How Thinking Like a Designer Can Unlock Organic GrowthTo truly grow your business, invest in the things that don't go out of style: quality, freedom and purpose.

ByDerek Nelson

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

When my company decided to go full time, we made a big decision right off the bat: As designers, we wanted to focus our energy onmakingthings. If we couldn't grow by the quality of our work, we didn't want to grow at all. So, we put funding rounds and sales strategies aside for the time being and got started.

Related:Design thinking – Is it for you and me?

We quickly learned that people are attracted to companies that lead with design. The numbers bear it out. A study by DMI shows that such companiesoutperform the stock market by 228 percent. Why? Good design conveys a clarity of mission, a sense of purpose and a healthy disdain for unnecessary distractions.

Thinking like a designer, in fact, has been a reliable way for us to build a bootstrapped, organic company. Today, as a team of 30 people, we've seen this mentality help us focus on what really matters: the work, the experiences people have and what we can do to create sustainable growth year after year.

Here are a few design approaches that may be helpful to apply to your business:

1. Don't "pivot" on who you are.

Accepting that smart people often fail is a key to the entrepreneurial economy, but it's resulted in a "fetishization of failure," with too many founders abandoning business strategies from one week to the next.

Designers know that brands that endure combine successive iteration with a clear purpose -- and have the discipline to stick with that purpose, forgoing the urge to tinker.

Guinness is an example; it's beengrowing recentlyby adding beers to its lineup, updating its glass design and opening the Brewers Project -- a lab where brewers can explore new recipes. But the company has also known whennotto change. It's been committed to its story and identity since 1862. But what if, when faced with a bad quarter, an ambitious designer said, "It's time for something more modern" and then threw out that famous harp logo? Would we still root for Guinness?

Pivoting on tactics should be encouraged. We should iterate, test assumptions and get feedback before we reach conclusions. But we shouldn't pivot on what we stand for. Be patient, and see your vision through, even when times get hard. Customers recognize and reward that consistency.

2. Think like a customer.

The best designers can get into a user's mindset, and a key principle of user experience design is that users like to be delighted in unexpected ways.

A good example is howSlackhandles cancellation. Its service monitors user accounts, and if someone hasn't logged in for 14 days, it automatically makes the account inactive. That way, if a client forgot to remove an employee who is no longer with the company, it won't be charged. Slack's service hurts its immediate bottom line but achieves something more important: It shows that the company cares more about its relationship with its customers than monthly numbers.

Related:Why a Good User Experience Is the Most Overlooked SEO Strategy

In a service business like ours, people notice when we're forgiving on scope, when we overdeliver or when we show flexibility in a way they wouldn't expect. We work to make flexibility the exception instead of the rule.

3. Empower designers to do their best work.

The recent Uber rebranding had all the hallmarks of client-directed design, which is usually a handy euphemism for bad design. The work had potential, but the end result was confusing, disjointed, often literally misaligned -- and reportedly directed by the CEO.

任何设计师看发生了什么事with Uber can almostfeela businessperson pointing to his or her screen and stating, "I'm not a designer, but. . ." before pointing to where each pixel should go.

To combat this, organizations have to set up empowered teams -- and trust them to do what they do best. Your company should do this, too: Instilling a mindset of ownership intoanyteam is as important as anything you do as a business owner. Companies with this mindset oftenconsider themselves insurgentsand naturally fight off stagnation.

Even as you grow, foster a culture of ownership. Instead of increasing complexity andkilling growth, make sure everyone is given the freedom to drive the mission.

4. Reject distractions.

Employee engagement isn't a mystery. People want to be challenged to do their best work and trusted to make decisions. They want to be paid well, to be treated respectfully and to work with people they like.

Furthermore, employees understand how businesses work. They're very aware that the money spent to book a famous band for the holiday party has essentially been taken out of their paychecks. When72 percent of people are stressed about money, it may be time to rethink that multimillion-dollar office building you had planned in lieu offinding better work, doing better work and giving the team a bigger part of it.

Like any good design, focus on what matters. The rest is a distraction.

5. Don't hack your growth -- earn it.

Designers and "growth hackers" are natural adversaries. This is because the best design is rooted in long-term strategic thinking.

Growth hackers, on the other hand, often cobble together disparate systems or methodologies for quick wins and short-term growth before moving on. Those actions may be great for meeting the sales quota, but not every company is a software-as-a-service startup. In many industries, this mindset is counterproductive.

想象一下你自己的高端时尚线:你designer lays out a beautiful, clean redesign of your new website. The marketing person requests a big phone number be placed in the top-right corner of the site. Even more, she asks for a red arrow to point to it. "This drives leads," she says. And, to the dismay of the designer, she's right -- leadsdoincrease the day that the update goes live. The marketer moves along.

Later on, however, trust in the brand erodes. Customers don't feel a connection with it -- they feel that they're just being sold something. That may work for a more transactional company, but it won't work for a high-end fashion line where customer sentiment is everything.

The message here? There aren't any shortcuts to long-term growth. With an organic-growth business, build sustainable and repeatable relationships instead of focusing only on numbers.

Related:3 Steps That Will Empower Your Employees to Act Like CEOs

To truly grow your business,invest in the things that don't go out of style.That means creating a culture of quality, freedom and purpose. It's ultimately not about design. As graphic designer and filmmakerSaul Bassonce said, design is just "thinking made visible."

Wavy Line
Derek Nelson

Partner and Creative Director, Clique Studios

Derek Nelsonis a partner and creative director atClique Studios, where he helps build and introduce innovative solutions for the digital market. Based in Chicago, Clique Studios is an award-winning design and engineering company building digital experiences for high-growth organizations.

编辑器的选择

Related Topics

Business News

An 81-Year-Old Florida CEO Just Indicted for a $250 Million Ponzi Scheme Ran a Sprawling Senior Citizen Crime Ring

Carl Ruderman is the fifth senior citizen in the Miami-Fort-Lauderdale-Palm Beach metropolitan area to face charges in connection with the scam.

Business News

'Soul Crushing': Internet Sleuths Notice Something Is Very Off With This Condo Listing

From the grey carpets to the fluorescent lights, it's obvious that this home was not always a home.

绿色Entrepreneur

Phoenix Has Hit 110 Degrees for a Month, But This One Invention Is Cooling Things Down a Tad

For the Arizona city amid a record-breaking heat wave, cool surfaces bring a modicum of relief.

Business News

'Awful Advice': Barbara Corcoran Slammed For 'Tone Deaf' Business Advice to Interns

The "Shark Tank" star shared tips on social media about how interns can increase their chances of getting hired full-time, but the public reaction didn't go as planned.

Growing a Business

3 Ways Leaders Can Use Data to Grow in Shrinking Economies

Business leaders need to find a way to make sense of this dynamic environment and use it to their advantage — and they can do so with data. Here's how.