast Track.

Step 3: Analyze the Use Process for Design Decisions

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Overview

The way our customers actually use our product is the Use Process of our design. They follow steps to accomplish tasks. Which is why we can borrow common tools from manufacturing and business processes to evaluate the Use Process of our product for design inputs.

This team activity may surprise you. There is a lot we can start to understand about our concept ideas just by looking at high-level functions as a process step. Plus, there are many ways we can dig into the flowchart to derive design inputs, depending on what it is we want to learn.

In this lesson, we cover these objectives:

  • Construct process flowcharts to develop design concepts.
  • Analyze process flowcharts with a team for design inputs.
  • Choose when to iterate from high-level concepts to more detailed analysis.

There is also bonus videos that use scenarios to show how to use these different types of flowcharts and analyses.

Transcript
Audio

Downloads / Worksheets

Notes - Alignment Process Flowchart Example

Notes - Critical to Quality Process Flowchart Analysis Example

Notes - Value-Added Process Flowchart Example

Notes - Deployment Process Flowchart Example

Practice It (30 mins): 

Think of a current product you're working on now. What is the use process of that product? Choose a clear beginning and end (the scope of the process). Then fill in-between with steps and decision points. Another good place to start may be a previous version or similar product, or a competitive product. Look at the instructions for use. (30 minutes)

If you're in the middle of a current use process design project now, do this activity with someone on your team. Working with people that are customer-facing (marketing, sales, field operations) is a benefit for mapping a use process because they're more familiar with the environment and the users and have a different point of view.

Success is understanding the use process: the users, the inputs and outputs, and the steps and decisions our users may make. You'll identify where team follow-up is needed to learn more about the use process. And you'll begin to understand which process steps are a priority for product design based on quality and value.

Analyze the Use Process for Design Decisions

Objectives

Bonus Training

Bonus Video 1: Alignment Process Flowcharts

(5:00 min)

Let's explore more how to use an Alignment Process Flowchart to get started with the use process. We start with a scenario and end up discovering some hidden customer needs. We then further explore with another flowchart that focuses-in on the areas of the use process that we don't understand, with the goal of gaining clarity.

Download the notes to follow along with the example.

Bonus Video 2: Critical to Quality Process Flowchart Analysis

(6:55 min)

We want to better understand our process inputs, outputs, and how they relate to our process steps. We analyze our flowchart for steps that are critical to quality and derive more design inputs, still.

Download the notes to follow along with the example.

Bonus Video 3: Value-Added Process Flowchart Analysis

(3:14 min)

What is really value-added to our customers, what is something that needs to be done but doesn't add value, and where should we really focus to simplify? We continue looking at our process flowchart, but in a way that identifies priorities.

Download the notes to follow along with the example.

Bonus Video 4: Deployment Process Flowchart Analysis

(2:10 min)

Do we have multiple users? Do they work together to use our product to achieve something? Who is doing what and when?

In our scenario, we choose to try to simplify the use process steps that don't add value (from our value-added analysis) and add a white glove service. Let's see how this would look in a Deployment Process Flowchart.

Download the notes to follow along with the example.