Though academics have written about the economic value of and need for transformations over the years7,8, its practice first emerged in 2004 when , the UK's national strategic body for design, formed : a self-proclaimed “do-tank” challenged to bring design thinking to the transformation of public services.1 This move was in response to Prime Minister Tony Blair's desire to have public services “redesigned around the needs of the user, the patients, the passenger, the victim of crime.”3 The RED team, led by Hilary Cottam, studied these big, complex problems to determine how design thinking and design techniques could help government rethink the systems and structures within public services and possibly redesign them from beginning to end.3 Between 2004 and 2006, the RED team, in collaboration with many other people and groups, developed techniques, processes and outputs that were able to “transform” social issues such as preventing illness, managing chronic illnesses, senior citizen care, rural transportation, energy conservation, re-offending prisoners and public education. In 2015 Braunschweig University of Art / Germany has launched a new MA in . In 2016 The Glasgow School of Art Launched another masters program "M.Des in Design Innovation and Transformation Design".
Process
Transformation design, like user-centered design, starts from the perspective of the end user. Designers spend a great deal of time not only learning how users currently experience the system and how they want to experience the system, but also co-creating with them the designed solutions. Because transformation design tackles complex issues involving many stakeholders and components, more expertise beyond the user and the designer is always required. People such as, but not limited to, policy makers, sector analysts, psychologists, economists, private businesses, government departments and agencies, front-line workers and academics are invited to participate in the entire design process - from problem definition to solution development.6 With so many points-of-view brought into the process, transformation designers are not always ‘designers.’ Instead, they often play the role of moderator. Though varying methods of participation and co-creation, these moderating designers create hands-on, collaborative workshops that make the design process accessible to the non-designers. Ideas from workshops are rapidly prototyped and beta-tested in the real world with a group of real end users. Their experience with and opinions of the prototypes are recorded and fed back into the workshops and development of the next prototype.