Design Sprint:
A Fast Start To Creating A Great Digital Product
Posted by
EdmontonPM
Aug 18
Live Webinar August 26th, 2015 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM EDT
Duration: 1 Hour Credits: 1 PDU Category C Free
Presented by : O’Reilly
This presentation is based on the book Design Sprint: A Practical Guidebook for Creating Great Digital Products by Richard Banfield, C. Todd Lombardo, Trace Wax
The Design Sprint is a flexible framework for starting new product design and development work.
The Design Sprint is the first, and for some projects the most significant, phase of a design thinking process. It gets the entire product design and development team on the same page, reduces the risk of downstream mistakes, and generates vision-lead goals for the team to measure their success.
In this webcast, you’ll learn both why and how Design Sprints work and how you can use Design Sprints to enhance your own design process.
- Get an eye-opening approach to the product design process that results in better, faster outcomes
- Learn the design sprint process from start to finish, including essential tools, tips, and best practices
- Learn about successful examples of design sprints from across the industry
Presenters:
Richard Banfield (LinkedIn profile, @freshtilledsoil) Co-Founder of Boston-Based User Experience Agency Fresh Tilled Soil, wears the strategic hat around the office. Richard worked his way up the web marketing food chain, being in the thick of it during the heady dot-com years, founding Acceleration, an international e-marketing business headquartered in London. Along with authoring Design Sprint: A Practical Guidebook for Creating Great Digital Products Richard also wrote Design Leadership: How Top Design Leaders Build and Grow Successful Organizations
C. Todd Lombardo (LinkedIn profile, @iamctodd) As an Innovation Architect at Constant Contact’s InnoLoft, Todd stands in the intersections of hyper-specialization, and sees the connections that revolve around us. Todd facilitates product and service design sprints for a wide range of external startups and internal product teams.and is a member of the adjunct faculty at Madrid’s prestigious IE Business School where he teaches courses on Creativity, Innovation, Design-Thinking and Communication.
Trace Wax (LinkedIn profile, @tracedwax) After a career in user experience design and research at companies like Microsoft and Nuance, he then became a developer at Pivotal Labs, and is now a Managing Director at Thoughtbot. Trace has facilitated numerous product design sprints, and is an developer and maintainer of thoughtbot’s design sprint methodology repository. Bringing “Lean & Agile Methodology” to many large companies and small startups, he has helped teams teams to focus, prioritize, and become happily productive.
PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:
Process Groups: Initiating, Planning
Knowledge Areas: 4 – Integration 5 – Scope
- 4.2 Develop Project Management Plan
- 5.2 Collect Requirements
- 5.3 Define Scope
As a Category C ‘Self Directed Learning Activity’ remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your ‘PDU Audit Trail Folder’
Click to register for Design Sprint: A Fast Start To Creating A Great Digital Product
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