Dutch multinational conglomerate
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Send us a textThis episode is sponsored by the Better Future Awards. To find out more, head to betterfutureawards.com/redcated–Today, the (REDACTED) team are joined by Phil Rose, the Co-Founder and Creative Director of boutique design studio Alquemy. Based in Sydney, Australia, Phil cut his teeth in the design world by working at Sunbeam, Breville, and before heading to the US for Click Clack & Philips Design. We sat down with Phil to learn how about the contrasting elements of design culture in Australia and the US, the significance of finding the right business partner, why front-end design research is crucial to achieving the best end product and navigating the challenges of opening an Australian-based consultancy with an international clientele. Hosted by Lucy Bishop and Fraser Greenfield with guest Phil Rose.––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––Alquemy DesignFollow Alquemy on Instagram | @alquemy.designAlquemy | LinkedInPhil Rose - Alquemy | LinkedIn Common TigerFollow Common Tiger on Instagram | @commontiger Listen to our other episodes | Buzzsprout —————————————————————- To follow the show, get in contact with us via email & more head to: https://linktr.ee/redactedpod
Head of Philips Design, Peter Skillman, joins Peter and Jesse to share lessons from Philips' century of design innovation, from light bulbs to the compact disc to healthcare technology. We'll also talk about the cultural factors that support design influence, what he learned and had to unlearn from his time in Silicon Valley, and how the game for design leaders has fundamentally changed in recent years.
Send us a Text Message.With Zuzanna we talk about just everything that is strategic design thinking to how to get out of our comfort zone to color-matching in plastics, to being the only woman in the room and how businesses need to understand that their brand is made of people. And all that while being brutally honest.Zuzanna started her career in 1998 at Philips Design and for years she contributed with SignalS of Change analyses to international visionary design projects. Then for almost 15 years she was involved in Design Management & Trends consultancy at a leading Dutch design consultancy Vanberlo (today part of Accenture Industry X.O). Since 2014 she has been a founding partner of 360Inspiration, working for clients from various industries, including many blue chips and market leaders. Zuzanna's core expertise areas include Up-Front Innovation, Industry's Cross-fertilization, SignalS of Change and Strategic FutureS Thinking. Her research and consulting activities concentrate on 8 crucial industry fields: CE, DAP, Home, Healthcare, Mobility, FMCG/Retail, Urban and Finance. She works closely with CEOs and decision makers on strategic scenario's development as well with R&Ds/in-house creative teams on specific projects. With almost 25 years of experience Zuzanna skillfully translates her knowledge into actionable innovative programs, using many of her own, self-developed tools. Simultaneously, she has been engaged in promotion of creative industry as Member of the Board and then Advisory Board member of Dutch Design Week as well in the international design education, as a lecturer at TU/e University in Eindhoven and at Parsons School of Design in New York. She is a co- founder of School of Form – a design academy in Poland.Skalska has been a jury member at many prestigious design competitions like IF Design Awards and a keynote speaker at many recognized business conferences and economic summits. She is an active journalist and contributing editor to leading design and lifestyle magazines. In addition, together with her partners Greenhat Innovation and Blue Media/Autopay, she publishes an annual book - a comprehensive volume on SignalS of Change research.Her professional and public activity has been often recognized not only by the prestigious world's design awards. In addition, in recent years she has been granted prestigious titles, such as one of the 50 most influential women of Eindhoven region, one of the strongest contributing expats in Eindhoven or one of the best professional speakers in Poland. Born in Warsaw, Poland, Zuzanna has been living in the Netherlands since 1992.Thank you for listening! Follow us through our website or social media!https://www.thecolorauthority.com/podcasthttps://www.instagram.com/the_color_authority_/https://www.linkedin.com/company/78120219/admin/
Mauro Porcini is a widely known design thought leader, author, and first-ever Chief Design Officer at PepsiCo. He is also a presenter and judge on the TV shows New York by Design and America by Design on CBS and Amazon Prime Video. Mauro is from Italy, where he studied design in Milan and did his thesis on wearable technology with Philips Design. After opening and closing an agency with music artist Claudio Cecchetto, he spent 10 years at 3M, then was hired at PepsiCo as Chief Design Officer in 2012 to help them gain a competitive edge over their main competitors at Coke. In this role, he is infusing design thinking into PepsiCo's culture and is leading a new approach to innovation by design that impacts the company's product platforms and brands, which include Pepsi, Lay's, Mountain Dew, Gatorade, Sodastream, Doritos, and many other brands. He leads teams based in cities all over the world, including but not limited to New York City, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami, London, Moscow, New Delhi, Shanghai, Mexico City, and Cape Town. On the show today, Alan and Mauro talk about what it means to be a Chief Design Officer and how the role came about at PepsiCo. They also talk about the scope of design in an organization like Pepsico today, how design manifests in the work they do, and some examples of the type of work he is doing. Mauro tells us design is not about working with an outside agency; it is about the culture around everything in your company, from finance to branding to shipping and everything in between. PepsiCo realized they needed an outsider who could design their culture and found the perfect candidate in Mauro, who brought the five phases of design culture to their organization. In this episode, you'll learn about:What advice from Steve Jobs inspired PepsiCo to create the Chief Design Officer role? The five phases of redesigning culture What has changed over the past 15 years that is completely changing the business world? Three recent design examples to highlight three business goalsKey Highlights:[02:20] Shoes as a source of love and pain (and business)[05:50] How Mauro learned about innovation and timing[10:45] Why PepsiCo created the Chief Design Officer position [24:24] Being understanding but still calling out bad behavior [25:30] How does design manifest at PepsiCo?