Regenerative Design Process
DMBA 2020 Capstone Project by Erin Schnair, Holly McKenna, Sarah Grimm & Serena Chan | originally published to Medium
Who We Are
We are a group of four graduate students in the MBA in Design Strategy program at CCA: Sarah Grimm, Holly McKenna, Serena Chan, and Erin Schnair. We are all committed to not just what work we do, but how and why we do that work. For this reason, we joined forces for our DMBA capstone project, Fidu. This is a glimpse into our design process.
For our capstone project at the DMBA, our team committed to trusting the (design) process and to building trust with one another. We launched our collaboration in the SF Botanical Gardens and defined our guiding principles for our adapted “Regenerative Design Process.” There are four pillars of this process: Human-Centeredness, Agility, Collaboration, and Equity. This is a case study of how we worked together, how each of these pillars came to life, and what we learned.
The Regenerative Design Process
We began and closed every meeting with three collective breaths of compassion
We began each meeting (whether in person or virtual) with a short, creative activity
We welcomed personal check-ins, poems, and stretches at the beginning of the meetings, and when needed
We incorporated the Green Lens framework that helped ground us in each others’ wholeness
We practiced feedback in pods each week, and provided team process feedback every two months
We reached out to people who had lived experiences in the problem space we identified
We listened deeply to the people we interviewed and were mindful of their time and energy
We set aside time to critique and iterate on our team processes and charter
We mocked up product concepts, tested them with potential customers, and iterated again based on feedback
We seamlessly shifted our in-person design jogs, to virtual design jogs, hosted on Mural
We checked in each week at a “standup” meeting, that took the form of a Slack update on 1) what we’ve done, 2) what we’ll do next, and 3) what blockers we’re facing and any help we need
We rotated as facilitators to design and time box our Design Jog exercises and incorporated breaks to keep us moving along
We met weekly for 4–5 hour co-working and design sprints
We rotated design facilitators each sprint, taking turns crafting the agenda with warm-up activities, design exercises, and objectives
We practiced co-creation with yes-and mindsets and active listening
We worked in rotating pods to allow for more dedicated focus, autonomy, and accountability
We switched our pods weekly to cross-pollinate and prevent siloing
We used virtual collaboration tools including Zoom, Mural, Trello, Slack, and Google Drive
We started off design jogs with reviewing Maria Nemeth’s Green Lens and committing to collaborating from this perspective
We called for equity pauses to stop, reflect, and discuss ways we could work more equitably and inclusively
We created time for individual reflection before sharing back to the group in design sprints to promote equity of voices, and prevent groupthink
We incorporated opportunities for visual reflection and communication to meet the needs of our visual thinkers
We checked in on equity of work when delegating deliverables
Closing Thoughts
The design process can be hard to trust, yet it is deeply rewarding, especially when teams are committed to developing interpersonal trust. In trusting each other and the process, we journeyed into the unknown, grew as individuals, strengthened as a team, and developed a business and product we could not have imagined at the start. Particular areas we would like to continue exploring are: how to balance autonomy and co-creation, critique culture, and clarifying roles without rigidity. The journey taught us a great deal, and we have come to the finish line with a desire to continue learning, which is success in our book.