Jump to content

Conceptual design

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 124.125.68.11 (talk) at 18:57, 9 July 2016 (ccc). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Conceptual Design is an umbrella term given to all forms of non-aesthetic design management disciplines.The conceptual design phase provides a description of the proposed system in terms of a set of integrated ideas and concepts about what it should do, behave, and look like, that will be understandable by the users in the manner intended. Conceptual designers tend to be better geared to abstract reasoning in any given environment, quickly able to understand the underlying motivations of key players, root-causes of failure, as well as feeling and connecting with the human elements that any system, experience or interaction has on its users.

Since the emergence of design thinking as a vehicle for business and research development, many conventionally trained aesthetic designers have wrongly been called upon to support organizations with workshops pertaining specifically to business or process development in the incorrect assumption that all design is equal in this capacity. This has resulted in a large shadow being cast over the role of design in business and development and questions being asked about the value of design as a tool for business and research development.

The Conceptual Design Forumccxvzxzvzxz

The Conceptual Design Forum was proposed in early 2015 by Jonathan Häsen, founder of Häsen Global Concept Development,[1] in an effort to distinguish the independent nature of non-aesthetic design disciplines such as service design, user experience design, human-technology interaction design, spatial design as well as all forms of design and innovation management. It is asserted that those investing in design for the commercial and developmental benefits it offers, stand to benefit from understanding the distinction between aesthetic design disciplines such as graphic design and architectural design and those of conceptual design practitioners. With the UK and EU governments pledging enormous contributions into innovation [2] and design management,[3] understanding the variations within the design field is an essential step in the management process. Without a strong understanding of the specific differences within design, it becomes increasingly difficult to identify how any organization can utilize creative acumen in the correct capacity.[4]

References

See also