[33:15] Innovation is not just about a great idea; it's about being able to take it to market. [36:10] 3 recent design examples to highlight 3 business goals [41:30] Pushing businesses forward through design rather than innovation [44:00] There are two different types of projects. [46:20] Divorce, depression, and the importance of a community that cares[51:20] The barriers to entry are changing, and we need to change with them.Looking for more?Visit our website for the full show notes, links to resources mentioned in this episode, and ways to connect with the guest! Become a member today and listen ad-free, visit https://plus.acast.com/s/marketingtoday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
There's a secret formula behind fostering innovation, driving success, and creating positive work environments in large corporations. Optimism, coupled with curiosity and kindness, are traits that leaders must embody to create synergies, boost efficiency, and improve working relationships in their organizations. According to Mauro Porcini, these underrated characteristics allow leaders to see progress, stay motivated and overcome any obstacles. Mauro Porcini is a visionary leader and the first-ever Chief Design Officer at PepsiCo. With a distinguished career spanning renowned organizations like 3M and Philips Design, Mauro has been at the forefront of infusing design thinking into corporate cultures worldwide. He hosts the podcast ‘In Your Shoes With Mauro Porcini,' where he explores the creative minds shaping our world. Mauro is also an accomplished author, with his latest book, "The Human Side of Innovation,” has earned accolades for his insights into innovation, design, and leadership. In episode 2 of season 2, Mauro Porcini discusses the importance of dreaming big and creating space for innovation within organizations. He shares his experience implementing the 15% time approach in PepsiCo, allowing employees to work on passion projects. He also highlights the importance of dreaming big and executing ideas through prototyping and experimentation. Mauro also discusses insights from his book, 'The Human Side of Innovation,' which highlights the importance of people in driving successful projects. He concludes by emphasizing the importance of love for the people served, love for what one does, and love for the people surrounding us as key drivers of success and happiness. Tune in to discover Mauro's wealth of insights in creating a culture of innovation and kindness in your organizations! . . . Like this episode? Be sure to leave a ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review and share the podcast with your colleagues. . . . TIME-STAMPED SHOW NOTES: [07:49] Surrounding yourself with inspiring people [15:15] ‘The Human Side of Innovation' [25:26] The 15% time rule [30:55] The importance of optimism, curiosity, and kindness in business [44:27] The three dimensions of love in the workplace
Stefano Marzano is a maestro of design, a visionary who reshaped the contours of how we interact with everyday objects. As the former Chief Design Officer and CEO of Philips Design at Royal Philips International from 1991 to 2011, Stefano was the guiding force behind the transformation of Philips into a brand synonymous with innovation and user-centric design. His tenure at Philips was marked by a profound commitment to the philosophy that design should be democratic, an ethos that has influenced the aesthetics and functionality of countless products we use daily.His journey didn't end with Philips. Stefano brought his forward-thinking design principles to Electrolux as the Chief Design Officer and member of the Group Management from January 2012 until his well-earned retirement at the end of 2013. Here, his innovative leadership continued to revolutionize the home appliance industry, integrating intuitive design with the sophisticated technology that defines modern living spaces.In our podcast, we're diving into the creative ethos of Stefano Marzano, exploring how his approach to design extends beyond mere form and function. Stefano's philosophy sees design as a narrative, a story that unfolds in the spaces we inhabit and the products we engage with. His influence is etched into the very fabric of Philips and Electrolux's identity, where each product serves as a testament to his belief in design that not only serves purpose but also ignites imagination.Join us as we trace Stefano's indelible impact on the world of design, from his early days at Philips, where he championed the 'Ambient Intelligence' concept, to his strategic vision at Electrolux that redefined the company's global design language. We're not just recounting the career of a legendary designer; we're immersing ourselves in the doctrine that design is an omnipresent force in shaping human experience. With Stefano Marzano's story, we reveal how a deep understanding of design's power is crucial in crafting not only products but also the future of innovation. Tune in to discover how Stefano's legacy is a beacon for designers and industry leaders alike, illuminating the path toward a future where design and life are inseparably interwoven.
