IIT’s 2009 Design Research Conference: It’s all about Synthesis
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Photos by Tara Mullaney (top) and Junyoung Yang (bottom)
Guest post by Tara Mullaney
Robert Fabricant, Vice President of Creative at Frog Design, opened IIT’s two-day Design Research Conference in Chicago this past week with a slide diagramming the peak and collapse of the housing market. At the click of a button, he swiftly compared this slide to one diagramming the recent rise in demand for design researchers. The two were almost identical, with one exception; the market for Design Researchers hasn’t crashed, yet. Fabricant goes on to describe this phenomenon as “an ethnography bubble,” and he posed this question to the audience; “Where did we go wrong?”
Despite the recent corporate inflation of the need for ethnographic research, Fabricant reminded us that designing based on observations of humans isn’t a new way of working. He used Henry Dreyfuss’s Designing for People, written in the 1950s, to illustrate his point. Fabricant argued that design research is really just “common sense,” and he emphasized that you don’t need special training to do it. Indeed, many of the Design Research professionals I talked with at the conference come from diverse backgrounds. They were once mechanical engineers, AIDS researchers, journalists, and actors, not trained ethnographers. What brought them to the field was a strong interest in human behavior and “being good at listening and talking to people.” Fabricant explained in simple terms how the “bubble” we are currently experiencing stems directly from the treatment of design research as a commodity instead of an integrated part of the design system. He postulated that as researchers, we are “selling the wrong thing.” The user insights we currently find at the end result of design research projects, “have no inherent value, and must be translated into meaningful ideas.” Fabricant’s call for a “drive to results and outcomes” is one method for revaluing research’s role in the design process as well as the market.
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