👋 Welcome to the debut issue of design thoughts. You’re here and you signed up!
I’m Charlotte, I curate this newsletter. I’m a (newly) freelance service designer. My career started at Snook service design agency in 2014, since then I’ve designed services across the government, third sector, private sector and created my own start up.
I’m always looking to improve my practice, I think as design thinkers we can do that in a number of ways;
In this newsletter I’ll be making it easier to access reading by providing short round-ups of news, and a list of upcoming opportunities I’ve spotted.
Elizabeth Ayer
I stumbled across this article and it blew my tiny mind. For those of us who are overwhelmed by meetings in a large organisation, I’ve summarised this article by Elizabeth Ayer. This is just the TL:DR version, you can read the full article here.
The good news is, we can improve our collective learning in a number of ways:
Nicole Michaelis
I stumbled across this Twitter thread from Nicole on how to establish a content design practice in your organisation. These learnings are also relevant to people who are establishing themselves as a user research, service designer or content designer in an organisation that doesn’t already have that capability.
Tweet of the week goes to Specsavers. Twitter brough out a new ‘Alt-text’ label which would be visible on all Twitter images. Lots of people and brands responded by hiding joke messages in their images alt text, writing ‘Click here’ on the image.
This is a problem because as Specsavers said: “ALT text is a hugely important accessibility tool designed to help people navigate the internet more easily, so it shouldn't be used as a punchline. This is especially true if the ALT text doesn't describe the image, leaving blind and visually impaired people out of the joke.”
Specsavers didn’t make a joke at the expense of screen-reader users, they used their alt-text to explain how to use Alt-text properly. Source.
6 ways to design services for REAL people Charlie Fountaine Freelance Service Designer Welcome to the newsletter! It's had a slight refresh. I'm Charlie 👋your newsletter spirit-guide. This no-nonsense newsletter is all about designing better products and services for real people. Each month I send you a short email explaining how. These are favourite 6 tips that I continually apply to my design work. In each project, I apply these ideas, to make services that are as easy-to-use as they can...
Your round-up of design thinking news and opportunities, to improve your practice. Welcome to Design Thoughts! I’m Charlie, a freelance service designer. This newsletter is a round-up of thoughts, news and opportunities. Cutting out the digital waste Gerry Mcgovern helps reduce data waste by designing simpler, lighter, more environmentally-friendly websites. He also writes about the topic, he wrote; 'World Wide Waste: How Digital Is Killing Our Planet—and What We Can Do About It'. This week a...
, Your round-up of design thinking news and opportunities, to improve your practice. Welcome to Design Thoughts! I’m Charlie, a freelance service designer. This newsletter is a round-up of thoughts, news and opportunities. Codesigning with Caution I’m working on a big government software project and a senior stakeholder suggested using codesign, initially making me wary. I’d rather someone started with the outcome they were trying to achieve, rather than the method. Through further...