What are the advantages of writing your Service Design Principles in the open and how to do it?
What are the advantages of writing your Service Design Principles in the open and how to do it?
Service Design Questions and Answers
Basics of Service Design
Basics of Service Design
Examples of good Service Design
Examples of good Service Design
Learning Service Design
Learning Service Design
Service Design and others fields
Service Design and others fields
Service Design tools, apps and methods
Service Design tools, apps and methods
Service Blueprints and Journey Maps
Service Blueprints and Journey Maps
Service Design as a career
Service Design as a career
Hiring service designers
Hiring service designers
Coaching and Service Design
Coaching and Service Design
Service Design portfolio
Service Design portfolio
Service Design workshops and facilitation
Service Design workshops and facilitation
Service Design and Ideation
Service Design and Ideation
Service Design and research
Service Design and research
Service Design and Presentations
Service Design and Presentations
Service Design Principles
Service Design Principles
Service Design projects
Service Design projects
Service Design Books
Service Design Books
Accessibility and Service Design
Accessibility and Service Design
Sustainability and Service Design
Sustainability and Service Design
Service Design in government
Service Design in government
Service Design Philosophy and Mindset
Service Design Philosophy and Mindset
Service Design in Switzerland
Service Design in Switzerland
Why to write in the open?
Writing or sharing your Service Design Principles in the open has a few clear benefits:
Others benefit from your learnings
You get valuable feedback from others to improve your ideas
You set yourself as an expert
You get reactions that motivate you to keep on writing
In the blog post "How I'm building my next free course in the open" I've mentionned 6 reasons why it makes sense to build a course in the open. These can also apply to a Service Design Principles Library:
Get attention: people can discover that there is a course in preparation and if they are interested, can leave their email to get notified of the course launch
Help the curious ones: some extremely curious people don't need the course in its final course to already benefit from it. For these people, they can join the shitty draft version and get already the references and notes that will help them learn further
Get feedback: members of the service design community often share feedback about what they would add or further resources to go further. This allows me to make the course either better or bigger.
Get motivation: when you see that people find what you are building attractive, it's really motivating, and it gives you the energy to continue writing and exploring.
Meet new people: because I shared the work I've built in the open, lovely people from the community offered their help! So I'm working in a less lonely way on this course.
How to do it?
Keep a timeline of all the changes and ideas shared by others
Use website builders (like Podia, Squarespace, Wix, Wordpress) or tools that allow you to share your notes publicly (Notion, Obsidian Airtable, Trello). More details here. Or use a mix of tools
More Service Design questions and answers like this one
Check out all the questions about how to create and use Service Design Principles.
