Service design sprint

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Short description: Design project type



A Service Design Sprint is a time-constrained Service Design project that uses Design Thinking and Service Design tools to create a new service or improve an existing one. The term Service Design Sprint was first mentioned by Tenny Pinheiro in his book The Service Startup: Design Thinking Gets Lean (Elsevier; 2014).[1]

Methodology

The Minimum Valuable Service methodology used in a Service Design Sprint [2] combines Agile-based approaches with Service-dominant logic and Service Design tools [3] to help product development teams understand, co-design, and prototype complex service scenarios with low resources and within the timespan of a week. The methodology, created by Tenny Pinheiro in 2014,[4] was designed to be used by startups in their Agile sprints.

Applications

A Service Design Sprint differs from a traditional Design Sprint[5] due to its service dominant logic inclination.[6] Since its inception, the approach has been used by startup accelerators, educational institutions like the university of Lapland in Finland, MIT, and fortune 500 companies in many different sectors.[7]

Structure

The Minimum Valuable Service model [8] is divided into four phases each containing a set of tools.

  1. Projection: Agile ethnographic tools are used to uncover untapped barriers, needs, and desires, understand mental models and get a sense of the user's “Learn, Use and Remember” journey.
  2. Perspectives: Tools like the Swap Ideation are used here to co-design with users, generating valuable service propositions.
  3. Playground: Mockup and roleplaying tools are used to prototype ideas and explore concepts in a playful manner.
  4. Polish Off: The MVS Journey, an Agile service blueprint tool, is used in this phase to breakdown interactions in intentions and avatars.

References