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Double Diamond Design Approach

Product Design and Technologies
StudyPulse

Double Diamond Design Approach

Product Design and Technologies
01 May 2026

Activities and Purposes Within the Double Diamond Design Approach

What Is the Double Diamond?

The Double Diamond is a structured design process model developed by the UK Design Council (2005). It maps the design process as two successive diverge–converge movements, represented visually as two diamonds.

It is the primary design process framework in VCE Product Design and Technologies.

The Four Phases

Diamond 1: Discover and Define

Phase Activity Purpose
Discover (Diverge) Research, observation, user interviews, market analysis, literature review Open up the problem space; understand the real need or opportunity from multiple perspectives
Define (Converge) Synthesise research; formulate design brief; define evaluation criteria Narrow findings to a clear, specific problem statement and brief

Diamond 2: Develop and Deliver

Phase Activity Purpose
Develop (Diverge) Ideation, sketching, concept generation, prototyping, testing Generate and explore multiple possible solutions
Deliver (Converge) Refine concepts; select final design; develop proof of concept; produce; evaluate Narrow to the best solution and realise it

Note: VCAA maps these four phases to: Investigate and Define / Generate and Design / Evaluate and Plan / Manage and Produce.

Thinking Modes Within the Double Diamond

Critical thinking
- Analytical, evaluative, evidence-based
- Used in: evaluating research, critiquing existing products, assessing concepts against criteria
- Converging phases rely heavily on critical thinking

Creative thinking
- Generative, associative, imaginative, non-linear
- Used in: ideation, exploring unconventional solutions, generating multiple concepts
- Diverging phases rely heavily on creative thinking

Speculative thinking
- Future-focused, hypothetical, questioning assumptions
- Used in: imagining how products might change with emerging technologies; ‘what if’ scenarios; design fiction
- Particularly relevant in Unit 4 when examining future technologies

Relationships Between Thinking Modes and Phases

  • Diverging (Discover, Develop): Creative and speculative thinking dominate — generate possibilities without premature judgment
  • Converging (Define, Deliver): Critical thinking dominates — evaluate and select based on evidence and criteria
  • Both diamonds involve iteration: movement is not strictly linear; findings may require returning to earlier phases

Key Activities in Each Phase

Investigate and Define (Diamond 1):
- Stakeholder research and user interviews
- Observation and empathy mapping
- Market and competitor analysis
- Sustainability research
- Synthesis into design brief with evaluation criteria

Generate and Design (Diamond 2 — Graphical):
- Sketching and ideation (thumbnails, roughs)
- Annotated design options
- Mood boards, material samples
- CAD modelling and rendering
- Evaluation of graphical concepts against criteria

Develop and Refine (Diamond 2 — Physical):
- Physical prototyping and mock-ups
- Material testing and trialling
- End-user feedback and testing
- Selection and justification of final concept

Plan and Manage:
- Scheduled production plan development
- Risk assessment
- Time and resource management

KEY TAKEAWAY: The Double Diamond provides a structured yet flexible framework for moving between exploration (diverge) and decision-making (converge). Both diamonds are essential — skipping the first means solving the wrong problem.

EXAM TIP: Know the name and purpose of each phase. Be able to explain what activities occur in each and what type of thinking is dominant. VCAA questions often ask about the ‘purpose’ of a specific phase or activity.

VCAA FOCUS: The Double Diamond is explicitly named in the study design. Use the term ‘Double Diamond’ in exam responses — do not just say ‘the design process.’

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