This episode is sponsored by Concepts! For a free 90 day trial of Concept Pro go to: http://concepts.app/t/coupon/redactedpodcast———————————————————Disclaimer: The details disclosed in this episode regarding Philips Design's internal team structure & operation were correct as of the time of recording. Due to company re-organisation, these details may have changed since.———————————————————Elodie Delassus is a French designer, living in the Netherlands. She's been challenging the design status quo since 2012; when she started at Dutch multinational Philips. Where she's worked on domestic appliances, beauty and medical devices. Elodie'spassion for creating functional yet aesthetically pleasing designs shines through; as she shares insights and valuable advice for aspiring designers and industry veterans, both on Instagram, her mentoring program and now on (REDACTED)!We discuss with Elodie how the legacy of innovation at Philips has influenced her work, how she incorporates sustainability into her design process plus the challenges ofbringing about a circular economy and limiting the usage of single-use plastics, mainly in PCBs and batteries, in the wider context of the medical industry.Hosted by Oliver and Lucy Bishop with guest, Elodie Delassus——————————————————ElodieDelassus.comFollow Elodie on Instagram | @elodiedelassusElodie Delassus - Senior Industrial Product Designer in PhilipsHealthcare—————————————————————- To follow the show, get in contact with us via email & more head to: https://linktr.ee/redactedpod
Mauro Porcini is PepsiCo's first ever Chief Design Officer. He joined the food & beverage corporation in 2012 and in said role, he is infusing design thinking into PepsiCo's culture and is leading a new approach to innovation by design that impacts the company's product platforms and brands, which include Pepsi, Lay's, Mountain Dew, Gatorade, Sodastream, Doritos, Lifewtr, Bubly, Aquafina, Cheetos, Quaker, 7Up, Mirinda, amongst many others. His focus extends from physical to virtual expressions of the brands, including product, packaging, events, advertising, fashion and art collaborations, retail activation, architecture, and digital media. He leads teams based in New York City, Purchase, Dallas, Chicago, Los Angeles, Orlando, Miami, London, Dublin, Moscow, Il Cairo, New Delhi, Shanghai, Bangkok, Mexico City, Sao Paulo, and Cape Town. Mauro is the host of his own successful video podcast “In your shoes - with Mauro Porcini” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube, where he interviews inspiring personalities from the creative community worldwide. Since 2020, he has been a presenter and judge on the TV show “New York by Design” and “America by Design”, airing on CBS and Amazon Prime Video. In 2021 his first book was published, in Italian: “L'età dell'eccellenza – Come innovazione e creatività possono costruire un mondo migliore” (Il Saggiatore). His first book in English, “The Human Side of Innovation. The Power of People in Love with People” (Berrett-Koehler), focusing on innovation, design, and leadership, launched in October 2022.Prior to joining PepsiCo, Mauro served as the first ever Chief Design Officer at 3M, where his mission was to build and nurture a design-sensitive culture in a technology-driven global corporation. His teams, based in the U.S., Italy, China, and Japan, won many of the world's most prestigious design and innovation awards. Mauro began his professional career at Philips Design and then created his own design firm, Wisemad Srl, in Italy with the celebrated entertainment producer and music star Claudio Cecchetto. His work on wearable technologies has been showcased at the Louvre in Paris as well as the Seoul Art Center. Over the years he has been on the board of directors for several organizations. Currently, he is the President of the Politecnico of Milan Foundation in the United States (Fellows of Politecnico), sits on the board of directors of the Design Management Institute of Boston, and on the advisory council of other design, art, innovation, and business institutions. Mauro is a fashion lover, but not a fashion addict – regardless of his collection of more than 300 pairs of shoes. He lives between New York City and the Hamptons with his wife Carlotta, with their daughter Beatrice, and with their two Pomeranians, Leone, and Bella.Here's a glimpse of what you'll learn:How Mauro grew upThe values instilled in him by his parentsThe artistic and cultural impact of his childhoodThe people who had the greatest influence on Mauro's life journeyHow dimensions of design and innovation fuse with humanity in Mauro's bookWhat drives his work at PepsiCoHow Mauro refers to conflict as dialogue and the meaning it holdsThe importance of both storytelling and cultureWhich type of books most inspire MauroIn this episode…Mauro Porcini grew up in a town called Baris in Italy, about one hour from Milan, in a family obsessed with both culture and knowledge and the idea of kindness. This led him to study design in university with dreams of becoming a writer. Today, he has a wide-ranging career that involves both design and authorship.Mauro worked in design in companies from Milan to Minnesota before eventually landing at PepsiCo to become their Chief Design Officer. The kinds of values important to him, imbued from childhood and his own expansive life journey, involve dreaming, innovating, being kind and resilient, all these themes that he explores in his book “The Human Side of Innovation”. In this episode of What CEOs Talk About, host Martin Hunter and guest Mauro Porcini discuss Mauro's celebrated career, his thoughts on design and innovation, the journey to always achieve something larger, choosing the right people for a company, and how love is a vital ingredient for success. The conversation reveals the depths of Mauro's insight and passion: it's both inspirational and aspirational.Resources mentioned in this episode:URGEOContact email: info@urgeo.comMartin Hunter on LinkedInMauro Porcini on LinkedInMauro Porcini Pepsico Design + InnovationMauro Porcini on Instagram‘In Your Shoes with Mauro Porcini' podcast‘The Human Side of Innovation: The Power of People in Love with People' by Mauro Porcini‘The Village Saturday Night' poem by Count Giacomo Leopardi‘Leonardo da Vinci' by Walter Issacson‘Einstein: His Life and Universe' by Walter Issacson‘Steve Jobs' by Walter Issacson‘Losing My Virginity' by Richard Branson‘Finding My Virginity' by Richard Branson‘Shoe Dog' by Phil KnightResources recommended for CEOs and leaders:Monday.comBambooHRSponsor for this podcast...This podcast is brought to you by URGEO, Operational excellence in action through the Are you Ready Program!Are you READY to free up your time?Optimize your Organization?Grow revenue and reduce costs?Build your leadership team?Partnering with organizations like yours, we work with you to implement our proven methodology designed to transform your operations, while providing accurate advice and support for real success.Translating strategy into frontline operations, URGEO helps leaders and the people within their organization excel at safe, on-time, on-budget and on-spec delivery. Let's touch base so we can learn how we can level up your business. Contact us today.
