“All the world’s a stage,” Shakespeare wrote in . More and more, I am struck by how much that insight applies to management and higher education. Whether we’re launching a new product or rolling out a new academic program, we need to start testing, piloting, and rehearsing as early as possible in the development process. In other words, we’d all do well to learn a little stagecraft, as I describe in a .
I don’t think it would be overstating the matter to say that stagecraft is at the vanguard of innovation. The idea behind this approach is to stage the entire customer experience by creating a super-realistic version of a complex product or service before finalizing the design. It’s always an experiment. The purpose is to get real-life reactions from users far sooner than in the conventional product development process. You’re looking for critical insights into the innovation without pouring too many resources into the idea.
My interest in this topic stems in part from my research focusing on human-centered design. I’ve been fortunate to work directly with people at , located in Boston’s innovation district in the Seaport. The design firm practices what it calls “deep learning”—observing consumers in action to identify unmet customer needs. Continuum famously used the concept to learn things about floor care that led to the . Fun fact: in recent years Continuum also played an important role in . The consultants helped our core renewal team use design principles such as empathetic listening, attention to narrative, and prototyping.
I call it “stagecraft” because of my exposure to some other Continuum projects. One example I discuss in the HBR piece is a project for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate. The designers used stagecraft to gather very early learning about the future of emergency response management, and in particular how responders will be able to use new technologies . The deep learning included riding around with Boston area EMTs and staging emergencies in a large project room at Continuum.
At the Carroll School, we draw on elements of stagecraft all the time. It’s different with us because when we pilot a class or program, for example, we’re not just staging an innovation. We’re serving real students. But we carry out the experiment in a way that provides both a valuable academic experience for the students and crucial insights for further development of the innovation.
In this fashion, we’ve developed all of the signature Carroll School offerings introduced in the past decade. These include, among others, the multidisciplinary Portico course taken by every first-year student; our expanding focus on business analytics; the Summer Catalyst program for non-management, liberal arts majors; and our latest co-concentration profiled in this issue of the Carroll Connection—Social Impact.
The point is that we don’t adopt ideas just because we like the sound of them. We experiment with them and try to learn key lessons from the experimentation. Our plan always changes and develops along the way, which only confirms that the testing is essential. And yes, failure has to be an option. It’s not much of an experiment if you can’t fail. I think of Jeff Bezos’s comment that Amazon is “the best place in the world to fail,” which I wrote about a year ago in this space. In that spirit, I like to think of the Carroll School as a great place to fail early so as to succeed sooner through experimentation.
Do we stage an entire summer of Catalyst without any real assurance that the concept has legs? You bet. Through observation and experimentation, the testing led to the rigorous and multifaceted academic program now in its fourth summer session. Shakespeare was characteristically on the mark. All the world, including our little corner of it on the Heights, is indeed a stage.
Andy Boynton ’78, P’13
John and Linda Powers Family Dean
Carroll School of Management