This is cool! It reminds me of the way filmmakers use post-it notes of different colors to organize a storyline / edit. UX designers use a similar method to map out the user’s journey. It makes a lot of sense especially, tho, for planning a work on paper, which is not only finite, but of a specific number of pages, including B and C, as you note. And yeah— totally looks like it adds a lot of fun to the process! ✨
I’m a service designer by day, so perhaps that’s why it’s something that feels so familiar! The whole user centred design family really does love its post-it notes
Thank you. I am fascinated by the processes behind such creative work. I have to admit they called me ‘Mr Flowchart’ when I was in clinical service improvement and a good mapping allowed wonderful creativity to emerge from seemingly close structured methodologies. It seems somehow the constraint allows boundaries to both be broken and contained. Thank you.
I love a good flow chart! I totally agree that sometimes giving yourself a bit of a framework just opens up so many possibilities you wouldn’t have thought of if you’d just started with an (always intimidating) blank page
Thanks heaps for sharing your process! It's always fascinating to see what goes into making something. And I love the post-it note style workflow!
This is cool! It reminds me of the way filmmakers use post-it notes of different colors to organize a storyline / edit. UX designers use a similar method to map out the user’s journey. It makes a lot of sense especially, tho, for planning a work on paper, which is not only finite, but of a specific number of pages, including B and C, as you note. And yeah— totally looks like it adds a lot of fun to the process! ✨
I’m a service designer by day, so perhaps that’s why it’s something that feels so familiar! The whole user centred design family really does love its post-it notes
Thank you. I am fascinated by the processes behind such creative work. I have to admit they called me ‘Mr Flowchart’ when I was in clinical service improvement and a good mapping allowed wonderful creativity to emerge from seemingly close structured methodologies. It seems somehow the constraint allows boundaries to both be broken and contained. Thank you.
I love a good flow chart! I totally agree that sometimes giving yourself a bit of a framework just opens up so many possibilities you wouldn’t have thought of if you’d just started with an (always intimidating) blank page