The personal disquiet of

Mark Boulton

July 29th, 2010

Designing from one end to the other

A little over a year ago, we pub­lished my first book with Five Simple Steps. A small ripple in the pub­lish­ing industry, but a large splash for us. From that single tent­at­ive toe in the water, we’ve gone and dipped our whole leg in with the pro­duc­tion of six upcom­ing titles — ran­ging from Andy Clarke’s Hard­boiled Web Design to Brian Suda’s Design­ing with Data.

Today sees the ship­ping of Donna Spencer’s ‘A Prac­tical Guide to Inform­a­tion Archi­tec­ture’, and its promp­ted me write a little bit about how the work we did a year ago is now start­ing to pay off.

Donna Spencer's 'A Practical Guide to Information Architecture'

Donna Spencer’s ‘A Prac­tical Guide to Inform­a­tion Architecture’

Design­ing from one end to the other

I’ve said before one of the reas­ons I wanted to pub­lish my own books was because of want­ing to con­trol the pro­cess; from edit­ing through to design and pro­duc­tion. As time has gone on I’ve real­ised that the thing I get a kick out of is being able to con­trol — well, actu­ally, have an influ­ence over — is the entire cus­tomer exper­i­ence; from the moment they look at the web­site to buy the book, right through until they receive it in the mail. Being able to make that jour­ney con­sist­ently is incred­ibly chal­len­ging as ele­ments within the pro­duc­tion chain are always try­ing to take con­trol away from you. Let me give you an example; pack­aging and fulfilment.

There are many pack­aging and ful­fil­ment com­pan­ies across the world. They exist to help large and small com­pan­ies deal with ship­ping goods without the head­ache of hav­ing to store, pro­cess, pack­age and mail out the stock. They do it all for you and you pay for the square foot­age of ware­house space you use, together with a per order ful­filled charge. All good. One thing is com­mon amongst most large ful­fil­ment com­pan­ies, how­ever. They gen­er­ally like to use their own pack­aging. Using your own is more costly for them — so much so, some just won’t enter­tain the thought.

The Five Simple Steps books come in a bespoke box designed to with­stand a fair bit of knock­ing about. You see, due to the slightly heav­ier paper stock, these books weigh in at 1kg each. That’s a fair weight to be dropped onto its corner. The pack­aging also had to look attract­ive. We wanted to cre­ate some kind of unbox­ing exper­i­ence — receiv­ing and open­ing these books should be another step along that exper­i­ence jour­ney. It’s not the end of the line. This got us think­ing a lot more about the cus­tomer jour­ney with us.

Five Simple Steps pack­aging. At 1kg each, these books aren’t light.

This is roughly the jour­ney cus­tom­ers take:

Ini­tial contact

How did the cus­tomer come into con­tact with the book? Was it a refer­ral or ref­er­ence. Word of mouth? Google? Twit­ter? You need to under­stand where they came from and why? How can you make that first impres­sion a mem­or­able one, because those first impres­sions count.

Eval­u­ation

Is this pro­duce for me. Will this book make me a bet­ter designer/developer/IA/project man­ager? How does this book relate to me and my life?

Decision

How much does it cost? Is it worth it? 

Form filling

Nobody, nobody, nobody likes filling in forms. They’re always dif­fi­cult and riddled with poten­tial errors. How can you make it not just easy, but pleas­ur­able? Well, some­times just being easy is pleas­ur­able enough.

Ful­fil­ment

Now I’ve par­ted with my cash, what hap­pens? Do I receive an email? When? Are my books being shipped? When? 

The wait­ing

How do I know what is going on? Is my order just sit­ting on a shelf somewhere?

Receiv­ing and Unboxing

Receiv­ing pack­ages is always excit­ing. It’s not the hard­est thing in the world to make pleas­ur­able. But, with some care­ful atten­tion paid to pack­aging, labelling, lan­guage and mater­i­als and you can make open­ing a box more delight­ful than using the thing inside. Just look at Apple.

The diges­tion

The story doesn’t end with receiv­ing the book. Does it deliver on what you prom­ised? If not, how does the cus­tomer go about chan­ging that? 

Of course, what I’m describ­ing here is the pro­cess that’s been around as long as mail order has. It’s not rocket sci­ence, but it’s so, so easy to get wrong. We’ve only just begun on this path and, to be frank, there hasn’t been a week goes by that we haven’t learnt some­thing or screwed up in some way. But regard­less of the pain and frus­tra­tion a cus­tomer may exper­i­ence, there are some things you can put in place to help them for­get. Again, a side­ways glance at Apple.

Spikes Of Joy

When I describe this to poten­tial cli­ents, I talk about ‘Spikes of Joy’ — those tiny moments that bring a smile to your face. If you’re listen­ing to music, it’s the moments when you feel a wave of joy; when the right notes com­bine to cre­ate a phys­ical reac­tion. The same approach can be applied to design of all sorts. It cer­tainly applies to web design, but I’m not talk­ing about web design here, but some­thing more akin to Ser­vice Design. Through­out the Five Simple Steps cus­tomer jour­ney, we want to cre­ate spikes of joy. Small moments of pleas­ure. Sur­prises. Care and atten­tion. Love. And, you know what? It’s really, really difficult.

