Why Do We Need Even More Predictability as We Get Older?

The third and last season of the Krominsky Method is out on Netflix and I am chuffed. Such a good show, witty, honest, real, sophisticated. Michael Douglas and Alan Arkin’s characters frequent the…

Smartphone

独家优惠奖金 100% 高达 1 BTC + 180 免费旋转




How to use Speculative Prototyping to Explore the Future

Spotless was recently transformed into a Future Lab to explore, build and test future scenarios within retail. The aim was to advance our prototyping competences and to explore methods to consider possible futures.

Recently the whole Spotless team left London to work on our business strategy as a service design agency and to advance our internal competences. You can read Senior Service Designer, Hannah Steele’s blog post on how to plan a company away day here.

As experience consultants and designers we explore and manage potential futures to allow and support our clients in realising their opportunities and potential. One of the areas that we aimed to advance was around speculative prototyping as a method to assess future commercial opportunities and reflect upon their feasibility.

In my previous blog post Speculate to Innovate, I touched upon why it’s important to embrace speculative prototyping in order to make potential future tangible in order for us to engage with these and seed insights. If you’d like a bit more background, you can read the article here.

Had someone asked you 30 years ago how the future supermarket experience would look, would you have suggested self-service and RFID tags? Probably not. Nevertheless, today self-service checkout tills have been commercially adopted across all major supermarkets in the UK. In Decathlon they have even integrated RFID tags instead of barcodes across all steps in their supply chain. These are all examples of how designers have challenged the status quo in the past.In 2018 Amazon opened their Amazon Go store to the public; another example of speculative design in a commercial context. The store offers seamless payments and challenge the traditional customer journey inside a supermarket.

Black Mirror is a great example of speculative design through fiction; Charlie Brooker translates a future scenario into a tangible touchpoint for us to interact with and have a conversation about.

Through future scenarios and speculative prototypes we question and create tangible points of interaction. These tangible futures allow us to gain insights on users’ mental models and expectations to the future.

The workshop was kicked off by announcing to the Spotless team that for the next 2 hours we’d be Spotless Future Lab. We we were going to explore potential speculative futures in order to articulate tangible future forecasts. The workshop’s objective was for us to learn about speculative prototyping as a method to explore future commercial spaces. The workshop was constructed around 4 phases:

Hey, what’s going on in retail?

Within the first stage I wanted the team to map the current landscape within retail. Their work as experience consultants means they constantly get exposed to micro and macro consumer trends. When exploring where we’re going, we initially need to define where we are; an understanding of the current landscape is enabled by three key parameters:

Experience Consultant, Max Taylor is busy adding technological trends he’s come across in his work as a design and user researcher. The team did a STEEP analysis of the current micro and macro trends with retail environments, and further identified what drives the trends and behaviour.

I then encouraged the team to interpret what these trends combined with the behavioural drivers could potentially mean for the future of retail; what are the weak signals for the retail environment?

An example of how a team member identified a weak signal around data management in retail.

Welcome to the year 2045!

The second phase of the workshop aimed to disrupt in order to explore; we were going to take the identified weak signals and turn them into future scenarios.

First, each team member got a 2045 identity card to enable creative and future thinking. We weren’t just Spotless Service Design Agency anymore; we were Spotless Future Labs representing stakeholders within retail in the year 2045

Next, I asked the team to transform their weak signals into actual future ideas: They were prompted to transform their weak signals into ‘what if’-questions:

These were just some of the future scenarios created during the workshop. Next, the team ideated how this future retail environment would actually work. They got 6 minutes to individually ideate 6 ideas on how a service would cater or deal to the future world:

The team was focused during the ideation session, where they each had to come up with 6 ideas in 6 minutes.

Build the future!

The team took their service ideas into the third phase of the workshop: the develop phase. The aim was to prototype their ideas; building the ideas allowed us to transform the future ideas into tangible touchpoints for interaction.

The team got engaged with paper, Play Doh and Lego to build their prototypes.

Learning through enactment

Finally the team was asked to interact with their prototypes; this enactment allowed for conversation with the artefacts and the service system, and revealed tacit user reactions and expectations to these future scenarios.

The picture above show how one team prototyped how a future world without physical shops would potentially look. Here they are midway through building a prototyping of a autonomous, driverless store allowing consumers to test products. This team explored consumer expectations to the physical retail space, and the need for a full sensory experience.

Director, Ben Logan, and Senior Service Designer, Caroline Butler, embraced the workshop to the fullest. Here they’re acting out their future scenario including their speculative prototypes to the team. The workshop showed to be more than a professional skill-exchange; it was also an informal and fun collaboration exercise and allowed the team to get to know each other even more.

Working with speculative prototyping in order to talk about possible futures can often seem intangible and utopian to clients. But Future Workshops is way more than utopia and dystopia; it’s identifying expectations to the future, users’ mental models and realising opportunities for brands, products and services. The Future Workshop is the road to getting there; it helps us by challenging our assumptions and gain insight on our expectations to future environments. To reiterate my previous statement:

Here’s a few learning from our workshop, and why you should conduct a Speculative Workshop with your internal or external team:

👏 if you enjoyed the post!

I’d love to hear from you if you have experiences or tips you’d like to share!

Want more? The team at Spotless shares their insights on the blog Spotless Says.

Add a comment

Related posts:

Setting up Android Devices

You will see questions about Microsoft Intune, configuration profiles, and compliance policies. You won’t see any questions about how to set up a device in Intune but I thought it was important for…

A pleasant feeling of victory

Trafee team continues to take great interest in ensuring that its affiliates maintain passion for their work when it comes to attracting traffic and increasing their earnings. This is why we are…

Can This Digital Human Help Smokers Quit?

With smokers at great risk of COVID-19 complications, the World Health Organization developed Florence, an embodied AI who offers online counseling for those hoping to quit. We took Florence’s…