Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Erik Michielsen: How is your creative toolbox changing?
Jon Kolko: My creative toolbox is starting to have much more grownup tools in it, which
usually mean things that are about talking and not things about making. And it's weird
that that is true. And so, the examples that I'm thinking of are facilitation tools and
tools that help drive large organizational and strategic change as opposed to tools for
making things look a certain way, act a certain way, feel a certain way. This strategy, design
thinking, whatever catchy name you want to use for it, has always sort of rubbed me a
little bit the wrong way because I'd always felt like it wasn't enough without the making.
And so, I think I still believe that. But I'm becoming okay with using a designerly
way of working to convince people of things, to get people to see my perspective, to drive
an argument. And that will be the way that design plays out in policy and in law. I mean,
design is going to be embedded in all of these external disciplines or fields and that's
how it's going to work. There will still be artifacts but that's not the endgame, they're
a means to an end and I think the toolbox that I have is widened to include those. Before,
frankly, I didn't give them the time and day. I thought they were sort of fake. I still
have that same concern that without making an artifact, and I'm using artifact loosely,
even digital or a service is an artifact to me but without making something. You're not
doing design work. You're doing something else and it's probably just argument. But
I'm becoming more comfortable integrating those issues of argument a rhetoric into the
toolkit that I have.