Mak­ing some­thing with care and atten­tion is easy. That will always shine through in a product. Authen­ti­city, truth and love is always easy to spot too. If product design­ers and man­u­fac­tur­ers care — every step of the jour­ney — you, as a cus­tomer, will be very sat­is­fied at the end of that jour­ney. BUT, it does not mean there will be moments of pleas­ure along the way. Sure, it may go without a hitch, but you could exper­i­ence it with a com­plete straight face. What’s hard is con­nect­ing the mundane pur­chas­ing jour­ney with moments of human pleas­ure. That’s dif­fi­cult to do. 

Books and Joy

I’ve always deeply loved books. I trained to be a book designer. I love their form, their smell and the know­ledge they hold. Mak­ing books joy­ful things isn’t too hard. Mak­ing pur­chas­ing books is. How do you make that pro­cess more than enjoy­able? How do you cre­ate spikes of joy?

I’d love to know what ideas you may have.

16 Responses to “Designing from one end to the other”

  1. Andy Walpole said on: July 29th, 2010 at 6:07 pm

    I like filling in forms!

    Con­grats on the up-coming publications

  2. Ilias said on: July 30th, 2010 at 12:57 am

    Any chance the first book is going to get a second print?

  3. Jeff Van Campen said on: July 30th, 2010 at 10:26 am

    We’ve been design­ing a sim­ilar pro­cess and have been pay­ing a lot of atten­tion to the cus­tomer jour­ney. We’ve been call­ing them “bright spots,” but I really like the phrase “spikes of joy.” I think it cap­tures what we’re try­ing to achieve better.

    Thanks for the post. Read­ing it brought a spike of joy to my morning.

  4. Luke Jones said on: July 30th, 2010 at 1:01 pm

    Woo, can’t wait for my copy to appear.

  5. alex morris said on: August 2nd, 2010 at 1:37 pm

    A lot of par­al­lels here with the notion of ‘design­ing for delight’.

    Giles Col­borne has a great present­a­tion on just that.

    http://www.cxpartners.co.uk/cxinsights/designing_for_delight.htm

  6. zeb said on: August 4th, 2010 at 11:53 am

    Is it avail­able online for free?? Con­grats on the grear pub­lic­a­tions BTW!

  7. Bored at home said on: August 8th, 2010 at 1:39 am

    Wow I can’t wait!! Good luck :)

  8. Arulius said on: August 10th, 2010 at 12:33 am

    I used to dream of being a writer when I was younger, but I never got more then 20–30 pages into a novel before my ideas dried up. I just recently looked in the Amazon self pub­lish­ing option. I def­in­itely think that is the way to go.

  9. Richard Bateman said on: August 11th, 2010 at 2:46 pm

    Looks great. Can’t wait to get my hands onto these. Really great work.

  10. Luke said on: August 11th, 2010 at 3:06 pm

    ‘Mak­ing books joy­ful things isn’t too hard. Mak­ing pur­chas­ing books is. How do you make that pro­cess more than enjoy­able? How do you cre­ate spikes of joy?’

    This is some­thing that is very import­ant for the sus­tain­ab­il­ity of books (phys­ical books, not PDF books) now that we are in the age of the iPad and Kindle.

    Not only do you need to ask “how do we make pur­chas­ing books more enjoy­able?”, but also “how do we make the act of read­ing books more joyful?”

    Any­way, I’ve always liked the little sur­prises you get in some books like a beau­ti­fully designed, let­ter pressed bookmark.

  11. Wow Costa Blanca Web Design said on: August 14th, 2010 at 10:08 pm

    Looks great!

  12. seolar said on: August 15th, 2010 at 8:44 pm

    Yeah man, I like your work and I can’t wait until I got a pub­lic­a­tion on my hands! It will be great to keep on read­ing your work!
    Thanks a lot for your work

    - Greet­ings from Germany -

  13. 2dpixel said on: August 18th, 2010 at 2:55 pm

    con­grats on the book

  14. Dave Wirth said on: August 27th, 2010 at 11:38 pm

    I have found that even though I try hard to design some­thing with those little spikes of joy, I always feel like I can do much much bet­ter. Totally buy­ing both the books when I get the dough.

  15. 淘宝名鞋馆 said on: August 29th, 2010 at 8:32 pm

    昨天忘记来了,郁闷 !~

  16. BMLCREATIVE said on: August 31st, 2010 at 5:06 pm

    Hey MArk — great col­lec­tion. I know it might be a bit com­mer­cial, but you’ve got to hand it to the guys who pieced together Jamie Oliver’s ‘Jamie at Home’ cook book — that it just a beau­ti­ful and utterly enga­ging piece of design. I sup­pose it helps for­mu­lat­ing your print fin­ish­ing strategy when you know it’s destined to sell X mil­lion cop­ies! Thanks for the post

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  • Me

    Hello. My name is Mark Boulton. I’m a designer, an author, a speaker and I run a small design agency where we work with lovely cli­ents and pub­lish books as we go. This is my blog.

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