What can we learn from shortcuts Tom Hulme

When we’re designing new products,

services or businesses,

the only time you’ll know
if they’re any good,

if the designs are good,

is to see how they’re used
in the real world, in context.

I’m reminded of that every time
I walk past Highbury Fields

in north London.

It’s absolutely beautiful.

There’s a big open green space.

There’s Georgian buildings
around the side.

But then there’s this mud trap
that cuts across the middle.

People clearly don’t want to walk
all the way around the edge.

Instead, they want to take the shortcut,

and that shortcut is self-reinforcing.

Now, this shortcut
is called a desire path,

and it’s often the path
of least resistance.

I find them fascinating,

because they’re often the point
where design and user experience diverge.

Now at this point, I should apologize,

because you guys are going to start
seeing these everywhere.

But today, I’m going to pick
three I find interesting

and share what actually it reminds me

about launching new products and services.

The first is in the capital city
of Brazil – Brasilia.

And it reminds me that sometimes,

you have to just focus
on designing for a real need

at low friction.

Now, Brasilia is fascinating.

It was designed by Niemeyer in the ’50s.

It was the golden age of flying,

so he laid it out like a plane,
as you can see there.

Slightly worryingly,

he put most of the important
government buildings in the cockpit.

But if you zoom in,
in the very center of Brasilia,

just where the point is there,

you see it’s littered with desire paths.

They’re absolutely everywhere.

Now, they thought that they
had future-proofed this design.

They thought in the future
we wouldn’t need to walk anywhere –

we’d be able to drive –

so there was little need
for walkways or pavements.

But as you can see, there’s a real need.

These are very dangerous desire paths.

If we just pick one, in the middle,

you can see it crosses
15 lanes of traffic.

It won’t surprise you guys

that Brasilia has five times
the pedestrian accident rate

of your average US city.

People are resourceful.

They’ll always find the low-friction route

to save money, save time.

Not all these desire paths are dangerous,

I was reminded flying here
when I was in Heathrow.

Many of us get frustrated
when we’re confronted

with the obligatory walk
through duty-free.

It was amazing to me

how many people refused to take
the long, meandering path to the left,

and just cut through to the right,

cut through the desire path.

The question that’s interesting is:

What do designers think
when they see our behavior here?

Do they think we’re stupid?

Do they think we’re lazy?

Or do they accept
that this is the only truth?

This is their product.

We’re effectively
co-designing their product.

So our job is to design
for real needs at low friction,

because if you don’t,
the customer will, anyway.

The second desire path I wanted to share

is at the University of California.

And it reminds me

that sometimes the best way
to come up with a great design

is just to launch it.

Now, university campuses are fantastic
for spotting desire paths.

I think it’s because students
are always late and they’re pretty smart.

So they’re dashing to lectures.

They’ll always find the shortcut.

And the designers here knew that.

So they built the buildings

and then they waited a few months
for the paths to form.

They then paved them.

(Laughter)

Incredibly smart approach.

In fact, often, just launching
the straw man of a service

can teach you what people really want.

For example, Ayr Muir in Boston
knew he wanted to open a restaurant.

But where should it be?

What should the menu be?

He launched a service,

in this case a food truck,

and he changed the location each day.

He’d write a different menu
on the side in a whiteboard marker

to figure out what people wanted.

He now has a chain of restaurants.

So it can be incredibly efficient

to launch something
to spot the desire paths.

The third and final desire path
I wanted to share with you

is the UNIH.

It reminds me that the world’s in flux,

and we have to respond to those changes.

So as you’ll guess, this is a hospital.

I’ve marked for you on the left
the Oncology Department.

The patients would usually stay
in the hotels down on the bottom right.

This was a patient-centered organization,

so they laid on cars for their patients.

But what they realized when they started
offering chemotherapy

is the patients rarely
wanted to get in cars.

They were too nauseous,
so they’d walk back to their hotels.

This desire path that you see
diagonally, formed.

The patients even called it
“The Chemo Trail.”

Now, when the hospital
saw this originally,

they tried to lay turf
back over it, ignore it.

But after a while, they realized
it was an important need

they were meeting for their patients,

so they paved it.

And I think our job is often
to pave these emerging desire paths.

If we look back at the one
in North London again,

that desire path hasn’t always been there.

The reason it sprung up

is people were traveling to the mighty
Arsenal Football Club stadium

on game days,

from the Underground station
you see on the bottom right.

So you see the desire path.

If we just wind the clock
back a few years,

when the stadium was being constructed,

there is no desire path.

So our job is to watch
for these desire paths emerging,

and, where appropriate, pave them,

as someone did here.

Someone installed a barrier,

people started walking across
and round the bottom as you see,

and they paved it.

(Laughter)

But I think this is a wonderful
reminder as well,

that, actually, the world is in flux.

It’s constantly changing,

because if you look
at the top of this image,

there’s another desire path forming.

So these three desire paths remind me

we need to design for real human needs.

I think empathy for what
your customers want

is probably the biggest leading indicator
of business success.

Design for real needs

and design them in low friction,

because if you don’t offer them
in low friction,

someone else will, often the customer.

Secondly, often the best way
to learn what people really want

is to launch your service.

The answer is rarely inside the building.

Get out there and see
what people really want.

And finally, in part
because of technology,

the world is incredibly flux
at the moment.

It’s changing constantly.

These desire paths are going
to spring up faster than ever.

