Creating tomorrow’s services, together

What will tomorrow’s services look like? How will they function? How will they be performed? How will people interact with tomorrow’s services? How will technology support services?

We will try to answer some of these questions together: we’ll be creating together evidence of tomorrow’s services.

It won’t be just boxes and arrows, though. Most systems and services need business, technology and design combined to bring them to life, and we’ll be looking at all of these. We’ll sketch lean canvases, advertisements, digital touchpoints, people flows, whatever it takes to bring our services alive Let’s make some prototypes too, time permitted and we will use our IoT Service Kit to ideate on possible scenarios for tomorrow’ services. And most importantly, let’s tell stories. Bring your skills to the table, and we’ll help make the rest happen.

More about the tools and methods we will use:

IoT Service Kit
This kit brings designers, developers and business developers out of their digital silos to play with IoT concepts in the real world. The IoT Service Kit is a co-creative tool for exploring user-centric interactive scenarios. The goal is to let user experience drive the process of merging physical and digital realities into successful digital services.developers and business developers out of their digital silos to play with IoT concepts in the real world. The IoT Service Kit is a co-creative tool for exploring user-centric interactive scenarios. The goal is to let user experience drive the process of merging physical and digital realities into successful digital services.

Trend cards
To support our process we will use Trend cards and Lean Service Creation. Trend cards are a tool coming from the Futures Thinking field, and they’re exactly what they sound: cards depicting trends. We’ll be looking at trends as a way to ground our thoughts about the future in what we see around us today. The trend cards will be prepared beforehand, and used for ideation.process we will use Trend cards and Lean Service Creation. Trend cards are a tool coming from the Futures Thinking field, and they’re exactly what they sound: cards depicting trends. We’ll be looking at trends as a way to ground our thoughts about the future in what we see around us today. The trend cards will be prepared beforehand, and used for ideation.

Lean Service Creation
Lean Service Creation is a philosophy and way of working that draws mainly from lean startup, service design, and lean software development. On the one hand, it supports the use of multidisciplinary teams made up of T-shaped individuals and combines business knowledge, user-centric design and technology expertise to look holistically at the total value delivery of a service. On the other hand, it supports the frequent use of experiments to test different assumptions about the service at hand, be them about business models, people or technology. design and technology expertise to look holistically at the total value delivery of a service. On the other hand, it supports the frequent use of experiments to test different assumptions about the service at hand, be them about business models, people or technology.

We’ll be using the LSC philosophy in the design of our workshop: attendants will be split into small, multidisciplinary teams to the degree possible, and we’ll see our cities through the business, design and technology lens. Finally, we’ll see the tangible “evidence” we produce together as small experiments that will be shared with the community for feedback.

Workshop content:

First Session, 2h

  • Intro, warm up,
  • Lean Service Creation thoughts
  • IoT Service Kit / IoT Ideation and technical feasibility framework
  • Introducing the trend cards;
  • Team formation

Second Session, 2h

  • Ideation
  • Get to work: build your evidence.
  • Our team is available to help with prototyping.
  • Ideas presentation
  • Feedback
Jane Vita

Jane Vita

Over the past 15 years, Jane Vita had the opportunity to gain experience in many of the design competencies, including user experience, interaction design, service design, digital strategy, digital media and visual design, with projects in a range of different industries. She has a visual design background, post-graduation in Web Design and she holds a Master’s in Service Innovation and Design.

Ricardo Brito

Ricardo Brito

Ricardo Brito is developing successful digital services and is pushing the boundaries with new concepts in the design domain and outside of it. His current focus is on the future of IoT, Digital Disruption, Hyper Local Services and Smart Cities. Ricardo is one of the Inventors of Futurice’s IoT Service Design Kit, which enables testing-drive IoT concepts in the real world. Know more about the kit on http://www.iotservicekit.com/.

Paul Houghton

Paul Houghton

Manager and innovative entrepreneur with interests in business and technology. Recent work has focused heavily on the business and technology of mobile software applications for Android and the Internet of Things. Specialties: Mobile message passing architectures, concurrent design, functional programming, project management, technology-based business strategy

When?

01.03.2016
9:00–13:00

Where?

ROOM 5 – LOWER FOYER

Aalto University’s Arabia Campus, Hämeentie 135 C, Helsinki

Buy workshop tickets

Event Partners