Abstract

Abstract: The practice of solving issues by putting the requirements of the customer first is known as "design thinking." Its foundation lies in the compassionate observation of people's interactions with their surroundings and the use of an experiential, iterative process to generate creative solutions. The "human-centered" nature of design thinking refers to the utilization of data showing how customers interact with a good or service, as opposed to how a company or other party anticipates such interactions. A product or service must be continuously improved by designers seeing how users interact with it in order to be really human-centered. In design thinking, this is the "iterative" phase. In place of incessant study or ruminating, it encourages moving fast to test prototypes. Unlike traditional problem solving, which is a linear process of identifying a problem and then finding solutions, design thinking only works if it is iterative. It's less of a way to arrive at a single solution, and more of a way to continually evolve your way of thinking and respond to consumer needs.

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