EMPATHY 1. DEFINE PROTOTYPE IDEATE UNDERSTAND TEST OBSERVE IMPLEMENT 2 EMPATHY.
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Transcript of EMPATHY 1. DEFINE PROTOTYPE IDEATE UNDERSTAND TEST OBSERVE IMPLEMENT 2 EMPATHY.
EMPATHY
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DEFINE PROTOTYPEIDEATEUNDERSTAND TESTOBSERVE
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EMPATHY
Pacific free clinic story or arbuckle café story
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The trauma nurse’s perspective
Noise
Assertingauthority
Managing patient information
Identity confusion
Crowding & traffic
Trauma
“Many times people just don’t listen to me. I don’t feel like I have authority.”
“Many times people just don’t listen to me. I don’t feel like I have authority.”
“During a 99 there might be 50 people in the room that I have to manage.”
“During a 99 there might be 50 people in the room that I have to manage.”
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An overloaded trauma nurse
To feel authoritative in order to reduce the trauma room traffic to ensure fast, quality patient care.
USER NEEDS
What is it?
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Empathy: the intellectual identification with or vicarious experiencing of the feelings, thoughts, or attitudes of another
You can think through the experience of another by understanding them completely
You can feel what another is feeling by immersing yourself completely in an experience
More about it…
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Needfinding: discovering people’s explicit and implicit needs so that you can meet them through your designs
need: a physical, psychological or cultural requirement of an individual or group that is missing or not met through existing solutions
Empathy Methods
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• Understand: read books, articles, watch movies, talk to experts• Interview: Talk to the user• Observe: Observe the user• Immerse: Put yourself in the user’s shoes
Some interview tips…
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• Have a good conversation.• Prompt the person to tell you stories.• Talk about feelings.• Follow up with ‘why?’
Have a good conversation.
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Have a good conversation.
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IntroProjectIntro
Yourself
Build Rapport
Evoke Stories
Explore Emotions
Question Statements
Thank & Wrap-up
The Rules of Engage Club
1st RULE: You do not say ‘usually’ when asking a question.
2nd RULE: You do NOT say ‘usually’ when asking a question.
3rd RULE: If someone says “I think” or states a belief or seems to prefer one thing over another, then the conversation is NOT over. Ask why that’s important.
4th RULE: Only 10 words to a question.
5th RULE: One question at a time.
6th RULE: No binary questions, no leading questions.
7th RULE: A conversation started from one question will go on as long as it has to.
8th RULE: If you’re the only one interviewing, then you HAVE to use a voice recorder to capture!
Seek stories.
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“Tell me about the last time you_______________________.”“Tell me about an experience you’ve had with _______________________.”
Talk about feelings.
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“How did you feel when [x] happened?”
“What were you feeling at that point?”
And always follow-up with ‘why?’
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Practice Interview
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Turn to your partner and interview them about their health regimen. [2 min each]
Remember:• Have a good conversation.• Prompt the person to tell you stories.• Talk about feelings.• Follow up with ‘why?’
Observation
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WHATHOWWHY
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What is this person (or persons) doing?
How are they doing it? Pretend you are describing the picture to someone not looking at it.
Why are they doing it this way? Take a guess. Start to form a story.
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Empathy: The Bird’s Eye View
WHAT (what are they doing in the photo?)
HOW(how are they doing it?)
WHY(why are they doing it this way?
Take a guess!)
-picking root vegetables -smiling, even though it looks bigger than them, it looks fun
-somehow it’s been made into a game…gardening is fun…getting messy is fun to them
concrete emotional
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Empathy: Whose LifeAttribute The Character
Name
Age and Life-Stage
Occupation
Family Situation
Hobbies and Interests
Attitudes towards Health
Key Values
Media Interests (music, movies, etc)
Personal Strengths and Weaknesses
A regular ritual
Loyalty to a brand
A source of pleasure
A habit desired
A habit he/she wants to kick
Something under control
Something out of control