New Technology / Innovation Policy
Follow innovation policy, technology regulation, industrial strategy and institutional decisions shaping the future of new technology.
Ryan's three operating truths
Topic
operating truths in design management
Key insights
- Speed and quality being a dichotomy is false
- You can do both speed and quality at the same time
- Speed is what makes for better quality
- The key to achieving speed and quality is iteration
- Class one disagreements are disallowed
- Class one disagreements occur when one person cannot explain their argument to the others satisfaction
Perspectives
short
Ryan Lucas
- Claims speed and quality are not mutually exclusive
- Argues that iteration enhances quality
- Proposes disallowing class one disagreements to improve communication
- Highlights the importance of collaboration among engineering, product, and design
- Emphasizes the need for overlapping responsibilities in teams
Key entities
Timeline highlights
00:00–05:00
Ryan Lucas, VP of Design for Rippling, asserts that speed and quality are not mutually exclusive and can be achieved simultaneously through iteration. He emphasizes the importance of collaboration among engineering, product, and design teams to create great products.
- Speed and quality being a dichotomy is false
- You can do both speed and quality at the same time
- Speed is what makes for better quality
- The key to achieving speed and quality is iteration
- Class one disagreements are disallowed
- Class one disagreements occur when one person cannot explain their argument to the others satisfaction