Who Runs The World? Women in Design at the Designer Fund Event

In December, I had the pleasure of joining a group of amazing speakers at the Designer Fund “Women in Design” event.

The Designer Fund has published a recap of the event with audio and slide links, and I recommend you check it out. The presentations are filled with great stories, smart insights, warmth and humor. Every speaker showed the passion and courage that are key to doing great design work and loving what you do. Two other summaries are here: this Fast Company article and an article on The Paly Voice by Kate Apostolou.

At the event, I spoke on a topic that seems to never go away, and is particularly hot right now: How to be successful in a business with a gender imbalance. The recent conversation about whether Silicon Valley is a meritocracy has helped to crystalize my thinking on the issue. (For backstory, see posts like this one by Eric Reis, the CNN documentary Black in America and responses such as this from Vivek Wadha.)

It doesn’t matter whether there is bias in the Valley. Even just the threat of bias is enough to cause women to leave the field, to avoid putting themselves out there at conferences and in the media, and to perform below their actual capabilities. This is a well-documented social phenomenon called Stereotype Threat.

So how can women succeed? Be confident. Believe that you (women) are up to the challenge that a possibly biased environment would present. Then go forward and Run The World (girls). Here’s my talk and the related audio:

 

If you have a chance to attend a Designer Fund event, do it! The community is smart, engaged and passionate. It was one of the most exciting events I’ve been to in the past few years.

Tasty brainfood from the New Context Conference

In October, the LUXr team attended and presented at Digital Garage’s New Context Conference. In addition to meeting a host of fabulous Japanese techies, entrepreneurs and investors, we also had a lot of amazing food. Especially tasty was the food for thought that happened at the conference. Here’s the LUXr teams’ contributions.


Introduction to Lean Startup

(by Janice)

Jump into the Lean Startup ideas with this short and succinct summary of the key concepts.


MVP : What is it and why we (all) should Care

(by Kate)

This short presentation helps you get your mind around what a Minimum Viable Product is, why it’s worth doing, and some tips & tricks to get started.

See Eric in action : The Principles of a Lean Startup at the Commonwealth Club

You probably already have your copy of The Lean Startup book. (You may have already finished it.)

But there’s nothing like hearing the whole deal direct from the source. That’s why you should grab a ticket ($20) and hear Eric Ries speak at The Commonwealth Club on Tuesday, Sep. 27th at 6:30pm.

Eric’s a fun, engaging speaker with an important message. A message that can change how you start, manage and operate your business. Whether or not you consider yourself a startup, you should hear what he’s got to say.

While you’re there, come say “Hi” to us! Jason, Tobi and I will be there with bells on. See you there!

Tokyo Startup Scene Is Heating Up

Last week, Jason and I went to Tokyo to do a one-day workshop for 120 entrepreneurs, hosted by the Open Network Lab at Digital Garage. If you’re not familiar, DG  was founded by well known angel investor Joi Ito. Today Digital Garage is the hub of startup action in Tokyo. The company provides venture investment, operational support for American imports like Twitter, and incubator services for seed-stage startups.

We were surprised to learn that Tokyo has a voracious appetite for Lean Startup and UX thinking. We initially set up the workshop for 80 people. When it sold out quickly, we upped the capacity to 100. When that sold out, we knew it was going to be a very interesting day!

In the end, we had about 120 people in the room for a hands-on Lean User Experience all-day workshop.

You’d expect, by reputation, that the Japanese startup community would be reticent—a little unwilling to dive into the radically collaborative, selectively uncontrolled Lean UX process that we advocate. Turns out, you’d be wrong.

Throughout the day, we used sketching, collaborative critique, dot voting, and assorted other techniques. Participants dove into the mock customer development interviews and translated their learnings into new product ideas. It was an active, engaged, crowd filled with people I’d love to work with. Having simultaneous translators helped (arigato gosaimas!).

Most impressive was the gratitude that participants expressed for our visit to Tokyo. We’ll be going back and heading on to other countries. In the next several months, LUXr coaches will be visiting Jakarta, Singapore, Chile, Mexico…keep an eye out for announcements.

If you’re anywhere in the world and want to bring a LUXr workshop, please drop us a note.