Briefing at the pre-project phase in design consulting - How design consultants navigate through uncertainty while briefing and selling simultaneously
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School of Arts, Design and Architecture |
Doctoral thesis (article-based)
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Date
2021
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Mcode
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Language
en
Pages
128 + app. 126
Series
Aalto University publication series DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS, 77/2021
Abstract
In design consulting, briefing prior to project commission – i.e., the process of communicating and negotiating a project's aim, scope, deliverables and corresponding fee – is an essential first step for designers to get a project commission and establish an initial relationship with a potential client. Although briefing has long been of interest to scholars and practitioners in design, there have been few empirical studies on the real-life context of briefing at the pre-project phase in design consulting, especially in such fields as industrial design and service design. The aim of this dissertation is to understand the nature of briefing at the pre-project phase in design consulting and its real-life conditions for design consultants. Through three studies of an inductive nature, it reveals how briefing is an embedded part of sales and procurement processes in design consulting, which produces a discontinuity in briefing subsequent to a project commission. Therefore, design consultants are required to predict the full scope of the (potential) project and to detail tasks in creating an offer for a potential client even though the design process inherently involves uncertainties. Briefing at the pre-project phase can be more challenging if clients have little proficiency in using design and do not readily understand the uncertainty and their role for effective collaboration. These real-life contexts challenge the widely accepted notions of briefing as a reflective and iterative dialogue in the context of design consulting and thus call for guidelines for sensible and practical responses for practitioners. This dissertation shows how design consultants strategised and adapted their briefing practices to prevent and mitigate the above challenges. In dealing with clients, design consultants tailored their communication, codified briefing procedures and productised their services with the intention of both getting more project commissions and achieving better project outcomes. They also developed a sense of strategy in terms of what information they seek and what aspects they emphasise in offer documents based on clients' (perceived) degree of proficiency in using design. Dictated by the legal and organisational requirements, the process of public procurement does not allow design consultants to develop and apply such practices when tendering. The ways in which design consultants and public servants adapted their briefing and procurement practices not only exemplifies the rationale of iterative briefing in design, but also reveals the criticality of effective briefing prior to project commission for a successful project outcome. This dissertation hereby builds an empirical view on, and practical guidelines for, design consulting practices. It also shows that briefing at the pre-project phase has a significant impact on the success of the project outcome, and hence the likelihood of design consultancies receiving project commissions in the future. Therefore, I would argue that briefing before project commission – however briefly done – yields strategic value for both clients and design consultants.Description
Defence is held on 18.6.2021 14:00 – 16:00
https://aalto.zoom.us/j/66803142373
Supervising professor
Person, Oscar, Assoc. Prof., Aalto University, Department of Design, FinlandKeywords
briefing, design practice, design consulting
Other note
Parts
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[Publication 1]: Park-Lee, S. & Person, O. (2018a). Briefing beyond documentation: An interview study on industrial design consulting practices in Finland. InternationalJournal of Design, 12(3), 73–91.
Full text in Acris/Aaltodoc: http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:aalto-201901301405
- [Publication 2]: Person, O. & Park-Lee, S. (in review at the International Journal of Design). Offer making for inexperienced and experienced clients: A Delphi-inspired ex-pert inquiry.
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[Publication 3]: Park-Lee, S. & Person, O. (2018b). Perspective: the gist of public tender for service design. In C. Storni, K. Leahy, M. McMahon, P. Lloyd, & E. Bohemia (Eds.), Proceedings of DRS2018: Design as a Catalyst for Change (pp. 3078–3089). Limerick: Design Research Society.
Full text in Acris/Aaltodoc: http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:aalto-201808274729
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[Publication 4]: Park-Lee, S. (2020). Contexts of Briefing for Service Design Procurements in the Finnish Public Sector, Design Studies, 69, 100945.
Full text in Acris/Aaltodoc: http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:aalto-202009255534DOI: 10.1016/j.destud.2020.05.002 View at publisher