Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Not more things but better ways to….



Current growth-based economic systems are having negative impacts socially, environmentally, and economically. For as much as new products try and are able to solve problems, we can’t ignore the reality that as more and more new things get pushed into the world, a host of problems result from this forward momentum. Because products play a role in larger systems, they can have enormous influence on the systems in which they participate. The stresses appear across every industry including transportation, construction, food production, and consumer goods, to name a few.

Consider the clothing industry. Through the channels that provide “mass” and “fast” fashion the promise of affordable and “on trend” clothing is always within grasp. But this never-ending offer of newness fuels an invisible system of disposability that undermines the stability of the environments and economies in which they operate. In the US alone, 13 million pounds of textiles move annually into the landfills with no hope of ever being used again. When moved into the global reuse market, these products are proving to destabilize already fragile local foreign economies. (1,2)

Post-growth and the organizations that love it
If pushing new goods into the world isn’t always the answer, then what other options are out there? Individuals, businesses, and governments alike are exploring and experimenting with new organizing principles where economies can prosper by making use of what already exists rather than depending primarily on new goods entering the market. Anne Thorpe in her book, Architecture & Design versus Consumerism: How Design Activism Confronts Growth describes it like this: “A major implication of a post-growth economy is the likely shift in emphasis from new build (or fabrication of new goods) to maintenance, long-term management, renovation, and retrofit.”(3) She also nods to a new type of thinking centered around use versus ownership—one where access trumps possession.

Simply put, new business opportunities are being designed to take existing goods and materials and create ways to keep them in play for longer while also designing infrastructures that provide options for access over ownership. Together they’re finding ways to take the pressure off of new goods to carry the responsibility of economic growth.

In a profession that excels at systems thinking, designing new services, infrastructures, policies, and platforms that can contribute to stable economies is an exciting prospect. Designing invisible, stabilizing systems may not seem as glamorous as the development of new or novel products, but this shift from objects to systems and from products to services opens up a host of design opportunities that are some of the most critical, challenging and rewarding problems worth solving today.


Case Study 1: Patagonia’s Common Threads Initiative

The California-based apparel company, Patagonia, recently announced a program called “Common Threads Second Home.” The service accepts used Patagonia clothing for trade-in and sale, essentially “rewarding” customers who clean out their closets and garages of their used but still serviceable products, and bring them to the company, so they can be put back into circulation. This service is part of the company’s, Common Threads Initiative, which is a larger vision of partnering with consumers to create an over-arching system of services, communications and production methods focused on maintaining resources and stabilizing consumer growth.

With sales last year of over $414M, the company is no small start up trying out some new idea. The value they’re bringing resonated enough with their customers to enable the company to make over $43M in cash and in-kind donations to date.

Case Study 2: The Homemade Food Act and ForageSF








Economic opportunities that make use of existing resources don’t always come from established, resource-rich businesses. Recently, The California Assembly (along with 25 other states) has passed The Homemade Food Act. This law effectively opens the door for people to have businesses to produce and sell their homemade foods. This new policy supports economic growth by allowing citizens to start these small cottage industries using existing tools and spaces i.e. the use of their own kitchens. California is effectively removing one of the critical barriers for these businesses, which is the need to build out “new” spaces that are regulated and monitored by the Department of Health. 
Economic opportunities compound through organizations like ForageSF who offer wrap around services to educate potential merchants and provide platforms to market and sell their goods.


Not more things but better ways to….
If we fast-forward and imagine a steady state, where reuse, upkeep and access are the central drivers, we start to see a host of opportunities that serve as a foundation for these systems including the ability to provide maintenance, education, public access and skill building to name a few. Each of these has the potential to provide economic, social and environmental benefits.

To make a shift to these new models, it’s helpful to think about how individual problems and goals fit into larger ecosystems or contexts. This helps us understand what resources are at our disposal to help serve the needs and goals people having for using these systems.
  • Transportation: People don’t necessarily need a new car. Instead we need ways to make our vehicles last longer. We also need more compatible ways to get from A > B, so owning a car doesn’t feel like our only option.
  • Healthcare: Healthcare organizations don’t necessarily need new devices. Instead, we often need better connectivity between the people and tools that already exist.
  • Housing: Society doesn’t necessarily need new houses and buildings to live in. Instead we need access to spaces that can support the ways we as individuals and groups want or can afford to live.
  • Clothing: We don’t necessarily need brand new clothes to update our wardrobes. Instead, we need access to clothes that are new to us. Or we need access to materials and skills that help us re-envision what we already have.
These examples illustrate that it’s not more things we need but better ways to access and keep in play what already exists.
















The potential for designers 
A critical part of our job as designers is to explain and even convince clients, peers, and society at-large how the world works today and as importantly, the direction it could be heading in the future. In the conscious design of objects and services that focus on resilience and access, enormous opportunities exist by improving and integrating existing product offerings with larger goal-directed systems. It’s our job to tell that story and show how it can work.

For everyone involved there are opportunities to benefit from the value and impact that reconfiguration and increased access can provide. For businesses, like Patagonia or ForageSF, opportunities exist to expand their reach with less investment than when relying on new production alone. There are opportunities to reduce the idling capacity of existing resources. And there are opportunities to demonstrate how appropriate, forward-looking practices translate into stronger brand perception and loyalty.

For designers who focused on understanding human behavior, we have the opportunity to learn about emotional drivers like trust and rewards that influence how and why we use the products and services we do. For example in the shift from ownership to access, the emphasis shifts from the immediate rewards based on purchase and ownership — my car, my dress, my house — to a model where reward potentially comes from the craft of users. Reward and stimulation are paced by new patterns of access, such as planning ahead to reserve a car or negotiating with sharing partners. The quality of stimulation is also different, shifting from the getting and caring of things, to the development of relationships within the system of use (4). With this deeper understanding of human behavior in combination with our systems thinking skills, we have a fighting chance of designing game-changing services, platforms and infrastructures that move us in a positive and profitable direction.

My hope is that as designers, we’re open to the idea that product-focused solutions may be limiting our possibilities and our imagination for building a more stable future. My hope too is that by aligning with existing infrastructures and by thinking about products as part of larger goal-driven services systems rather than stand-alone solutions, that we will uncover benefits such as increased efficiency, access, civility, and creativity. Along the way, we’re likely find innovative and truly satisfying ways of creating stability and longevity with less material investment.

(1) North America only.Figures based on a 2010 US Environmental Protection Agency report 
(2) “Used-Clothing Donations and Apparel Production in Africa", Frazer, Garth. The Economic Journal. Volume 118, Issue 532, pages 1764–1784, October 2008.
(3) Architecture & Design versus Consumerism: How Design Activism Confronts Growth. Thorpe, Anne. Earthscan. 2012.
(4) Post Growth Fashion and the Craft of the UsersFletcher, Kate. Earthscan. 2012.