Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us! I facilitated Design Sprints a couple times and the results were amazing. Sprints helped us to set up a customer centric product and build realistic app prototypes in just one week! It would be great if you could offer more videos in different languages. I started to share my experiences with design sprints on my YT channel in German, because I did not find any good instruction videos in German language and many clients were asking for that :)
I'm not quite understanding this part "Finally, you’ll pick a *target*: an ambitious but manageable piece of the problem that you can solve in one week." So is the TARGET here is the goal of the Design Sprint? If so, then would it go like this then: *Design Sprint Week > TARGET Week > Then back to Design Sprint Week > TARGET Week?*
The target is usually a literal target on the map, for example, if the biggest challenge in your current project is sign ups, then maybe you target the the copy on the landing page. The idea being, you believe that fixing this 'target' will have the biggest impact on achieving your goal. That's how the goal and the target fit together. The questions will ideally be related to the same target. So continuing with the landing page example, you might have three big questions about the landing page (e.g. do we focus enough on the benefits on the landing page?) and therefore your day 2 will focus on ideas for answering this question. Hope that makes sense.
Also, and I don't fully understand what your list of 'weeks' is suggesting, but you might design and test a solution for one target, and then decide to refine the results even further following test day, or you might decide there is a secondary target that you also need to focus on. In either case, you could then run another sprint, which might end up being shorter than the previous one because you have a lot of the work done, at least for day 1, which you don't need to repeat.
Hello, I am the CEO of elexion, a platform that reports on the problems of silicon valley to send them to entrepreneurs who wish to solve them. If you are a citizen of silicon valley, tell us about the problems you are facing?
1:37 Start at the End
2:15 Make a map
2:31 Ask the Experts
3:04 How Might we
3:22 Organize HMWs
3:41 Pick a Target
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us! I facilitated Design Sprints a couple times and the results were amazing. Sprints helped us to set up a customer centric product and build realistic app prototypes in just one week!
It would be great if you could offer more videos in different languages. I started to share my experiences with design sprints on my YT channel in German, because I did not find any good instruction videos in German language and many clients were asking for that :)
Get this dude a glass of water.
Merci pour les informations.
Exciting!
I'm not quite understanding this part
"Finally, you’ll pick a *target*: an ambitious but manageable piece of the problem that you can solve in one week."
So is the TARGET here is the goal of the Design Sprint? If so, then would it go like this then:
*Design Sprint Week > TARGET Week > Then back to Design Sprint Week > TARGET Week?*
The target is usually a literal target on the map, for example, if the biggest challenge in your current project is sign ups, then maybe you target the the copy on the landing page. The idea being, you believe that fixing this 'target' will have the biggest impact on achieving your goal. That's how the goal and the target fit together. The questions will ideally be related to the same target. So continuing with the landing page example, you might have three big questions about the landing page (e.g. do we focus enough on the benefits on the landing page?) and therefore your day 2 will focus on ideas for answering this question. Hope that makes sense.
Also, and I don't fully understand what your list of 'weeks' is suggesting, but you might design and test a solution for one target, and then decide to refine the results even further following test day, or you might decide there is a secondary target that you also need to focus on. In either case, you could then run another sprint, which might end up being shorter than the previous one because you have a lot of the work done, at least for day 1, which you don't need to repeat.
@@BlairRorani why
@@BlairRorani you lord gav
Why is there so low comments
What you talking about? Sprint?
Hello, I am the CEO of elexion, a platform that reports on the problems of silicon valley to send them to entrepreneurs who wish to solve them. If you are a citizen of silicon valley, tell us about the problems you are facing?
Why does this man's mouth sound so wet?