I believe life is connected.
I believe people are connected
to their social and physical environment,
and I believe mankind
is connected to the planet;
but our society has lost
touch of this connection.
We've built a society
that thinks in straight lines:
we buy things, we use things,
we throw them out, period.
We have companies that try to achieve
maximum growth,
maximum profit, maximum efficiency.
Nature works slightly differently.
In nature, when you use something
and you throw it out, it rots,
and it becomes a source of new life.
It's a cyclical process.
In nature, there is
a dynamic balance of species
that are intricately connected
to each other,
I believe our future
is based on an integration
of these two worlds,
integrating that industrial society
with its natural roots.
So, after I graduated from university
I started making shoes, as you do;
but they weren't just any shoes,
they were the world's first
biodegradable shoes that bloom.
They were shoes that you could wear
just like any other shoes,
and once they were worn down,
you could plant them in the ground,
and the seeds that we put inside
the tongue of the shoes could grow
into a beautiful bouquet of wildflowers;
and of course, the shoes
would decompose into the earth.
It was based on a notion
I had in university
that products can be more
than just perform a function
and look a certain way.
They can offer us a new perspective
on how we see the world.
They can connect us to a bigger reality.
That goes into how we experience products,
and to explain a little bit
how that works,
I'm going to do a little quiz with you.
You don't have to raise your hands
or call out any answers;
just play along in your head,
and we will see where we end up.
I'm going to show you three axes.
The question is
which is the best axe for cutting wood
when you look at these three?
Chances are
you probably took the first one.
This is how we experience
the first dimension of product design:
utilitarian function, what does
the product do, how does it do it,
how well does it do it,
is it comfortable, is it durable?
Second question:
if you have to divide
these three words between the axes,
which one would you say
is aggressive compared to the other ones?
Which one is modest?
I'll give you a little bit of time
to make up your mind here.
If you are anything like my friends,
you said something like this:
first one's modest, second's elegant,
the third one looks a little aggressive.
This is how we experience
the emotional attitude of a product,
it's how a product strikes us
when we see it.
It can be supportive,
it can even be arrogant,
it can be tough, it can be cute.
That was the second dimension
of product design.
Third question: imagine the person
that would own this axe.
I can already see the images
racing in your head,
but I'm going to help you a little bit.
(Laughter)
Which one goes with which axe?
I put it down like this; is that
what you had in mind more or less?
I see a lot of people nodding,
that was good.
First one: a regular axeman,
cutting his wood;
second person,
or the creative type, let's say
(Laughter)
and the third one might not have
cutting wood in his mind
at the moment.
(Laughter)
This is the third dimension
of product experience
and it's the cultural style of a product.
It's basically the style
that we identify with.
A British aristocrat
will have a different style
than a breakdancer from New York.
So when products connect with us
on all three levels,
that's when it hits us in the sweet spot,
and we identify with that product,
and when we buy it,
it becomes an extension
of our identity to the world around us.
But to say that the products
are really meaningful,
that they have a purpose ...
No, you need something else.
I believe there's one more dimension
of product experience we need to consider:
and it's fundamental to creating
those meaningful products with a purpose.
It's based on the work of a psychologist
in the 1960s, called Clare Graves
- look him up -
and in relation to product design,
I call it the belief system of a product.
To explain how that one works,
let's go back to the axes.
Which sentence fits which axe the best?
Which axe fits the idea that life is
about power and conquest?
Which axe is more about
hard work and dedication?
And finally, which maker of the axe,
or the buyer of the axe sees life
as being about self-expression?
I'm making this easy on you.
Anything like you thought?
That's the way we see the world.
The belief system is
basically how you see the world,
and that is the basis
for the purpose of your actions.
If you see life as a competition,
and you want to win it,
you're going to spend
a lot of your time doing things
to try to beat the competition.
So when we go to the axes, and we imagine
the people making those axes,
we can imagine what purpose
they might have making these axes.
I ventured to guess and said,
"If life is about power and conquest,
chances are you're making
that axe to help your tribe
conquer some other tribe."
