Meaning in the Making: Introducing a hermeneutic perspective on the contribution of design practice to innovation
Abstract
In recent years interest has grown in how design can contribute to innovation in business and society, such as through the management concept of design thinking. However, up-close studies on design’s contribution to innovation are still scarce. This may be one reason why rhetoric arguing the benefit of design in innovation contexts is often related to pervasive innovation concepts, such as idea generation and problem-solving, rather than to concepts that capture tacit and embodied dimensions of design as an aesthetic practice.
The purpose of this study is to develop an understanding of the contribution of design practice to innovation. This has been achieved through an experimental research-approach in which five designers, through different interventions, involved multi-disciplinary groups of non-designers in experiencing design practice “hands-on” in five "non-designerly" companies. The aim of the interventions was to strengthen the innovativeness of the organizations. The interventions have been studied through ethnographically inspired methods and an interpretative and reflexive methodological approach.
In the interventions established product understandings in the companies were challenged, initially leading to friction. However, the immersion in design hands-on meant that established meaning-spaces were gradually expanded through processes of entwined conversation and hands-on making. In these processes new product understandings were developed through aesthetic deliberation and material practice, which in three cases lead to innovative concepts that could not have been developed within the meaning-space in the organization before the interventions. This study thus sheds light on how the emergence of innovative concepts can be understood as processes of meaning-making, and how design practice may provide processes for such innovation work in multi-disciplinary contexts. It also suggests that when design practice is abstracted away, as is common in design thinking rhetoric, relevant dimensions of design’s contribution to innovation may be lost.
The main theoretical contribution is to show the relevance of hermeneutics as an explicit concept for understanding the contribution of design practice to innovation. This can be seen as establishing a missing link between design theory, design management studies and innovation management theory. Beyond articulating the contribution of design practice to innovation, this thesis also supports the relevance of understanding meaning-making as central to innovation.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts
Institution
HDK - School of Design and Crafts ; HDK - Högskolan för design och konsthantverk
Disputation
Fredagen den 20 september 2013 kl. 13.00 i aulan, HDK - Högskolan för design och konsthantverk, Kristinelundsgatan 6-8, Göteborg
Date of defence
2013-09-20
marcus.jahnke@hdk.gu.se
Date
2013-07-08Author
Jahnke, Marcus
Keywords
design
innovation
design management
hermeneutics
meaning-making
design thinking
design practice
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-979993-7-3
Series/Report no.
ArtMonitor
42
Language
eng
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Personas in Real Life
OTTOSSON, JOSEF; BRANDIN, TIM (2013-09-18)Personas is a method for modeling users used for the interaction design in a software project. It has gained a lot of popularity within the industry. However, the role personas should play is not always abvious even to ... -
Tillämpning av evidensbaserad design vid gestaltning av två trädgårdsrum på GreveGarden
Sjöstrand, Jenny (2020-10-06)Mental illness is rising dramatically in Sweden and accounts for as much as 46 % of all ongoing sick leave. Studies show that between 2011 and 2017, the increase due to psychiatric afflictions was 129 %, with the vast ... -
Design for Service: A framework for articulating designers’ contribution as interpreter of users’ experience
Wetter-Edman, Katarina (2014-03-11)During the past approximately 15 years designers have paid increasing attention to service and changes in our society, resulting in a new design discipline – service design. In parallel, designers’ contributions to service ...