Giulio Ceppi"Festival dei Luoghi Comuni"https://www.festivaldeiluoghicomuni.it/Festival dei Luoghi Comuni, CuneoDomenica 9 ottobre 2022, ore 20:00"Sociocromie: 100 anni in 25 colori"con Giulio Ceppi e Francesco MoraceL'incontro nasce dal progetto espositivo del designer Giulio Ceppi, e propone una rilettura degli ultimi 100 anni della storia mondiale attraverso 25 colori, rinominate come “sociocromie”, ossia manifestazioni attraverso il colore di un fatto sociale rilevante: dal black Friday alla rivoluzione arancione, dal telefono azzurro alla notte bianca, dalla green economy al blue Monday, dalle quote rosa ai gilet gialli, dai colletti bianchi alla zona rossa. Il designer, accompagnato dal sociologo Francesco Morace, guiderà il pubblico in un viaggio lungo il colore vivo della lingua parlata, che diventa poi storia, fatto vissuto.Prenota qui il tuo posto:https://www.eventbrite.com/e/biglietti-sociocromie-100-anni-in-25-colori-422309658557Giulio CeppiArchitetto e designer, studia alla Scuola Politecnica di Design di Milano, dottore in ricerca e quindi docente al Politecnico di Milano e prima nelle Facoltà di Architettura di Genova, Torino e Roma; dirige nel 2005 il Master in Business Design per Domus Academy, dove ha coordinato il Centro Ricerche fino al 1997. E' tra i fondatori di Schola Italica e membro del board del Design Museum ADI a Milano.Si occupa di progettazione sensoriale, innovazione sostenibile, design for all e di scenari sistemici.È stato senior consultant di Philips Design e nel 1999 fondatore e creative director di Total Tool, società di visioning e design strategy, con sedi a Milano e Buenos Aires.Ha tenuto workshop e conferenze in oltre 25 paesi del mondo e scritto diversi saggi sulla cultura del progetto.Ha vinto numerosi premi (Compasso d'Oro, Dedalo Minosse, Mr Planet, Confcommercio…), e tenuto esposizioni personali (Biennale di Venezia, Triennale di Milano).Vive e lavora a Milano e sul Lago di Como, dove è nato nel 1965.Francesco MoraceSociologo e saggista, lavora da quarant'anni nell'ambito della ricerca sociale e di mercato.Fondatore del Future Concept Lab, è consulente di aziende e istituzioni italiane e internazionali.Tra i più affermati esperti di tendenze, è stato docente di Social Innovation al Politecnico di Milano e di Culture & Lifestyle all'Università di Trento.È autore di una trentina di saggi: gli ultimi editi da Egea sono Crescita felice (2015), ConsumAutori (2016), Crescere! (2017), Futuro + Umano (2018) Il bello del mondo (2019), La Rinascita dell'Italia (2020) e L'Alfabeto della Rinascita. 26 storie di imprese esemplari (2021). Collabora regolarmente con la trasmissione Essere e Avere di Radio24 con la rubrica settimanale Il ConsumAutore e con le testate Mark Up e Millionaire con rubriche mensili.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEAscoltare fa Pensarehttps://ilpostodelleparole.it/
In EP76, we had the pleasure of speaking with Lindsey Mosby, a partner in Prophet's Austin office who specializes in healthcare transformation and innovation. She has worked for nearly two decades to improve healthcare by making it more connected, compassionate, and transparent.Prior to joining Prophet, she was the global strategic design lead for Philips Design and Philips Healthcare Transformation Services. She had previously worked at frog Design for seven years, building the Healthcare Practice from the ground up.Clients have included Pfizer Consumer Health, the Mayo Clinic, Kaiser Permanente, UCSF, TEVA, Johnson & Johnson, AARP, Otsuka, Boston Scientific, Merck, Medtronic, and Cigna.In the episode, we focus on how to design and develop better healthcare experiences both digitally and physically, looking at the entire customer journey as well as opportunities for creating innovations when it comes to the power of cross-industry learning. So, what can we learn from the hospitality industry, What can we learn from the finance industry to improve health-care experiences.In this episode, we look at:What is the state of healthcare today?What opportunities do designers have to influence the healthcare industry?Are we making the move from "Healthcare as an event" to "Health as a journey and mindset"?How do we shift from "solving" to "prevention" and become more strategic in this context?In terms of experience design, what can the healthcare industry learn from the financial industry?In a data-driven world, how is the concept of "personal advisor" changing?And plenty more!Thank you very much for your time and knowledge, Lindsey!