If life is about hard work and dedication,
maybe you're making this axe to sell it
and provide for your family,
send your kids to school.
If life is about self-expression,
maybe you're helping young artists
to express themselves
by having to make this axe, these axes.
Chances are
one or two of these belief systems
are things that you might identify with;
I doubt you identify
will all three of them.
Chances are as well
one or two of these purposes
might be something
that you could empathize with,
you might want to even support them.
That's the key to making
a product meaningful.
Meaningful products are based
on a belief system we can identify with,
and they serve a purpose
that we can empathize with.
If you look at our little circles
of the product experience dimensions,
I put in this fourth one.
There's still the sweet spot
in the middle, obviously,
where, if a product aligns with our ideas
of the function, the attitude,
the style, and the belief system,
we all want to have it;
but it becomes meaningful,
we want to support
the people making this product.
So the belief system is really the core
behind all the activities
and all the design decisions
that you make as a product designer.
If we look at the dominant system
in Western society
as I've said in the beginning:
we're all about maximizing growth,
maximizing profit, efficiency,
and we can see that in the products
that we find in the stores
when we go to shop.
Most products are cheaply made,
they're not great quality,
we don't use them very long,
they're not easy to repair,
so we thrown them out, buy new stuff
that's usually made with toxic materials,
unhealthy materials, unhealthy ingredients
by people that don't get paid
what they should be paid
not in the circumstances
that they need to survive well.
Is that a system
that we can identify with?
Is that a purpose that we believe in?
No.
We're already seeing
a growing attention
for sustainable products
because subconsciously,
we're already starting to make our choices
based on this belief system, as well.
I think by being aware, consciously,
of how a belief system affects
all the decisions that a company makes,
it allows us to make these choices
more consciously
and show to these companies
that it's worth their while
to change their ways.
Sustainability implies a belief system
that values a dynamic balance
and a symbiotic relationship
between people and their environment.
That was the whole idea
of these shoes I was making.
By adding to the function
based on the belief system,
we added this function of biodegradability
of these seeds that grow into flowers.
And this way, we could connect people
to their natural environment,
make people part
of the natural cycle of life.
It added the bonus
that natural materials turn out to be
really nice for your feet;
it's a great feeling.
It affected the style and the attitude
because we were working with
these natural materials,
putting them
into a very linear, geometric design;
created a unique attitude
for an urban, creative lifestyle.
But it affected our decisions in terms of
supply chain and other things, as well.
We chose to make them
in Europe to keep the line short,
to be able to secure that people got paid
what they needed to be paid
- the right circumstances -
we sourced
all of ours materials in Europe.
Even the people making the shoes
said, "We really like you guys
because otherwise,
we make shoes with glues inside,
and we're inhaling these vapors
the whole day, we go home stoned."
Our shoes are made without glue,
it's a much better experience for them.
It's our choice what products we buy,
and by making that choice,
we force companies to make this change.
When companies are aware
of how the belief system is at the core
of all their activities,
they can evaluate all those activities,
they can look at who are the owners,
whether private or public.
What are their purposes?
What do they see as the goal of life?
How do we treat our employees?
Is it a competitive system?
A cooperative system?
How do we award them?
How do we approach our customers?
How do we relate to them?
How do we treat our partners
in the supply chain?
Finally, how do we treat the planet?
As a company,
that's a daunting thing to do.
If you have to shift gears like that,
it's an enormous change to make,
but you can do that
one little step at a time.
Once you make that commitment,
and you communicate that to people,
you create a purpose for your company,
a purpose that customers like us
can empathize with,
a purpose that connects us
to the shared environment
that we have with the companies,
and the purpose that we want to support
so when we're going to come back
and buy those products,
we'll tell our friends more actively
what we think of these products.
That's, I think,
how we change this system.
So, if we talk about sustainability,
I think we have to start at the root
which is the belief system,
and then, the first question to ask is,
"What is life about for you?"
Thank you.
(Applause)