The Principles of Service Design Thinking - Building Better Services

Service design is all about taking a service and making it meet the user’s and customer’s needs for that service. It can be used to improve an existing service or to create a new service from scratch. In order to adapt to service design, a UX designer will need to understand the basic principles of service design thinking and be able to focus on them when creating services. The principles here are drawn from the design ethos of Design4Services, the organization that is committed to developing service design and promoting business transformation. These are widely accepted in the commercial sector. There are other ways of approaching service design, which are not as widely used but which may add value to the service designer’s toolkit; we have listed some of these approaches in the resources section at the end of this piece. When it comes to service design - it can help to remember that “A design isn’t finished until somebody is using it.” Brenda Laurel, designer at MIT.
(c) jonny goldstein, Fair Use Service design feeds into creating great customer experiences. This a customer experience map for a utility service.

General Principles of Service Design


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One of service design’s eventual outputs is the service blueprint which details all interactions with a customer. The service design principles ensure that this blueprint adds customer value when complete.

Process Design Principles for Service Design

Much of service design is found in the design of processes, both internal and external, and these principles underpin this:

Organizational Design Principles for Service Design

People are the key to service delivery and some basic principles for organizations can help them realize their full potential:


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Organizational design is a field all of its own and can become incredibly complex. It’s normally a process managed by HR, but there’s no reason that UX and service designers cannot be involved.

Information Design Principles for Service Design

Information flow is key to delivering high quality services; if people don’t know what they’re supposed to and when they’re supposed to know it – service suffers. These are simple principles for information design in service design:


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Data design will normally be carried out by DBAs (Database Administrators) however; UX and service designers should have a large amount of input in ensuring guiding principles are adhered to.

Technology Design Principles for Service Design

Technology design principles are used to support the delivery of service. They include:

The Take Away

Service design principles support the development of services which deliver high quality experiences to users and customers. Many of these principles are similar to principles already employed in UX design and it should be relatively easy for an experienced UX designer in products to transition to UX design for services.

Resources

See the design4services website for a free resource with large amounts of resources for service designers.

Hero Image: (c)_dChris, Fair Use