******The GuestLindsey Mosby is a partner in Prophet's Austin office, specializing in healthcare transformation and innovation. For nearly two decades, she has worked to make healthcare more connected, compassionate, transparent, and, dare we say, delightful.That necessitates thinking big, being brave, and listening well, all of which she has honed over her 20 years in design strategy and innovation. (Being a mom, a road warrior, an industry speaker, and auditioning for Lilith Fair also helped.) She focuses on envisioning and executing innovation programs that lead to a more human and sustainable healthcare ecosystem, working with both legacy and start-up healthcare players.She previously led global strategic design for Philips Design and Philips Healthcare Transformation Services before joining Prophet. She spent seven years at frog Design building the healthcare practice from the ground up. Pfizer Consumer Health, the Mayo Clinic, Kaiser Permanente, UCSF, TEVA, Johnson & Johnson, AARP, Otsuka, Boston Scientific, Merck, Medtronic, and Cigna are among the key clients.In addition to her work as a client advisor and team lead, Lindsey speaks on design strategy and healthcare experience innovation to audiences all over the world, including organizations in Copenhagen, Shanghai, Singapore, and Australia.
Jan-Erik is an author of the book Leading Design and professor of Design Management at the University of Applied Science and Arts in Lucern. We talk about his career at Philips Design, growing up as a Dutch-German hybrid and always trying to fit in while staying your authentic self.
We welcome our guest speaker Mr Unmesh Kulkarni, Founder Member Of OceanicCircles & A Former Director Of Honeywell User Experience, Philips Design. Social innovation is the practice of using creativity to develop solutions which improve the well being of people & society. It promotes collaborative action, creative thinking & innovative action to address social need. It uses the experience & insight of those impacted & those concerned to come up with new solutions & approaches. Social innovation is a way of making change. How you make that change is as important as what change you want to bring about. Successful social innovation is informed & characterized by the values of empowerment, fairness, inclusion & well-being. In fact, the purpose of social innovation we believe is to bring about a fairer, more equal world! Social innovation can help to address local, national & global challenges in our world. Our belief is that by learning social innovation - how to innovate for social good - we give people the tools to bring about the change that is needed. Unmesh is a founder member of Oceanic Circles, a collective for social innovation & impact. Previously he has handled global & regional design leadership roles at Honeywell & Philips, working across continents, living in India & China. Prior to that, he co-founded a multi-disciplinary design consultancy & appropriate technology lab, Design Matters. Unmesh has designed physical & digital solutions globally across sectors, technologies, & regions, successfully bringing branded product & service solutions to markets at scale across healthcare, industrial IoT, life-safety, consumer appliances & electronics, lighting, FMCG, crafts, appropriate technologies etc. A firm believer in the power of simplicity & creative empowerment in solving complex, real-world problems, he has a number of design awards to his credit including- 2009 INDEX: Award, Red-Dot, Design for Asia, IDEA Eco-Habitat Award, iF Award etc.
We have met with the editor of the largest design and architecture magazine, Interni Design Journal. During the pandemic, this iconic magazine was released in an online version. Laura Traldi is responsible for its online character and content. Agata Bisping and our guest will talk about the design industry and where it’s heading after the crisis caused by the pandemic. Which industry events make sense in the new reality? Should everything move online? How industry publishers and designers they work with change their thinking about design? To find out answers to these questions join us online during the webinar. Laura Traldi - journalist, blogger, former editor of La Republica. Currently editor-in-chief of the iconic Interni Design Journal. Laura has been working in the design industry and has been writing about it since 1997. She worked as a Global Communications Manager at Philips Design in Eindhoven, and since 2004 she has been a journalist for large circulation magazines. In 2011, she founded designatlarge.it – a blog about smart people, projects and ideas. Agata Bisping - hosts meetings and webinars on design-related topics, the originator of MISTRZOWIE/MASTERS interview series for Design Space of SWPS University.