Our job is to pick the appropriate ones

and pave over them.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

当我们设计新产品、

服务或业务

时,你唯一能
知道它们是否好

,设计好不好的时候,

就是看看它们
在现实世界中的使用情况,在上下文中。

每次经过伦敦北部的海布里球场时,我都会想起这一点

这绝对是美丽的。

有一大片开阔的绿地。

旁边是格鲁吉亚
建筑。

但是还有
一个横穿中间的泥坑。

人们显然不想
一直绕着边缘走。

相反,他们想走捷径,

而这条捷径是自我强化的。

现在,这条捷径
被称为欲望之路

,它通常是
阻力最小的路径。

我觉得它们很吸引人,

因为它们通常
是设计和用户体验分歧的地方。

现在在这一点上,我应该道歉,

因为你们将开始
到处看到这些。

但今天,我将选择
三个我觉得有趣的

并分享它实际上让我

想起了推出新产品和服务的事情。

首先是在
巴西的首都——巴西利亚。

它提醒我,有时,

你必须专注
于以低摩擦来满足真正的需求

现在,巴西利亚令人着迷。

它是由 Niemeyer 在 50 年代设计的。

那是飞行的黄金时代,

所以他把它布置得像一架飞机,
正如你所看到的那样。

稍显忧虑的是,

他把大部分重要的
政府大楼都放在了驾驶舱内。

但是如果你放大,
在巴西利亚的正中心,

就在那个点所在的地方,

你会看到它到处都是欲望的路径。

他们绝对无处不在。

现在,他们认为
这种设计已经过时了。

他们认为未来
我们不需要步行到任何地方——

我们可以开车——

所以几乎
不需要人行道或人行道。

但正如你所看到的,确实存在需求。

这些是非常危险的欲望路径。

如果我们只选择一个,在中间,

你可以看到它穿过
15 条车道。

巴西利亚
的行人事故率

是美国平均城市的五倍,这不会让你们感到惊讶。

人们是足智多谋的。

他们总会找到低摩擦的路线

来省钱、省时间。

并非所有这些欲望路径都是危险的,当我在希思罗机场时,

我被提醒在这里飞行

我们中的许多人

面对强制性
的免税手续时会感到沮丧。

令我惊讶的是,有

多少人拒绝
沿着漫长而曲折的道路向左走,

而只是向右

切,穿过欲望的道路。

有趣的问题是

:设计师
看到我们在这里的行为时会怎么想?

他们认为我们是愚蠢的吗?

他们认为我们很懒惰吗?

还是他们接受
这是唯一的真理?

这是他们的产品。

我们正在有效地
共同设计他们的产品。

所以我们的工作
是以低摩擦来满足真正的需求,

因为如果你不这样做
,客户无论如何都会这样做。

我想分享的第二条愿望路径

是在加州大学。

它提醒我

,有时
想出一个伟大设计的最好方法

就是启动它。

现在,大学校园非常
适合发现欲望路径。

我想这是因为学生
总是迟到而且他们很聪明。

所以他们争先恐后地听课。

他们总能找到捷径。

这里的设计师知道这一点。

所以他们建造了这些建筑物

,然后他们等待了几个月
的路径形成。

然后他们铺平了它们。

(笑声)

非常聪明的方法。

事实上,通常,仅仅推出
一项服务的稻草人

就可以告诉你人们真正想要什么。

例如,波士顿的 Ayr Muir
知道他想开一家餐馆。

但它应该在哪里?

菜单应该是什么?

他推出了一项服务,

在这种情况下是一辆食品卡车,

并且他每天都改变位置。

他会
在白板记号笔的侧面写下不同的菜单,

以弄清楚人们想要什么。

他现在拥有连锁餐厅。

因此

,启动一些东西
来发现需求路径可能非常有效。 我想与你分享

的第三条也是最后一条欲望之路

是UNIH。

它提醒我,世界

瞬息万变,我们必须应对这些变化。

所以你会猜到,这是一家医院。

我在左边为你标记
了肿瘤科。

病人通常会住
在右下角的旅馆里。

这是一个以病人为中心的组织,

所以他们为病人铺设了汽车。

但当他们开始提供化疗时,他们意识到

患者很少
想上车。

他们太恶心了,
所以他们会步行回旅馆。

你在对角线看到的这条欲望路径
,形成了。

患者甚至称其为
“化疗之路”。

现在,当医院
最初看到这一点时,

他们试图在上面铺
草皮,不理会它。

但过了一段时间,他们意识到
这是

他们为患者满足的重要需求,

所以他们铺平了它。

而且我认为我们的工作通常
是为这些新兴的欲望之路铺平道路。

如果我们再回头
看看北伦敦的

那条,那条欲望之路并不总是存在。

它出现的原因

是人们在比赛日从右下角的地铁站前往强大的
阿森纳足球俱乐部体育场

所以你看到了欲望的道路。

如果我们把时间
倒退几年,

当体育场正在建造时,

就没有欲望的道路。

所以我们的工作是
观察这些欲望路径的出现,

并在适当的时候铺平它们,

就像有人在这里所做的那样。

有人安装了障碍物,

人们开始穿过
底部并绕过底部,如您所见

,他们铺设了它。

(笑声)

但我认为这也是一个很好的

提醒,事实上,世界在不断变化。

它在不断变化,

因为如果你
看这个图像的顶部,

还有另一个欲望路径正在形成。

所以这三个欲望路径提醒我,

我们需要为真正的人类需求而设计。

我认为
对客户需求

的同理心可能是商业成功的最大领先指标

为真正的需求

设计并以低摩擦设计它们,

因为如果你不
以低摩擦提供它们,

其他人会,通常是客户。

其次,
了解人们真正想要什么的最佳方式通常

是启动您的服务。

答案很少在建筑物内。

走出去,
看看人们真正想要什么。

最后,部分
由于技术的原因

,目前世界正在发生难以置信的
变化。

它在不断变化。

这些欲望之路
将比以往更快地涌现。

我们的工作是挑选合适的

并铺平它们。

非常感谢你。

(掌声)