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Deep Service Design

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Hi. I’m Michael! Good to meet you. @schoeyfield | libux.co [email protected]

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same page you are here

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I will argue that the status of service design and its impact as a professional field is impacted by the absence of a single consistent definition of the area, while the spread of professional practices and the varied backgrounds and training of its practitioners. — Jess Leitch

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#LibUX Service design is an emerging field focused on the creation of well thought through experiences using a combination of intangible and tangible mediums. — The Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design, 2008

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#LibUX Service design is a user centered approach to designing products and services, aiming to give the user a unique and memorable experience as well as optimizing business processes. — Amiz Azipoor,

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#LibUX Service design is a holistic, co-creative, and user-centered approach to understanding customer behavior for the creation or refining of services. — Joe Marquez and Annie Downey

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The user experience is the measure of your end-user’s interaction with your library: its brand, its product, and its services.

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The user experience is the measure of your end-user’s interaction with your library: its brand, its product, and its services.

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The user experience is the measure of your end-user’s interaction with your library: its brand, its product, and its services. User experience design describes the use of tools, techniques, and the creative application of behavioral knowledge about users to improve that user experience.

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#LibUX In a model where the user experience is a success metric, and user experience design describes the use of tools, techniques, and the application of behavioral knowledge to improve that metric, then the service design — concerned with the systems that underlie a service as its performed — determines the potential impact UXD can have on that score.

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service designers design services to improve user experience what we do it for what we do they won’t ever admit this but

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When 
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When 
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 I see an opportunity to make a part of our service better

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When 
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 I see an opportunity to make a part of our service better design the shit out of it

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When 
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 I see an opportunity to make a part of our service better design the shit out of it make the UX better!

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When 
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When 
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When 
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 [situation] [motivation]

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When 
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 [situation] [motivation] [expected outcome]

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As a 
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As a 
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As a 
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 [persona] [action]

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As a 
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Some services are better defined by the job they do than the customers they serve.

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As a 
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As a 
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 YOUNG DAD

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As a 
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 YOUNG DAD SEE UPCOMING EVENTS

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As a 
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 YOUNG DAD SEE UPCOMING EVENTS ENTERTAIN AND EDUCATE THE KIDDO

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When 
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When 
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 I am planning my trip to the library

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When 
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 I am planning my trip to the library see upcoming events, exhibits, and programs

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When 
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 I am planning my trip to the library see upcoming events, exhibits, and programs prepare and time my trip properly

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The Jobs-to-be-Done framework focus on uncovering the functional, emotional, and social circumstances that influence the users’ decision making process when they switch from one service to another. Jobs to be Done

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insideintercom.io

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I go to the library to _

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I go to the library to _ pass this class

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The services libraries provide are means to an end.

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The services libraries provide are replaceable.

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Understanding the job to be done is the key to designing useful services.

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First Thought The JTBD Timeline Passive Looking Event #1 Active Looking Event #2 Deciding Buying Experiencing Satisfaction

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jtbd.info

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First Thought The JTBD Timeline Passive Looking Event #1 Active Looking Event #2 Deciding Buying Experiencing Satisfaction

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Jim Kalbach’s Practical Model for JTBD

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DELIGHT HIGH FRUSTRATION LOW

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DELIGHT HIGH FRUSTRATION LOW

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ux DELIGHT HIGH FRUSTRATION LOW

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ux DELIGHT HIGH FRUSTRATION LOW

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Kano substantiated in a 900-person study that customers responded to features in five different ways. These, as our model takes shape, can be largely represented as curves across the quadrants we see emerge from behind the axes. Emotional response types

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Kano created a reliable and really quite straightforward method for measuring users’ reactions to the presence of a feature. There is some amount of footwork involved for library staff tasked with performing administering the survey, but the ease of the methodology makes this model is a real convenience. Measuring responses

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How would you feel if this feature were present?

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How would you feel if it weren’t?

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How would you feel if it weren’t?

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How would you feel if it weren’t?

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How would you feel if it weren’t? I like it

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How would you feel if it weren’t? I like it I expect it

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How would you feel if it weren’t? I like it I expect it I am neutral

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How would you feel if it weren’t? I like it I expect it I am neutral I can tolerate it

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How would you feel if it weren’t? I like it I expect it I am neutral I can tolerate it I dislike it

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practicalservicedesign.com

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libux.co/blueprint-for-trello sorry if it sucks

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Thanks! @schoeyfield | libux.co [email protected]