KP

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Kleber Puchaski, PhD(RCA) Education PhD Vehicle, Royal College of Art. 2004-08 MA Design and branding strategy, Brunel University. 2003-04 Specialization in marketing, UFPR, Brazil. 1999 Design products, PUC PR, Brazil. 1994-97

Experience StarDesign consultant 2001-03 HSBC Bank (Senior designer) 1997-2002 Racco Cosmetics (Designer) 1996 Cultural Foundation of Curitiba (Designer) 1995

Design Awards Electrolux Design Lab 2006 – Finalist. Barcelona, Spain. Scholarship Award - CNPq. 2004-08. III Mostra de Design - PUC PR - Brazil - 1997 MOYA Concept car. 11 The Best of Design (Design association - PR) - Brazil - 1998 MOYA Concept car.


Case PhD research at the Royal College of Art

feel the future


Perceptions of branding and design towards product development in the motor industry The car industry is on the brink of a new era. Carmakers have reinvented themselves significantly at least three times during the last hundred years. First, Ford with mass production, then Sloan with the planned obsolescence and then Toyota with the Lean System have all revolutionised the industry. However, there is much evidence that kleber puchaski €2008

it is time again for a change towards a sustainable future. This research brings to light three areas that will certainly have a huge impact on this change: design, branding and innovation. The meaning of design has extended beyond form and function to a new way of thinking when dealing with contemporary issues. Branding has also evolved from a visual representation of goods to an intangible asset of a company, which in many cases is even more valuable than the tangible assets. Thus, innovation is the oxygen that sustains both design and branding.



The main contribution of this research results from an original approach that brings together theory and practice in the demanding area of vehicle design. The central research question is: How can users’ perceptions of branding and design be determinant in product development within the motor industry? A unique way of gathering users’ insights from a blend of qualitative methods was developed and applied through a series of workshops in Brazil and in the United Kingdom (UK). This approach has been fundamental to the research hypothesis, which proposes that the automotive industry should transfer from a productdriven to a user-centred model when developing their products. The outcome of this new methodology is presented through an imagery map, which was entirely developed by the participants as their own representation of their feelings and desires about what the future drivers of change might be in the next twenty years. Convergences and divergences were identified from

the users’ insights and the results were collated into four future scenarios that have, in turn, served as the basis for a brief of fifteen projects developed by the Royal College of Art (RCA) MA Vehicle Design students. The participants then validated those projects by stating their opinions about whether or not the concept vehicles matched with their perceptions. A substantial positive response from the participants gave support to the research hypothesis. Hence, all the thoughtful designs explored further the users’ insights highlighting the importance of design thinking throughout the process. The final outcomes of this research are expected to become a theoretical catalyst designed to generate further constructive knowledge and awareness about the relevance of engaging the user at the early stage of the design process.



Participants are innovators or early adopters in their respectively areas. An ethinographic studied were carried out to better undestand users’ lifestyle.

During the focus group, a brainstorming session was carried out in order to explore the participant’s five senses when driving.

Focus groups took place in Brazil and in the UK. It was designed to take the participants on a journey through past experiences by capturing the hidden emotions and aspirations towards mobility.

Participants were asked to summarise the exercise with five words which represent drivers that might affect mobility in twenty years time. Subsequently they translated these words into a Visual Map.




Analysis

Analysis was addressed around the convergences and divergences which emerged not only from a cross-cultural perspective but also from the visual maps based on their aspirations. The users’ insights were then collated into four future scenarios.




Kleber Puchaski, PhD(RCA) 6, Jerome House 5 - 13 Glendower Place SW7 3DU London - UK kp@kleber-puchaski.com + 44 07969 164845 www.kleber-puchaski.com


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