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Lada Gorlenko | ArtefactUX Strategy for Patient-Centric
HealthcareUX STRAT 2015
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Case studyHow to bring UX and business strategies together – in healthcare and beyond
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The context
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ArtefactA design and innovation company that creates products and services for a preferable future
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Group Health Cooperative (GHC) A non-profit health care system that coordinates care and coverage for 600,000 members
Population Health Management (PHM)A program to engage Group Health members in health & wellness activities that lead to healthier lifestyle
Because let’s face it Most Americans could do better to have a better, healthier life
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Brief for ArtefactCreate comprehensive, long-lasting and member-centric business requirements for PHM
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ReframingHow can Group Health support sustainable behavioral change of its members?
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Key questions• What behaviors do we want to
change? • What do GHC members need to do
to change those behaviors?• What can Group Health do to
support members in what they need to do?
UX StrategyUX Strategy
Business Requirements
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Business Strategy UX Strategy Business Requirements
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The approach
Understand the business
Understand the members
Define the desired outcomes
Create mechanisms to enable them
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Activities• Multi-phase sequence of SME
workshops • Each phase uses the materials
generated earlier, extends them, and adds details to the same broader picture
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Framing questionsOutcomesProject implications
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Understanding the businessStakeholdersProgram objectives
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A good strategy is business-centered
Understanding stakeholders: questions• Who is involved and how?• What is the process? What is
the organizational culture? • How can we improve
organizational experience through this engagement?
Understanding stakeholders: outcomesUnique project approach = engaging the organization based on its distinctive needs, attributes & behaviors
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Project implications1. Made the project a case for
engagement2. Skipped new research in favor of
mining organizational knowledge 3. Skipped ‘fancy deliverables’ to
focus on knowledge transfer to the client
2 months, 2 people• 30+ sessions total • 20+ SME workshops • 25+ SMEs across the
business
Mapping business objectives: questions• How do program objectives
relate to each other?• What outcomes do they
enable?• How does each objective
depend on each target audience?
• How do different business units contribute to each objective?
Mapping business objectives: outcomesMap of Business Objectives = connecting success of each objective to other objectives, specific target audiences and individual business units
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Project implications1. Re-framed the program
perspective2. Re-prioritized target audiences3. Clarified how each business unit
contributes to each objective
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Understanding the membersHealthcare Mindset Model Target audiences
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A good strategy is people-centered
Understanding healthcare mindset: questions • What influences people’s
attitudes and behaviors about their wellbeing?
• How can these factors be meaningfully classified?
Understanding healthcare mindset: outcomes Healthcare Mindset & Behavior Model = defining what’s important to making decisions and changing behaviors related to health and wellness
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Project implications• Developed an operational
framework of key influences relevant to health engagement, across all audiences
Understanding target segments: questions • What is the most appropriate
way to look at the target population?
• How do existing segmentations fit?
• Which segments are in/out of scope?
• What are the most interesting stories to tell about the target audiences?
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2690331/table/tbl2/
http://www.england.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/1-seg-strat.pdf
Understanding target segments: outcomesHealth Engagement Segmentation = looking at target audiences in a way that matches the program objectives
Set of Personas =telling the stories of target segments
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Project implications1. Avoided reinventing the wheel2. Taught the client how to use rich
research insights 3. Connected a large body of
knowledge
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Defining the desired outcomeBehavior Change Journeys
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A good strategy has clearly defined outcomes
Defining Change Journeys: questions • What does short-term success
look like for each target persona?
• What is long-term success? • What does each persona need
to do to get from one state to another?
Defining Change Journeys: outcomesChange Journeys = defining the desired outcomes and action items for each target audience in different points in time
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Project implications1. Made tacit knowledge explicit and
shared across all stakeholders 2. Detailed the desired behavioral change3. Had honest informed discussions about
program expectations and success metrics
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Creating mechanisms to enable the changeCore cross-audience opportunitiesKnowledge transfer
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A good strategy lives after you leave
Creating the mechanisms: questions • How can we support key steps
in the transformation of each persona?
• What are the common themes? • What does the business need
to do to enable each common theme?
• What are the common business requirements across themes?
Creating the mechanisms: outcomes8 PHM opportunities = critical avenues to impact multiple audiences17 use cases = stand-alone building blocks of related business requirements98 high-level business requirements = individual business investments to support the identified opportunities
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Project implications1. Fully connected the UX strategy
with the business strategy and requirements
2. Enabled clear opportunity prioritization
3. Mapped existing services to the new strategy and identified gaps
Knowledge transfer: questions • How can we ensure that the
client can continue the work we started?
• How can we ensure that the strategy can accommodate change?
Knowledge transfer: outcomesProject Manual = detailing the what, how and why of everything we did during the project
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Project implications1. Gave the client confidence that
they can justify every requirement
2. Taught them how to be Design Thinkers
3. Established a long-term partnership between Artefact and GHC
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Takeaways
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1. Connecting UX and business strategies means understanding the business to the degree you understand the users, and then more.
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2. Being specific about the desired outcomes makes a UX strategy specific, feasible and practical.
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3. In creating strategies, the process is a vital part of the deliverable.
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“This is wonderful. Thank you for the detail, for taking the complex project and showing us how to simplify it, for making us look good.”
--- PHM Program Director
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5 signs of a robust strategy• Tailored to the organization• Focused on people• Has clearly defined outcomes• Lives after you leave• Makes complex things simple
We conceive, design, and develop technology products and services for the 21st century
Artefact was founded in 2006 and has a rapidly-growing staff of researchers, software developers, business developers, brand strategists, and visual, industrial, and interaction designers. Our company was founded by two Microsoft veterans, Gavin Kelly and Rob Girling, to become one of the world’s premier strategic design firms focused on software-mediated experiences. Our mission is to consistently deliver second-to-none quality, insight, creativity, and business value for our clients.
artefactgroup.com