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Andrew Polaine

Service Design: From Insight to Implementation

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  • Verónicahas quoted13 hours ago
    www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/service-design/) and we will try to make amends, either on the site or in future editions. The Service Design Network (www.service-design-network.org) and Jeff Howard’s excellent sites—Service Design Books (www.servicedesignbooks.org) and Service Design Research (http://howardesign.com/exp/service/index.php)—are good places to find service design resources
  • Verónicahas quoted13 hours ago
    . Interaction and user experience design are often understood as design for screen-based interactions, but service design covers a broader range of channels than this.
  • Verónicahas quoted2 days ago
    is book’s companion website (rosenfeldmedia.com/books/service-design/)
  • Jorge Vazquez Trujillohas quoted5 years ago
    into three primary spheres: care, response, and access.
  • Jorge Vazquez Trujillohas quoted5 years ago
    Core service offerings can be grouped
  • Jorge Vazquez Trujillohas quoted5 years ago
    In the service economy, services can be redesigned on a continuing basis to keep a competitive edge in the market.
  • Jorge Vazquez Trujillohas quoted5 years ago
    If customers are well informed about bus routes and schedules, they are more likely to get more efficiently from A to B and more inclined to use the bus, reducing their carbon footprint and easing congested roads.
  • Jorge Vazquez Trujillohas quoted5 years ago
    Services are about interactions between people, and their motivations and behaviors. Marketers and designers often talk of products having personalities, but an iPhone or a Volkswagen doesn’t wake up with a hangover, worry about paying the rent, or care who is using them. People do, which is why understanding people is at the heart of service design.
  • Jorge Vazquez Trujillohas quoted5 years ago
    The industrial legacy of treating services like products means that services often underperform and disappoint because they cannot be fixed in the same way as problems with products.
  • Jorge Vazquez Trujillohas quoted5 years ago
    The division of the silos makes sense to the business units, but makes no sense to the customer, who sees the entire offering as one experience.
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