HOW TO START WITH DESIGN THINKING IN HR
Design thinking is a solution-based approach and usually prescribes a series of specific phases, stages, and methods to help designers and business teams arrive at improved, user-focused solutions. In this piece, I’ll look at each of the typical stages of a design-thinking process, their application, and how we can leverage these ideas as we evaluate, deploy, and manage the HR technologies.
Empathise
The first stage in the design-thinking process is gaining an understanding of the business or people problem you are trying to solve. This is different from trying to determine the list of detailed technical requirements for a new HR system or the specific elements that need to be included in a new management training course.
But the key to making this information-gathering stage successful is empathy, which can help designers and leaders to get past their own assumptions and gain insight into users and their needs. For HR-tech projects, this means making sure that the project managers and HR leaders actually spend time with and observe the “real” employees who use the HR and workplace technologies in their jobs.
All too often decisions around software selection, implementation, and configuration are made by central project teams, consultants, and vendor staff who have received little if any input from the users whose jobs and work processes will be impacted the most by any new HR or workplace technology. Project teams can’t empathise with employees if they don’t meaningfully include them at all stages of the process.
Define
During this stage, designers and project leaders gather all the information and input from the initial phase.The team can then review and assess this information with the goal of defining the core problems identified.
Instead, a design-thinking approach would define the problem as: “Employees should be provided a platform for payroll and benefits that is easy to use and understand, and where they can find information”. In this stage, the designers and project team gather their ideas to establish the required solution features, functions, and any other process-design elements to address the problem in a human-centered way.
The goals of almost all HR-technology initiatives can be expressed in these “human” terms: “Make access to information faster and easier for front-line workers”. “Give managers better guidance to mentor and coach new employees.”. “Arm new employees with resources that welcome them and show them that the organisation is ready to support them”
These are “human” expressions that have more meaning to project teams and employees than metrics and abstract corporate goals. It is hard to rally most people around meeting a metric, so the goals of any HR-tech project should resonate and connect in a human way, especially with those whom you will ask to make (sometimes substantial) changes in how they get their work done.
Ideate
During this stage of the design-thinking process, the project team is able to start generating specific ideas and approaches.
This is often the time where team members are encouraged to “think outside the box” to identify new solutions to the problem statement created, and these ideas often feed back to the “define” stage – participants often discover different ways to look at the problem. In this process, all ideas should be considered, as it is important to get as many ideas or problem solutions unearthed as possible.
There are plenty of ways that rapid, iterative, and creative ideation can manifest in HR-technology projects. Let’s take just one recent example—the move of many organisations away from annual performance reviews to a more rapid, lighter and feedback-driven approach to guiding and improving employee performance.
By thinking creatively about how best to coach, develop, and reach organisational performance objectives, HR leaders have been able to drive significant changes in how employee performance is managed, and how the HR technologies that support these processes have developed and evolved.
A similar kind of evolution has been happening with employee engagement surveys – the larger point being that Design Thinking approaches create an environment in which many kinds of ideas can be proposed, even those that just a few years ago would have been considered crazy.
Prototype
The project team can experiment with many potential solutions to find the optimal approach for each of the problems identified in the first three stages.
These can be implemented on a pilot or small scale, then investigated by the project team and end users, before decisions are made about whether to continue, improve, or reject the solution entirely. At the end of this stage, the project team will have a better understanding of the available solutions, and how each one addresses or fails to address the defined problems.
Test
During the test phase, the project team and the solution users will thoroughly test the complete solution or product using the best options identified. The goal is to determine if the selected solutions can truly stand up to their application in the “real world” and not just in a small pilot or under highly-controlled conditions.
For HR-tech projects (leaving out areas like payroll), the best outcome of the testing process is getting validation from the end users that the problems you identified in earlier phases will actually be addressed successfully. Too often in HR-tech testing, we focus on things like process completion, error rates, and output reports. While all are important, design thinking challenges project teams to make sure their users are positive about the proposed solutions, and that their needs (remember, we started with empathising with them) are going to be met.
“How do you feel about the solution?” is a question you should ask as often as possible during the “test” phase. Once you’ve gone live, it is usually too late.
While the concepts surrounding design thinking are not new and are well-understood by the design, engineering and maybe even the marketing industry, they have not always been applied to the kinds of challenges that HR leaders face. But as many experienced and progressive HR leaders have been telling me lately, design-thinking concepts and approaches are becoming more common. There’s plenty of opportunity here for HR leaders to use these approaches to create better solutions and experiences for their staff.
Training Program
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT/IHRM
Internationalize the human resource management capabilities of HR professionals in Vietnam Opening Date: March 14, 2019 in HCMC |