Pandemia koronawirusa zmieniła nasze życie. Pracujemy w domach, nie możemy spotykać się z klientami czy bezpośrednio dyskutować o naszych projektach z ich odbiorcami. Jak w takiej sytuacji rozwiązywać zawiłe problemy dotyczące pracy? Jaki będzie wpływ kryzysu związanego z koronawirusem na usługi i produkcję? Czy będziemy musieli zmienić sposób myślenia o społeczeństwie i o biznesie? Jaka jest rola projektowania i edukacji w wychodzeniu z kryzysu? Czy to projektanci zbudują nowe systemy ekonomiczne i będą współtwórcami nowych modeli biznesowych? Ilu rzeczy będziemy musieli się nauczyć, a ilu oduczyć? Na te wszystkie pytania odpowie podczas webinaru Zuzanna Skalska ze School of Form, analityczka trendów w designie, biznesie i innowacjach. Zuzanna Skalska - jej kariera rozpoczęła się w 1998 r. w Philips Design, gdzie przez wiele lat pracowała w grupie odpowiedzialnej za Analizę Trendów w powstających tam wizjonerskich projektach przyszłości. Następnie przez blisko 15 lat pracowała jako konsultant w obszarze Design Management & Trends w wiodącym studiu projektowym w Holandii. W 2014 r. założyła firmę 360Inspiration, z którą pracuje z klientami z różnych branż. Jest wśród nich wiele światowych gigantów i rynkowych liderów. Zuzanna specjalizuje się w takich dziedzinach jak radykalne innowacje (Up-front innovation) i strategiczne myślenie o przyszłościach (Future(s) Thinking®). Ściśle współpracuje z prezesami firm i członkami zarządów, doradzając im w kwestii możliwych scenariuszy rozwoju strategicznego, także z działami badań i rozwoju oraz z zespołami kreatywnymi. Wykłada też na wielu prestiżowych uczelniach na świecie, mocno angażuje się w przedsięwzięcia promujące design i przemysły kreatywne oraz uczestniczy jako prelegent w wielu opiniotwórczych wydarzeniach poświęconych innowacjom i ekonomii. Agata Bisping - pomysłodawca i producent konferencji Element Urban Talks. Producent wystaw i wydarzeń kulturalnych poświęconych designowi i architekturze. Współpracuje m.in. z Instytutem Adama Mickiewicza, Mamy Projekt, Fundacją Piękna Polska. Interesujesz się designem? Zapraszamy na naszą stronę: https://design.swps.pl - znajdziesz tam jeszcze więcej merytorycznych materiałów w formatach audio, wideo i tekstowych.
Health consumerism brings healthcare design outside of hospitals, and into the community. Special guest Peter Weeks, healthcare designer at Philips Design, shares his perspective on the Internet of Things, Data and what it means to design for human beings. Interesting links for further exploration: https://designinghealth.care/ https://medium.com/hsxd-healthcare-systems-by-design
In this episode of Inside Jobs, Jarrett King (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jarrettking/), Director of Coca-Cola Studios at The Coca-Cola Company talks about her journey in house. She shares her views about design thinking and agile methodology in designing, more specifically on adapting and rolling out design thinking principles. With over 20 years’ experience in the marketing and advertising industry, Jarrett has been supporting, developing and mentoring creative teams to do their best work. She has worked for brands like Sapient, Georgia State University, Philips Design, Synchrony Financial and Coca-Cola. During her time at the Digital Design Department of Georgia State University, she worked to build her first in-house agency and contributed in the development of Red Dot, one of the very first enterprise-wide content management system. Before Coca-Cola, she was working with Synchrony Financial where she has spent a little more than five years revamping and strengthening their in-house agency. —— This podcast is supported by the In-House Agency Forum (www.ihaforum.org) and hosted by Robert Berkeley (https://www.linkedin.com/in/rberkeley/) from Express KCS (www.expresskcs.com).
Discover more tech podcasts like this: Tech Podcast Asia. Produced by Pikkal & Co - Award Winning Podcast Agency. Sunhera Cariappa is a strategic designer with specialization in designing for social impact. She has managed and lead a variety of projects ranging from organizing global service design workshops to researching healthcare opportunities for chronic disease patients with Philips Design in China. The Ultimate Toolkit integrates her passion for social impact and human-centred design.
