design matters. Design for outcomes rather than output

Alpana Parida Updated - January 20, 2018 at 06:30 AM.

Look at how the solar cooker fared in a country that has 300 days of sunshine

A place in the sun A nuanced understanding of the approach to cooking would have ensured better adoption of solar cookers

Too often, design is seen as an aesthetic output, to be evaluated through the personal like/dislike lens or taken to consumer research for their like/dislike judgment. It is output, based on the inputs of research and analysis, and is a logical progression of the same.

A lot of innovations in India tend to be design output. In a country with 300 days of sunshine, the solar cooker should have been a no-brainer.

But its adoption remained poor 30 years ago, and has been all but forgotten today. The output-based approach created a box that needed to be placed on terraces or balconies and needed stepping away from the kitchen and disrupting the normal cooking process. An outcome-based approach would have created adoption through a seamless use of utensils in cooking — and an aspirational quotient that modern kitchens signify.

Similarly, while creating a vitamin water for Nourishco (a Tata, PepsiCo joint venture), an output-based approach would have taken us to codes of vitamins and energy on the bottle label design.

The outcome-based approach, on the other hand, told us that in India water purifies. Our belief in water is such that even a dirty mop going around a floor is supposed to have cleaned, as has a grimy wet cloth wiping a table top, simply because it has used water.

If water cleanses, then how can it be believable to be depositing vitamins?

The outcome-based approach led us to understanding a deeply cultural belief of the potency of water when placed in a copper vessel. The vitamin water contained copper and thus we built the idea of the water on the copper ingredient, leading to market impact.

Why will someone buy?

Outcome-based approaches shape behaviour and drive belief. I come across too many start-ups that have determined what they will sell but have not answered the question: Why will someone buy? This is the question to answer to get a desired outcome.

Published on March 31, 2016 15:53