Lexi Leonetti, junior English major, participated in a ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó winter externship. Read on for her reflections on her time at Method, an experience design firm.
For ten days this winter I had the opportunity to extern at Method under the sponsorship of David Lipkin ’91. David was a history major at ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó and founded Method in San Francisco some years after graduating. Today, Method has over 200 employees in three offices: SF, New York City, and London. Method has collaborated with a multitude of companies ranging from Lush Cosmetics to TED to Google. Their clean and intuitive designs are award-winning, but their work isn’t limited to design; I think placing them somewhere between branding and product consulting is probably the most accurate way to describe their role. Ultimately, it all depends on the specific needs of each client (and what Method finds that they need).
In an initial one-on-one meeting with David, he explained how the best consulting and design comes from finding that essential “thing” about a product or service. What purpose does it serve and why would people (ideally) want to use it? To determine that, Method has a talented team of astute and perspicacious collaborators who know how to think outside a traditional problem-solving process — because they understand that knowing the process has nothing to do with the outcomes. Often times people make a beautiful, substantial “solution,” but it doesn’t solve the right problem or fulfill the exact need. The analytical skills gained from being at ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó are essential to this part of Method’s approach; though ÈËÆÞÓÕ»óies don’t necessarily have the raw craft skills, we have the ability to assess problems and see how your answer can solve the right questions.
Over the course of ten days, I conducted research audits, prepared a presentation of those audits, collected stock photos to fit a presentation of a proposed user journey, participated in an all-day brainstorming session where we tracked several user journeys provided with every possible technological availability, and wrote an entirely new manifesto for the company Method was developing a proposal. This externship went beyond the concrete outcomes, though; simply being in the studio, becoming a temporary part of the team, and taking in all of the shared ideas and collaboration that’s so essential to Method’s work was just as significant as the rest of it. By hanging out, eating lunch at the studio, and striking up conversations with people over the studio’s Chemex coffee brewer (Stumptown was their roaster of choice, ironically enough) I got to hear how different people got to Method through their own unique career paths, as well as a feel for the industry as a whole, extending beyond Method.
This externship sparked my interest in interaction design (IxD), a type of design that shapes the way a user interacts with an interface (generally a digital one). However, this approach can extend to how a user interacts with a product or service. I was able to work and participate in meetings with some of Method’s interaction designers and saw how their talents were actually integrated into the larger projects. Because of my externship at Method, I’ve had incredible first-hand experience at an elite design studio, surrounded by some of the sharpest individuals in the industry. Moreover, I’ve learned what exactly a firm like Method does and how I can shape my own set of skills to find where I fit within this industry.
Tags: reed winter externship , externship, method, design, product design