In services, we also look at the spaces between transactions. We see how people change channels to fulfil a need or desire – and its evolution. So when we apply a service lens, we start paying attention to a relationship that develops over time.
Our intention is not to invalidate everything the product mindset has brought to organisations worldwide. Seeing how the digital revolution has made most of our lives better and more fluid through those solutions has been amazing. And it is easy to see why the product view has taken such a dominant position in the digital landscape.
Enabling and fixing transactions to meet customer expectations
Since most people nowadays have access to smartphones (and the internet) and expect digital solutions to satisfy their needs and desires, product designers have been busy moving organisations to where customers expect them to be. Most transactions must be made available in a digital format, and plenty more need fixing. Taking our society to a digital landscape is currently the main benefit of product design work.
Autonomy to move quickly
By having a clear division around products, organisations provide teams with the right amount of accountability to decide what to do next. They are free to implement changes that might address business goals, which creates the right environment for teams to move fast. With more autonomy, organisations can ship products more quickly.
Fast reaction to changes in the market
Being digital means being where your customers expect you to be. With technologies advancing at a faster pace, organisations must build more screens (or other ways of interactions). Having teams dedicated to making those interfaces have helped organisations keep up with their expected pace, rapidly reacting to changes in the competitive landscape.
Constant learning and adjustments on the go
Services (and digital products) are not all implemented simultaneously, and once they touch customers, they will need adjustments. Having teams dedicated to a product means they build, launch and measure the impact of their solutions. This last part allows them to quickly learn what’s not right to make changes when needed instead of just hopping to the next project.
Service designers have approached projects as industrial designers do for a long time. But whilst objects must be designed in advance so they can be manufactured, services have multiple moving pieces, which are not implemented all at once. They must constantly change, evolving according to customers and organisational needs. And while it might be a good idea to determine an ideal vision for the service, it starts to change as soon as it begins being implemented. Service design should take advantage of this aspect that product design provides.
Instead of tweaking and improving bits and bytes of siloed products, organisations must also understand how everything is connected. Find balance and synchrony among products to satisfy customers with an optimised operation. And whilst it is crucial to optimize customer tasks by improving products, organisations must also be on the outlook for innovating themselves. They should look for new ways of doing the same thing they do and also think of new things to do, always with customers and their service in mind.