The O'Reilly Design Podcast: Designing for IoT, service design, and predictive analytics.This week's episode of the Design Podcast features a conversation I had with Mike Kuniavsky last fall. Kuniavsky is a user experience designer, researcher, and author currently working at Parc. He's also a speaker at the upcoming O'Reilly online conference "Designing for the Internet of Things," September 15, 2016. In our chat, Kuniavsky talks about designing for the IoT, service design, and the mindshift needed to design for ecosystems.Here are some highlights: Every new medium is the old medium I was reading this book that was published by Philips Design on their Ambient Intelligence project. They actually thought through the entire Internet of Things thing about 15 years ago, and then they couldn't make any money on it, and all those people went away. Now it's actually a real thing. They left some really good documentation. I was reading the Philips Design book, and they had a very interesting point from mine and probably one of Tim O'Reilly's favorite theorists, Marshall McLuhan. McLuhan essentially said that the content of every new medium is the old medium. Every new medium subsumes the old medium of the content until you actually figure out what the new medium is. When television came about, the stuff that was initially on television was essentially radio, until they actually figured out what television was good for. When radio came out, it was people reading the newspaper on the radio, until they figured out what radio was good for. It's like that going all the way back. Right now, in the Internet of Things, we're in this place where the content of the Internet of Things is the pre-Internet of Things world. It's all of the things that are either currently not connected, which are everyday objects, or it's the electronic things which are being shoehorned. What we're trying to do is we're trying to get over that hump and trying to figure out what are the natively interesting qualities of the Internet of Things that make it really different than home automation, which has been around for 30 years and has been an abject failure on every front, or simply connecting appliances to the Internet. On UX design and service design We're really looking hard at service design as a model. The funny thing is, service design isn't even a mature thing. It's not like we can import an entire discipline. Service design was a just a couple puzzle pieces just a couple years ago. It wasn't a finished product as it is. We're trying to take those puzzle pieces and we're trying to say, OK, now what happens when all of these different components of a service, these different things that service design is looking at—they describe front of house, back of house, different kinds of players and actors within that space—what if we replaced some of those with devices? What if we replaced some of those things with sensors and actuators? What happens to the service in that situation? That's how we're trying to envision an entire ecosystem without actually having any of the pieces of it in place. There's this slippery slope between service design and UX design. I think UX design is more digital, and service design allows itself to include things like a poster that's on a wall in a lobby, or a little card that gets mailed to people, or a human being that they can talk to, and what does that human being say and under what circumstances do they say it. Service design takes a slightly broader view, whereas UX design is still—and I think usefully—focused largely on the digital aspect of it. Pattern matching and predictive analytics I'm interested in, broadly speaking, predictive analytics—I should say, machine learning, statistical modeling, but specifically in predictive statistical modeling, predictive machine learning. I think that really that is the new superpower. That is literally looking into the future with some degree of confidence. In a place where you would never normally be able to look into the future, like identifying how often I pick up my cup of coffee. My cup of coffee would never have been able to tell me that before. Now it can. Again, to some degree, and that's really interesting. That's really a different relationship. That's to me a big shift in our relationship to our everyday objects and their relationship to how they can—as per my earlier point—how they can make our lives better. That's why I'm really interested in the predictive stuff right now. We as humans have no idea how limited our sensors are, our own personal ability to sense the world. We're really good at pattern matching in certain ways, and we're really not very good in many other ways, and we've never really had a very good way to compensate for that. Now, to some extent, we do, and that's really interesting.
The O'Reilly Design Podcast: Designing for IoT, service design, and predictive analytics.This week's episode of the Design Podcast features a conversation I had with Mike Kuniavsky last fall. Kuniavsky is a user experience designer, researcher, and author currently working at Parc. He's also a speaker at the upcoming O'Reilly online conference "Designing for the Internet of Things," September 15, 2016. In our chat, Kuniavsky talks about designing for the IoT, service design, and the mindshift needed to design for ecosystems.Here are some highlights: Every new medium is the old medium I was reading this book that was published by Philips Design on their Ambient Intelligence project. They actually thought through the entire Internet of Things thing about 15 years ago, and then they couldn't make any money on it, and all those people went away. Now it's actually a real thing. They left some really good documentation. I was reading the Philips Design book, and they had a very interesting point from mine and probably one of Tim O'Reilly's favorite theorists, Marshall McLuhan. McLuhan essentially said that the content of every new medium is the old medium. Every new medium subsumes the old medium of the content until you actually figure out what the new medium is. When television came about, the stuff that was initially on television was essentially radio, until they actually figured out what television was good for. When radio came out, it was people reading the newspaper on the radio, until they figured out what radio was good for. It's like that going all the way back. Right now, in the Internet of Things, we're in this place where the content of the Internet of Things is the pre-Internet of Things world. It's all of the things that are either currently not connected, which are everyday objects, or it's the electronic things which are being shoehorned. What we're trying to do is we're trying to get over that hump and trying to figure out what are the natively interesting qualities of the Internet