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Ten Ways to Measure Design's Success - BusinessWeek
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Ten Ways to Measure Design's Success
We use too much guesswork to evaluate the success of design. Here's a framework by which design value and performance can be measured
By Thomas Lockwood
As businesses increasingly recognize the power of design to provide significant benefits, executives increasingly are asking for metrics to evaluate the performance of design. What is needed is a framework for measurement, a specific set of criteria, and methods to be used as a structure to define and measure the values of design.
The following presents a framework of 10 categories that can be useful when measuring the value of design.
1. Purchase Influence
One type of design that is fairly easy to measure is packaging design. For example, a frozen-food manufacturer achieved a sales increase of 30% and more than $300 million in incremental sales gains—based solely on a new suite of packaging. Same product, new packaging. The measurement is not too difficult: Design new packaging, put it on the shelf side-by-side with the old, and see what sells. Then deduct the cost of design from the new sales and voila: ROI design based on actual numbers.
2. New Markets
The design of products, communications, interfaces, and experiences can be isolated. Here's a simple example: British Airways had built a business strategy around increasing its long-haul international flights. So the company looked to see how the interior design of its planes could be improved to offer more comfort to customers. What resulted was the first seat in the industry that could lie completely flat, allowing customers to sleep prone, rather than slouch as in conventional airline seats. The result was a significant increase in sales and profitability for long-haul international flights. Design alone made the ...
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