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What can we learn from shortcuts?

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    When we're designing new products,
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    services, or businesses,
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    the only time you'll know
    if they're any good,
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    if the designs are good,
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    is to see how they're used
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    in the real world, in context.
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    I'm reminded of that every time
    I walk past Highbury Fields
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    in north London.
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    It's absolutely beautiful.
    There's a big open green space.
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    There's Georgian
    buildings around the side.
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    But then there's this mud trap
    that cuts across the middle.
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    People clearly don't want to walk
    all the way around the edge.
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    Instead, they want to take the shortcut,
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    and that shortcut is self-reinforcing.
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    Now, this shortcut
    is called a desire path,
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    and it's often the path
    of least resistance,
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    and I find them fascinating
    because they're often the point
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    where design and user experience diverge.
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    Now, at this point, I should apologize,
    because you guys are going to start
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    seeing these everywhere.
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    But today, I'm going to pick three
    I find interesting and share
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    what actually it reminds me
    about launching new products and services.
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    So the first is in the capital city
    of Brazil, Brasilia,
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    and it reminds me that sometimes
    you have to just focus
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    on designing for a real need
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    at low friction.
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    Now Brasilia is fascinating.
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    It was designed by Niemeyer in the '50s.
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    It was the golden age of flying,
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    so he laid it out like a plane,
    as you can see there.
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    Slightly worryingly, he put
    most of the important government buildings
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    in the cockpit.
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    But if you zoom in,
    in the very center of Brasilia,
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    just where the point is there,
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    you see it's littered with desire paths.
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    They're absolutely everywhere.
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    Now they thought that they
    had future-proofed this design.
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    They thought in the future
    we wouldn't need to walk anywhere,
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    we'd be able to drive,
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    so there was little need
    for walkways or pavements.
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    But as you can see, there's a real need.
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    These are very dangerous desire paths.
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    If we just pick one, in the middle,
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    you can see it crosses
    15 lanes of traffic.
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    It won't surprise you guys that
    Brasilia has five times
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    the pedestrian accident rate
    of your average U.S. city.
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    People are resourceful.
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    They'll always find the low friction route
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    to save money, save time.
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    Not all these desire paths are dangerous.
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    I was reminded flying here
    when I was in Heathrow,
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    and many of us get frustrated
    where we're confronted
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    with the obligatory walk
    through duty free.
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    It was amazing to me how
    many people refused to take
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    the long, meandering path to the left
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    and just cut through to the right,
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    cut through the desire path.
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    Now the question that's interesting is,
    what do designers think
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    when they see our behavior here?
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    Do they think we're stupid?
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    Do they think we're lazy?
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    Or do they accept that this
    is the only truth?
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    This is their product.
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    We're effectively
    co-designing their product.
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    So our job is to design
    for real needs at low friction,
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    because if you don't,
    the customer will anyway.
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    The second desire path
    that I wanted to share
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    is at the University of California.
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    And it reminds me that sometimes
    the best way to come up
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    with a great design
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    is just to launch it.
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    Now, university campuses are fantastic
    for spotting desire paths.
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    I think it's because students
    are always late and they're pretty smart,
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    so they're dashing to lectures.
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    They'll always find the shortcut.
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    And the designers here knew that.
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    So they built the buildings
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    and then they waited a few months
    for the paths to form.
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    They then paved them.
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    Incredibly smart approach.
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    In fact often, just launching
    the straw man of a service
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    can teach you what people really want.
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    For example, ?? in Boston knew
    he wanted to open a restaurant.
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    But where should it be?
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    What should the menu be?
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    He launched a service,
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    in this case a food truck,
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    and he changed the location each day.
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    He'd write a different menu
    on the side in a whiteboard marker
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    to figure out what people wanted.
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    He now has a chain of restaurants.
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    So it can be incredibly efficient
    to launch something
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    to spot the desire paths.
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    The third and final desire path
    I wanted to share with you
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    is the UNIH.
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    It reminds me that the world's in flux,
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    and we have to respond to those changes.
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    So as you'll guess, this is a hospital.
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    I've marked for you on the left
    the Oncology Department,
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    and the patients would usually stay
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    in the hotels down on the bottom right.
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    Now this was
    a patient-centered organization,
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    so they laid on cars for their patients,
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    but what they realized when they started
    offering chemotherapy
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    is the patients rarely
    wanted to get in cars.
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    They were too nauseous.
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    And so they'd walk
    back to their hotels,
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    and this desire path that you see
    diagonally formed.
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    The patients even called it
    the Chemo Trail.
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    Now, when the hospital
    saw this originally,
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    they tried to lay turf
    back over it, ignore it,
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    but after a while, they realized
    it was an important need
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    they were meeting for their patients,
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    so they paved it.
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    And I think our job is often
    to pave these emerging desire paths.
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    If we look back at the one
    in north London again,
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    that desire path hasn't always been there.
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    The reason it sprung up
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    is people were traveling
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    to the mighty Arsenal football club
    stadium on game days
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    from the Underground station
    you see on the bottom right.
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    So you see the desire path.
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    If we just wind the clock
    back a few years,
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    when the stadium was being constructed,
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    there is no desire path.
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    So our job is to watch
    for these desire paths emerging,
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    and, where appropriate, pave them,
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    as someone did here.
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    Someone installed a barrier,
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    people started walking across
    and round the bottom as you see,
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    and they paved it.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I think this is a wonderful
    reminder as well
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    that actually the world is in flux.
    It's constantly changing,
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    because if you look
    at the top of this image,
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    there's another desire path forming.
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    So these three desire paths remind me,
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    we need to design for real human needs.
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    I think empathy for what
    your customers want
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    is probably the biggest leading indicator
    of business success.
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    Design for real needs,
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    and design them in low friction,
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    because if you don't offer them
    in low friction,
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    someone else will, often the customer.
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    Secondly, often the best way
    to learn what people really want
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    is to launch your service.
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    The answer is rarely inside the building.
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    Get out there and see
    what people really want.
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    And finally, in part because of technology
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    the world is incredibly
    flux at the moment.
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    It's changing constantly.
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    These desire paths are going
    to spring up faster than ever.
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    Our job is to pick the appropriate ones
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    and pave over them.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
What can we learn from shortcuts?
Speaker:
Tom Hulme
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
07:20

English subtitles

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