of Things that make it really different than home automation, which has been around for 30 years and has been an abject failure on every front, or simply connecting appliances to the Internet. On UX design and service design We're really looking hard at service design as a model. The funny thing is, service design isn't even a mature thing. It's not like we can import an entire discipline. Service design was a just a couple puzzle pieces just a couple years ago. It wasn't a finished product as it is. We're trying to take those puzzle pieces and we're trying to say, OK, now what happens when all of these different components of a service, these different things that service design is looking at—they describe front of house, back of house, different kinds of players and actors within that space—what if we replaced some of those with devices? What if we replaced some of those things with sensors and actuators? What happens to the service in that situation? That's how we're trying to envision an entire ecosystem without actually having any of the pieces of it in place. There's this slippery slope between service design and UX design. I think UX design is more digital, and service design allows itself to include things like a poster that's on a wall in a lobby, or a little card that gets mailed to people, or a human being that they can talk to, and what does that human being say and under what circumstances do they say it. Service design takes a slightly broader view, whereas UX design is still—and I think usefully—focused largely on the digital aspect of it. Pattern matching and predictive analytics I'm interested in, broadly speaking, predictive analytics—I should say, machine learning, statistical modeling, but specifically in predictive statistical modeling, predictive machine learning. I think that really that is the new superpower. That is literally looking into the future with some degree of confidence. In a place where you would never normally be able to look into the future, like identifying how often I pick up my cup of coffee. My cup of coffee would never have been able to tell me that before. Now it can. Again, to some degree, and that's really interesting. That's really a different relationship. That's to me a big shift in our relationship to our everyday objects and their relationship to how they can—as per my earlier point—how they can make our lives better. That's why I'm really interested in the predictive stuff right now. We as humans have no idea how limited our sensors are, our own personal ability to sense the world. We're really good at pattern matching in certain ways, and we're really not very good in many other ways, and we've never really had a very good way to compensate for that. Now, to some extent, we do, and that's really interesting.
What is Philips' perspective on copyright? Paul Gardien will tell us about design protection and patents at Philips and give us a peek at the Shapeways project, which lets consumers design their own products. Paul Gardien is head of design strategy and design innovation at Philips Design.
Ben Bayder participated in the Business in Germany Travel Seminar in mid-May and then headed to the Netherlands to work with the Director of Business Development at Philips Design division for his summer internship. He worked on a market-entry plan for a new product, making a final presentation to Philips’ top level executives.
Future of Lifestyles The Philips Design probe programme is a far future research initiative attempting to develop lifestyle scenarios 10 - 20 years ahead. Design "provocations" are created with the... The European Futurists Conference Lucerne aims to be the foremost annual gathering of futurists, analysts and decision makers with long-term perspectives working with scientific methods for futures studies in Europe.
Transcript -- The T211 course team reflect on Philips Design's methods, philosophy and areas of business.
The T211 course team reflect on Philips Design's methods, philosophy and areas of business.
Transcript -- The background and creative principles which underpin Philips Design's success.
The background and creative principles which underpin Philips Design's success.
Transcript -- The T211 course team reflect on Philips Design's methods, philosophy and areas of business.
The T211 course team reflect on Philips Design's methods, philosophy and areas of business.
Transcript -- The background and creative principles which underpin Philips Design's success.
The background and creative principles which underpin Philips Design's success.
➡️ Like The Podcast? Leave A Rating: https://ratethispodcast.com/successstory ➡️ About The GuestMauro Porcini is a highly accomplished design leader known for his expertise in driving innovation and shaping brand experiences. As the Chief Design Officer at PepsiCo, he transformed the company's design capabilities, making it a global leader in design and branding. With a background in design, strategy, and technology, Porcini has also held influential roles at 3M and Philips Design, where he contributed to the companies' design transformations.Porcini's strategic vision and emphasis on design-led innovation have garnered recognition for PepsiCo's groundbreaking design initiatives, focusing on enhancing consumer experiences and driving sustainable growth. He is known for embedding design thinking across the organization's diverse portfolio of brands.As a thought leader, Porcini has shared his insights on design and innovation at prominent conferences and events. He inspires audiences with his unique perspective on the role of design in business success. His book, "The Human Side of Innovation," explores the human-centered approach to fostering innovation within organizations.Mauro Porcini continues to shape the landscape of innovation with his visionary thinking and commitment to human-centered design. His expertise and passion have elevated the importance of design as a strategic driver for business growth and societal impact.➡️ Show Linkshttps://www.instagram.com/mauroporcini/ https://twitter.com/mauroporcini/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/mauroporcini/ ➡️ Podcast SponsorsHUBSPOT - https://hubspot.com/ BREVO - https://brevo.com/success (Promo Code: Success) ➡️ Talking Points00:00 - Intro03:02 - Mauro Porcini: The Journey of an Innovation Leader12:03 - Crafting Compelling Product and Company Stories at Global Giants17:57 - The Human Side of Innovation: How Design Drives Transformation32:16 - Shaping Values and Perceptions: Inside the World of Large Corporations50:10 - Unleashing Design Thinking: The Key to Universal Success54:15 - Connecting with Mauro Porcini: Insights from a Design Visionary55:36 - Redefining Success: Mauro Porcini's Path to ExcellenceAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy