1.Thinking
First stage of the design thinking process, designers are ready to generate ideas. You’ve grown to understand your users and their needs in the Empathize stage, and you’ve analyzed your observations in the Define stage to create a user centric problem statement.
With this solid background, you and your team members can start to look at the problem from different perspectives and ideate innovative solutions to your problem statement.
There are hundreds of ideation techniques you can us such as Brainstorm and Worst Possible Idea techniques are typically used at the start of the ideation stage to stimulate free thinking and expand the problem space.
This allows you to generate as many ideas as possible at the start of ideation. You should pick other ideation techniques towards the end of this stage to help you investigate and test your ideas, and choose the best ones to move forward with either because they seem to solve the problem or provide the elements required to circumvent it.
2.Implementaion
Second stage is implementation. Implementation is the execution or practice of a plan, a method or any design, idea, model, specification, standard or policy for doing something.
As such, implementation is the action that must follow any preliminary thinking for something to actually happen.
In an information Design technology context, the definition of implementation encompasses the processes that happen after the customer buys the product to get it operating properly.
3.Presentation
Presentation designers craft an array of ideas, stories, words, and images into a set of slides that are arranged to tell a story and persuade an audience.
Presentation design is actually a combination of certain elements, which are text optimization, font selection, color and background selection, icon selection, and figures.
If you want to have a perfect, totally polished presentation, you should pay close attention to each element. Here are five steps that will help you move rationally.