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Connecting Designing and Engineering Activities

In: Design Thinking Research

Author

Listed:
  • Thomas Beyhl

    (Hasso Plattner Institute for IT Systems Engineering at the University of Potsdam)

  • Gregor Berg

    (Hasso Plattner Institute for IT Systems Engineering at the University of Potsdam)

  • Holger Giese

    (Hasso Plattner Institute for IT Systems Engineering at the University of Potsdam)

Abstract

Different design thinking activities result in a multitude of analog as well as digital artifacts. These capture the working results and are employed as a medium to communicate and preserve the embodied design decisions, observations and insights. When engineers or design thinkers want to revisit particular design activities, the information captured by the latest artifacts typically handed over or maintained are not enough. In addition, earlier artifacts, their context, dependencies between artifacts, the design rationale and other related details would be required. However, this information is often hard or impossible to recover if it was not systematically captured and documented. In the first year of our research project we therefore studied how to organize the design artifacts and their dependencies in a cost-effective manner to be able to retrieve information for engineers who have to realize the results. This includes an understanding of the actual challenge concerning documenting during design thinking.

Suggested Citation

  • Thomas Beyhl & Gregor Berg & Holger Giese, 2014. "Connecting Designing and Engineering Activities," Understanding Innovation, in: Larry Leifer & Hasso Plattner & Christoph Meinel (ed.), Design Thinking Research, edition 127, pages 153-182, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:undchp:978-3-319-01303-9_11
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-01303-9_11
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    Cited by:

    1. Mario Le Glatin & Pascal Le Masson & Benoit Weil, 2018. "Can organisational ambidexterity kill innovation? A case for non-expected utility decision making," Post-Print hal-01808566, HAL.
    2. Mario Le Glatin & Pascal Le Masson & Benoit Weil, 2016. "Measuring the generative power of an organisational routine with design theories: the case of design thinking in a large firm," Post-Print hal-01367471, HAL.

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