A new very first shitty draft of a service design principle inspired by a parenthood frustration with music streaming apps.
It’s time to start work. So I open my favorite streaming app to pick some recommended music. These apps are pretty good at suggesting new music based on what you listened to in the past. It feels magical to have your personal DJ at your fingertips.
But this time, my personal DJ turned dumb. Maybe he had a few too many virtual drinks?
The streaming app recommends that I listen to a new kid music album... So in the middle of drum and bass music, I have now lullabies and kid songs in my personalized playlists...
An example of a recommended album: “The slide”... by the artist “The world of the Tinyminitiny”...
When you have a kid, you slowly realize that many services you have used for years have tiny gaps that make them a little more frustrating to use.
What happened here? The service doesn’t recognize that I have a new role as a parent and that, therefore I use the service in different roles now:
Me role: I play the music that I like for work, fun, workout and maybe even a romantic evening
Dad role: I play music for my kid to have fun, and it’s definitely not the same music
Services like Netflix have found a good workaround for this. They let you create different profiles.
Like this, all the Disney like movies that my wife watches don’t break my recommendations of rather dark films and series.
So if you are a service that offers recommendations to its users based on what they did or consumed in your app, think about this:
How can you help me get different recommendations for the various roles I have in my life where I use your service?
Thanks to my mate Romain Collaud for reminding me this little frustration and sharing with me a screenshot of his recommended “dad albums”.
I would build on your idea and propose a few other titles:
Will keep these ideas in mind for the next draft ✂️ If you have a preference or other idea, would obviously love to read your feedback.
Thanks again Nemos ❤️
Amazon builds recommendations based on things I’ve looked at or purchased, but I can look at this history and remove items at will so they won’t be used to make recommendations. Knowing this exists means I feel more confident looking for items that I need but might be embarrassing, as I can just excise it from my history afterwards.
If I can remove the 37 plays of “Space Unicorn” from my Spotify history, I would be a happy man.
Thanks again for the feedback!
The second draft of this Service Design Principle
Remember that I have multiple roles in my life
So let me ask you this.
Footnotes
(2) Read the principle "Let me remove things your AI shouldn't use for recommendations" to explore how you can create better recommendations in your app or service.
Daniele's personal notes
The third draft of this Service Design Principle
Footnotes
Daniele’s notes