Every once in a while, I’ll meet people who at once give me hope for the future and make me wonder what the heck I’ve done with my life.
(I mean that, of course, in the most positive way possible.)
Yesterday, I had a the privilege of meeting two such people. Lauren and Yohana, both seniors at the Design Tech High School in Redwood Shores, California, were exhibiting new technology they had developed as part of their curricula -- specifically, something called an Intersession, in which students are fully dedicated to one, in-depth subject and project.
By the end of my conversation with Lauren and Yohana, I was overwhelmed -- by the prototype they had developed, the motivation behind it, and they way each of them were able to bring a salient sense of empathy to everything they do.
We can all learn something from the two of them, I realized -- marketers included. Here's what these two high school students taught me about empathy.
A Different Approach to Learning
Design Tech High School
Design Tech High School -- often better known as d.tech -- isn't exactly a "typical" institution. It's a public charter high school located on the campus of enterprise tech company Oracle, and is a product of the company's Educational Foundation.
That relationship with Oracle is a core part of what many of the students are able to do as part of these Intersessions, the product of which was some of the prototyped technology exhibited at yesterday's d.tech showcase.
One such prototype was Vida Cam, Lauren and Yohana's project: an in-home thermal imaging camera that was developed to aid early detection of breast cancer -- which has been found to lead to a higher survival rate.
The Vida Cam prototype
The camera uses thermal imagery to detect heat changes, which Yohana explained could signal that a tumor might be present, as more blood flows to them, which can cause a spike in temperature. The Vida Cam can pick that up, and also allows users to compare thermal images over time.
I don't know what you were doing when you were 17 -- but I can say with certainty that, personally, I was not working on anything that carried as much impact as the Vida Cam.
At risk of "fan-girling," I wasn't shy about letting Lauren and Yohana know that they give me hope for the future, and was in awe of the altruism they seemed to bring to the development of this technology. What was their motivation, I asked?
As part of each Intersession project, it turns out, students are assigned a subject who presents a problem in need of a solution. Lauren and Yohana's subject had shared the story of her sister, who was diagnosed with breast cancer, which set into motion the process of designing the Vida Cam.
But like the rest of this learning experience, the process of coming up with the prototype is also anything but typical -- and it begins with empathy.
The Design Thinking Process
First coined at Stanford University, Design Thinking is defined as "a methodology for creative problem solving."
It consists of several stages, one of the first of which is empathy -- which places a major focus on human values, and eliminating the designer's assumptions when solving a subject's problem.
A visual representation of the Design Thinking process, alongside the Vida Cam prototype
In other words, writes one group of Stanford University academics, "The Design Thinking process first defines the problem and then implements the solutions, always with the needs of the user demographic at the core of concept development."
When designing a solution for something as personal and sensitive as the early detection of breast cancer, empathy understandably plays a vital role. But looking at the overall concept of empathy with a broader lens, I had to ask: What can the rest of us learn from Lauren and Yohana's work?
The empathy map. Source: Norman Tran
Answering that question begins with a quick look at the history of Design Thinking, says Colleen Cassity, executive director of the Oracle Education Foundation.
In coming up with the Design Thinking methodology, "a group of really smart folks ... set out to understand why [certain people] were really successful, effective designers really successful and effective," Cassity explains. "They looked in all different domains to figure out what were the commonalities, what were the actions being taken by really effective designers and solutions? They turned out to be, universally, empathy."
"[The Design Thinking] process applies to every single problem you’re going to come across."
- Lauren, Design Tech High School Senior
It's a bit easier to understand the importance of empathy in our day-to-day interpersonal relationships -- to be able to put ourselves into the shoes of our colleagues, friends, and relatives. But what's the correlation between empathy and truly remarkable designs, solutions, and even marketing work?
As it turns out, it boils down to forcing ourselves "to linger in ambiguity," as Cassity puts it.
The empathy map. Source: Norman Tran
"Do not, as the designer, jump to any conclusion that you understand what the solution is right away. That’s a very human thing to do," she continues. "Really notice what your user is telling you and what they’re not telling you. Because sometimes, what they think they need a solution for, that’s not actually it -- it’s something that’s adjacent.”
So that's where the correlation comes in for business owners who set out to solve a problem for an audience -- and the marketers responsible for communicating it. That requires dedicating time to figuring out how you're going to solve problems for your customers and your clients, Cassity says -- in a way that makes sense for them, and not necessarily what you think the answer is.
"Everybody’s designing solutions for somebody," she says. "What matters is how you put it into action."
The empathy map. Source: Norman Tran
And ask for Lauren and Yohana -- what do they make of this emphasis on empathy, and how do they think the rest of us can put it into practice in our work?
"I think the empathizing step is the most important step in the design thinking process," Yohana explains. "A lot of times, when we’re finding a solution to a problem, we forget about who we’re designing for, and we just start designing for ourselves and what we think would be the best solution. Versus empathizing, you’re constantly trying to figure out what they want, not what we want.”
And as for the future, is the design thinking process that these students think will stand the test of time? For her part, Lauren certainly thinks so.
“This process applies to every single problem you’re going to come across."
That principle applies to all of us, Cassity believes -- regardless of where we are in life, or in our careers.
"All we know for sure about the future is that it’s going to be very rapidly changing, and highly unpredictable. So what you need is a skill set, a practice, and a mindset that says, 'Whatever the future throws at me, I can handle it'," she says. "The only person who can’t learn design thinking is a person who is unwilling to learn."
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