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Viewpoints

Linking Design, Marketing, and Innovation

 

  Roy Luebke
 

Roy Luebke

     

By Roy Luebke, Innovation and Strategy Consultant

 

Over the past few years, the terms innovation and design thinking have taken on a life of their own through a variety of channels and media. Millions of words have been written on these topics by journalists, consultants, practitioners, and curious bystanders. Then throw in discussions about design itself and an even wider range of opinions emerge. What, then is a business leader supposed to make of all of this?

 

Years ago and much earlier than the current hype cycle, Peter Drucker wrote that the two main functions of a business are marketing and innovation. Drucker did a superb job defining both areas. Over the past 30 years, many business leaders seemed to have forgotten that their purpose as a business is to get customers and not focusing on cost-cutting, off-shoring jobs, and maximizing shareholder value.

 

To my mind, marketing and design both share the same business objective. That objective is to find customer problems and solve them with new offerings. A positive result of the renewed focus on innovation has shown that anything new (not just products or services alone) that generates economic value can generate growth and increased customer value. New business models, processes or partnerships, product or service platforms, channels, brands, or customer experiences can all generate new economic value. Business leaders must decide how to throttle their innovation efforts, from incremental to transformational, in order to direct the future vision and strategic intent of the organization.

 

Innovation is a result. Achieving innovation requires a combination of user research, competitor research, and market driver research (i.e. social, technical, economic, environmental, and political/legal evolutions) and analysis of these elements to make sense of the customers’ world and then creatively solve the challenges people have while operating in these worlds. Effective solution development and delivery requires the skills and talents of both marketers and designers, not to mention engineers, accountants, and customer service people as well. It is marketing and design people, though, who should be on the leading edge of opportunity discovery and customer problem framing.

 

Just as strategic marketing is more than just messaging, strategic design is more than just making things look good. A key strength of marketing is to understand customers and markets, and some key strengths of design are to look at the customers’ world differently, to break out of constraining biases, and to invent the future. A high level integration of these two disciplines should make any company stronger and more effective over the long haul.

 

The concept of design thinking seeks to merge the creativity of the designer with the realities of the market. While I both appreciate and dislike this phrase at the same time, so far it is the best description available to help business leaders see that creating an organizational future requires the combination of both marketing and design skills in order to deliver innovation. "Thinking" like a designer, or taking a design approach, extends research and analysis toward experimenting with a variety of concepts in order to create desirable, feasible, and viable new solutions. Taking this type of approach combines critical thinking and systems thinking in order to invent a future state. Imbedding this approach into the marketing function will help create a future state that breaks free of current reality and discovers "what could be."

 

Another positive result of all this discussion is there appears to be a change underway in business education. Design approaches for discovering and meeting customer opportunities are increasingly showing up in MBA programs. This is very exciting because a wider range of people are gaining insight into how marketing and design can be blended together to not only improve on products and services, but also to make the lives of their customers better. This blend of skills can find new ways of improving customer experiences; from the way people are attracted to a company, through the occasion of use, to an extended relationship using new digital approaches.

 

The Design Management Institute’s LinkedIn group has highlighted discussions recently on design’s value to the organization, where design ought to reside in an organization, and how design could work more effectively within marketing groups. There appears to be strong potential for merging these two disciplines together at a strategic level. Marketing and design both have the objective of meeting the customers’ needs, and both can support the business’ strategic intent and drive toward achieving sustainable competitive advantage.

 

There are tactical challenges in linking marketing and design more closely together, especially with so many specialties existing within each domain. Marketing groups include advertising, public relations, event planning, channel management, etc. Design consists of industrial design, graphic design, packaging design, web design, systems design, etc. Product management and product marketing also exist in many organizations separately from corporate marketing. Depending on the size and type of company, design may also exist as a separate department as well. There are many different political agendas within individual companies, and all of this makes for a very challenging organizational design effort.

 

One of the biggest self-inflicted obstacles in many companies is that people at the tactical levels of an organization have been trying to push a strategic change from the bottom-up. Just as the CEO of a business needs to be the key driver in developing an effective innovation process and culture, it is the CEO who needs to see the strategic side of design and learn to incorporate that value with marketing and create a new type of marketing organization. This type of organization would be much more in line with Drucker’s view of a business, and could help companies create more useful offerings, business models, and processes. It could help lead organizations to be more socially relevant and environmentally sound.

 

Design and marketing should be closely tied together to ensure the delivery of innovation to the market. It only makes sense to have them working more closely to achieve the strategic intent of a business, and conversely, to help develop strategic alternatives that can affect the evolution of strategic intent. All that is needed is getting the CEO to take the lead.

 

 

Biography

Roy Luebke is an innovation and strategy expert focused on implementing structured innovation planning methods, establishing innovation centers of excellence and competence, and linking business strategy to innovation actions that create real business growth.

 

Roy uses structured innovation planning techniques to discover, analyze, and interpret user-centered insights and create disruptive new products and services. He focuses on blending portfolio planning with innovation practices to create business value by maximizing product and service offerings, business models, business processes, and brand equity to enable companies to deliver outstanding customer experiences.

 

He has been creating business, product, and service strategies in technology and healthcare organizations for nearly 30 years. Roy possesses a master’s degree in design methods from the Institute of Design, Chicago; an MBA from the University of Maryland; and a bachelor’s degree in business and information systems from the University of Wisconsin. He currently advises clients as an independent innovation and strategy consultant.

 


 

Join the Discussion

Please add your thoughts and comments about this article. Constructive debate is welcome, however, personal attacks will be deleted.

 

 

This article appeared in the August 2011 edition of the DMI News & Views.

 

Copyright © Design Management Institute All Rights Reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the copyright holder.

 

Feedback on DMI Viewpoints and article proposals are always welcome! Please email jtobin(at)dmi.org.

 

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