Day 45 of #100DaysofAI 🧪
Today I'm learning about various frameworks that can help give structure to my unstructured thoughts.
Frameworks Toolkit
These frameworks collectively empower you to approach the challenges of Phase 3 with a robust toolkit for innovation, iteration, and user-centric development. By integrating design thinking, Minimum Viable Tests, and Jobs-to-be-Done into your workflow, you're equipped to navigate the complexities of bringing AI and no-code ideas to life efficiently and effectively, ensuring your projects are both agile and deeply rooted in addressing real-world needs.
💡 Design Thinking (IDEO)
Provides a structured approach to creativity, encouraging divergent thinking to explore multiple solutions before converging on the most viable option, helping you navigate complex problem spaces.
Facilitates User-Centric Solutions: It encourages you to deeply understand the user's needs and experiences, ensuring that solutions are not just innovative but also highly relevant and impactful.
https://designthinking.ideo.com/
🔀 Minimum Viable Test
Helps you identify the smallest experiment needed to test the core value proposition of your idea, allowing for quick validation without extensive resources.
Guides Focused Learning: Directs attention to learning about what matters most for the success of the idea, ensuring that efforts are concentrated on validating critical uncertainties.
https://review.firstround.com/the-minimum-viable-testing-process-for-evaluating-startup-ideas/
🎯 Jobs-to-be-Done
Helps you understand the underlying reasons why customers "hire" a product or service, focusing on solving real problems and fulfilling actual needs.
Makes Decision-Making Easier: With a clear understanding of what jobs are most important to your users, you can decide more easily where to focus your energy. It's like knowing exactly where to dig to strike gold, making sure every effort counts towards making something awesome.
Conclusions after reviewing the content
I found a interesting article while reading I spent some extra time exploring: