Exploring the Opportunities and Challenges of European Design Policy to Enable Innovation. The Case of Designscapes Project
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Design as Innovation-Enabler
- Design as an input of innovation, whereby design is regarded as a creative resource when applied to specific design domains like graphic design, engineering design, and industrial design, etc. Professional designers are the depositories of design knowledge and, therefore, the main actors of innovation. Through investment in design resources and professionals, firms can not only improve product form and style but also create a symbol that communicates a quality image and product integrity [57]. Owing to its emphasis on ergonomic and/or aesthetic dimensions, this type of innovation is often seen as incremental and a consequence of radical technological innovation in order to adapt users´ expectations and thus, is linked to a firm´s differentiation strategy. Concepts like design innovation [50] and design for innovation [51] can be included in this category.
- Design as an output of innovation, where design refers to the generation of meaning. The goal of innovation is to achieve novel and radical changes in socio-cultural models of consumer behaviours and values, rather than to meet their expectations with appealing form and aesthetics; accordingly, this should be done through radical, rather than incremental, innovation [58]. In this process it is necessary to shape a ‘design discourse’ [55] based on networked research processes with different parties including users, firms, designers, products, communication media, cultural centres, schools, artists and so on. Along with technology-driven innovation, design-driven innovation acts through radical changes in meaning in the business field, meaning that design should be integral to the business model, and even to organizational strategy, to sustain competitive advantage [53,59]. Verganti’s design-driven innovation [56] and its derivative concept, design-led innovation, [53,54], are examples.
- Design as a process of innovation with design as a key problem-solving process. In this context, the stages of the design process largely coincide with those of innovation maturity [47], so that design-centred activities can be properly integrated into the process of innovation and connected to all the other efforts undertaken to stimulate the inception, development and transition of innovation. From this point, design is a ‘social technology’ [60] that provides an effective user-centred approach to the empowerment of both professional designers and ordinary people, to adopt a new way of engagement in the process of human-oriented innovation within and beyond the organisation and, consequently, with particular emphasis on design’s potential to facilitate social innovation as well as measurement of innovation at system level. An example is design-enabled innovation [48].
- it is a human-centred activity that incorporates users into the research and design phase of each innovation process;
- it makes use of specific operational tools to research, contextualise, model, test and re-design;
- it bridges multi-disciplinary knowledge, including scientific, commercial and humanistic;
- it proposes a holistic approach encompassing aspects such as functionality, ergonomics, usability, accessibility, product safety, sustainability, cost and intangibles.
3. Design Policies in Europe
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Materials Collection
4.2. Materials Processing and Analysis
5. Results
5.1. A Brief Description of Multiple Cases
5.2. Dimensions of SWOT Factors and Prioritisation
5.3. Identifying Major Factors
5.4. Common and Specific Factors among Countries
5.5. Common and Specific Factors among Sectors
5.6. Institution and Technology Factors
6. Discussion and Conclusions
7. Limitation and Implication
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- An example of EU-initiated program is Design for Europe, a web-based European design innovation platform to support peer-learning, networking and partnerships with the aim of boosting the adoption of design in innovation policies and support creation of capacity and competences to deliver these policies.
- Examples of EU-funded design projects are IDeALL, EuroDesign, DeEP, SEE Platform, EHDM, REDI, Design4Innovation and DESIGNSCAPES, among other, which focus on the development of design and innovation theories and practices across Europe under a wide range of topics from value measurement, capacity building, design management and strategies, to policy design, etc.
- According to Design Policy Monitor (2012, 2014, 2015), 15 out of 28 EU member states including design in their national design policies are Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and the UK, among which Estonia, Denmark, Finland, France, and Latvia developed design action plans. A list of national policies for design in EU member states is available at [21].
