Design principles: Difference between revisions

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*[[Automation eliminates value but not risk]]
*[[Automation eliminates value but not risk]]
*[[Solve simple problems]]. Like [[Blind spot assistance]]. Leave the hard stuff to the experts.
*[[Solve simple problems]]. Like [[Blind spot assistance]]. Leave the hard stuff to the experts.
===[[Pace layering===
*'''Be patient''': Fundamental change comes slowly. Do not make the mistake of trying to change a fundamental/biological level behaviour with the fashionable layer. Biological behaviours are very persistent.
*'''five degrees, not fifty''': A radical, sudden change is much more likely to break, be unsustainable, and create unexpected and unwanted knock-ons and consequences for other parts of your machine. Make gradual changes, and build on them, gradually.
*'''Use your experts''': You have a great, real-world source of knowledge and intelligence about the problems and opportunities in front of you: The people who have those problems and are missing those opportunities. Your current staff. They need to be in the centre of the design process. You can’t leave it to [[management consultant]]s who have no subject matter expertise at all.
===[[Antifragile]]===
===[[Antifragile]]===
*[[Be sceptical of models]]  ↔  [[Don’t tick boxes]]  ↔  watch out for proxies. Don't confuse simplistic models with simplicity.
*[[Be sceptical of models]]  ↔  [[Don’t tick boxes]]  ↔  watch out for proxies. Don't confuse simplistic models with simplicity.

Revision as of 11:10, 13 March 2023

The design of organisations and products


Making legal contracts a better experience
Index — Click ᐅ to expand:

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In Don Norman’s terms[1] design is comprised of affordances, signifiers, mapping and feedback, a taxonomy of which the design of legal products seems utterly ignorant.

[[Pace layering

  • Be patient: Fundamental change comes slowly. Do not make the mistake of trying to change a fundamental/biological level behaviour with the fashionable layer. Biological behaviours are very persistent.
  • five degrees, not fifty: A radical, sudden change is much more likely to break, be unsustainable, and create unexpected and unwanted knock-ons and consequences for other parts of your machine. Make gradual changes, and build on them, gradually.
  • Use your experts: You have a great, real-world source of knowledge and intelligence about the problems and opportunities in front of you: The people who have those problems and are missing those opportunities. Your current staff. They need to be in the centre of the design process. You can’t leave it to management consultants who have no subject matter expertise at all.

Antifragile

See also

References