We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Driving Desired Futures
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
20 January 2014

Design Thinking
Headed by the slogan “Design Thinking,” a debate
has unfolded over the last ten years about design methods, which goes
far beyond the specialist boundaries of design disciplines. Executives
and business owners today recognize the potential for economic
innovation lying in the creative and analytical mindset of designers.
The extensive literature available on “Design Thinking” focuses on the
methodology of the design process, while the conditions necessary to
spark innovation processes in the first place, have long remained more
or less unnoticed.
Driving Desired Futures starts here and
asks how established innovations arise from a simple idea. What criteria
are mostly likely to be the basis from which the ideas of an individual
can take hold in a social system? What are conditions, under which they
can become incorporated into a diverse group of people? What topics
induce managers to choose and then to invest in a specific idea?
Questions such as these are pursued in international contributions by
renowned experts, using the first digital camera as a case study. They
identify the individual and social processes associated with the
exchange and implementation of new ideas.
- Analysis of innovation processes based on a well-known example: the first digital camera, which was developed by Kodak
- International experts from different fields analyze groundbreaking ideas and how they became established
Michael Shamiyeh, Professor an der Universität Linz und Head der Design Organization Media (DOM), University of Arts and Design, Linz.