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Type | Awareness | Provision | Incentive | Recognition | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Diagnosis | There is a lack of knowledge and information about the value of design, or a lack of capacity to leveraging design for business and innovation. | There is not a desired supply of design, quantitatively or qualitatively, in the market owing to some certain constraints, e.g., market failure. | There are obstacles preventing practitioners from adopting design. | There is consensus on the necessity for design-enabled innovation. | |||||
Intended Target | Policy—‘government inform that you can use design as innovation-enabler’. | Policy—‘government will do it’. | Policy—‘if you do it, you will get rewards; otherwise, you will get punished’. | Policy—‘you have the right to do it’. | |||||
Intended Outcome | Increasing demand for design as an enabler of innovation | Increasing supply of design-enabled innovation | Increasing willingness of design adoption | Appropriating design-enabled innovation | |||||
Tools | Information | Consultation | Network | Direct investment | Training | Institutionalised facilities | Direct subsides | Tax incentive | IPR support |
The European Design Innovation Initiative/EU/Government operation | X | X | X | - | - | - | - | - | - |
IDeALL/EU/Policy surrogate | X | X | X | - | X | - | - | - | - |
Designscapes/EU/Policy surrogate | X | X | - | X | X | X | X | - | - |
Design Boost/Denmark/QUANGO 1 | X | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Design Bulldozer/Estonia/QUANGO | X | X | - | X | - | - | - | - | - |
Design Leadership Programme/UK/QUANGO | X | X | - | X | X | - | - | - | X |
Design Innovation Tax Credits/France/Government operation | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | X | - |
Design Your Profit/Poland/QUANGO | - | - | X | - | X | - | - | - | - |
SME Wallet/Flanders, Belgium/gov’t operation | - | X | - | - | X | - | X | - | - |
Design Silesia/Silesia, Poland/Policy Surrogate | X | X | - | - | X | - | - | - | - |
Design and Craft for the Trentino Region/Trentino, Italy/QUANGO | - | X | - | - | - | - | X | - | - |
A Designer for Enterprises/Lombardy, Italy/QUANGO | X | - | - | - | X | - | X | - | - |
Bid for World Design Capital 2022/Valencia, Spain/QUANGO | X | - | X | X | - | X | X | X | - |
Strengths
|
Weaknesses
|
Opportunities
|
Threats
|
Primary Force | Secondary Force | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Internal level | Organisation | Performance | ||
Common Network & collaboration1 Low threshold for entering1 | Specific Participation-oriented method(IT)1 Trust (NL) | Common Positive outcome & impact1 Upscaling potential | Specific Sustainable potential (NL) Low product diffusion (IT & DK) Negative outcome (IT & NL) | |
Production | Knowledge | |||
Common User friendliness Innovativeness1 Dependency1 Time & money consuming1 | Specific Ease & simplicity (IT) Cost saving (IT) Lack of funding (IT & UK) 1 | Common Knowledge & skill1 Lack of knowledge | Specific Lack of experience (UK) | |
External level | Environment | Institution | ||
Common Increasing public awareness1 Local support1 Increasing political interests1 Lack of awareness & interests1 Lack of local support | Specific Community building movement (DK) Changes in social & political climate (IT & DK) | Common / | Specific Tax credits (NL) Inefficient bureaucracy (IT)Insufficient appropriation mechanism (NL) Policy & regulatory uncertainty (UK) Legal constraints (IT & UK) | |
Market | Technology | |||
Common Growing market1 Increasing demand1 Innovation diffusion1 Competition1 | Specific Visibility (NL) Increasing investment (DK) User retention (DK) Lack of market (IT & UK) Resistance to change (IT & NL) Over-commercialisation (NL) | Common / | Specific Technological advances (NL & DK) S&T constraints (NL) |
Primary Force | Secondary Force | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Internal level | Organisation | Performance | ||
Common Network & collaboration1 Low threshold for entering1 | Specific Trust (Business) Noninstitutionalised collaboration (Business) | Common Positive outcome & impact1 Upscaling potential | Specific Negative outcome (People) | |
Production | Knowledge | |||
Common Innovativeness1,2 Lack of fundingDependency1,2 Complicity1,2 | Specific Ease & simplicity (business) Cost saving (business & people) Lack of participation (people) | Common Lack of knowledge 2 | Specific Lack of specialist (business) Lack of experience (business & civil society) Newcomer (civil society & government) | |
External level | Environment | Institution | ||
Common Increasing public awareness1,2 Actively engaged community 2 Lack of awareness & interests1 Lack of local support | Specific / | Common / | Specific Tax credits (business) Political & regulatory uncertainty (business & people) Inefficient bureaucracy (business & civil society) | |
Market | Technology | |||
Common Growing market1,2 Increasing demand1 Innovation diffusion1,2 Competition1,2 Psychological behaviour & barrier 2 | Specific Less competition (academy) Increasing investment (business & people) Resistance to change (business & people) Low adoption rate (business & people) Over-commercialisation (people) | Common / | Specific S&T constraints (people) |
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Li, C.; Rausell Köster, P. Exploring the Opportunities and Challenges of European Design Policy to Enable Innovation. The Case of Designscapes Project. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5132. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12125132
Li C, Rausell Köster P. Exploring the Opportunities and Challenges of European Design Policy to Enable Innovation. The Case of Designscapes Project. Sustainability. 2020; 12(12):5132. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12125132
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Chuan, and Pau Rausell Köster. 2020. "Exploring the Opportunities and Challenges of European Design Policy to Enable Innovation. The Case of Designscapes Project" Sustainability 12, no. 12: 5132. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12125132
APA StyleLi, C., & Rausell Köster, P. (2020). Exploring the Opportunities and Challenges of European Design Policy to Enable Innovation. The Case of Designscapes Project. Sustainability, 12(12), 5132. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12125132