Summary
There’s something shifting in our field. Increasingly, design professionals are drawn to work in domains that truly help humanity, rather than building another ‘Uber for X’, to make the rich richer. While this is an expected response to recent world events, the reality of doing such impactful work is full of obstacles. Spanton will draw on 12+ years of UX design in healthcare to share some experiences and strategies, helping you anticipate and navigate predictable obstacles, so that you can apply your skills toward solving meaningful problems and realizing your goal of a truly impactful career. The talk will cover: 5 common obstacles 3 coping mechanisms 1 big bag of hope and determination to create lasting meaningful impact
Key Insights
-
•
Working in meaningful impact domains often involves heavy regulatory constraints that are more complex and far-reaching than initially apparent.
-
•
Medical product standards, like Australia’s on-screen medication guidelines, are thoughtfully designed to prevent fatal errors and serve as crucial safety tools.
-
•
The mantra “don’t kill grandma” encapsulates the ethical imperative behind regulated healthcare design: preserving life and safety above innovation speed.
-
•
Large-scale impactful products are inherently complex, making quick fixes or simple solutions rare and slow to ship.
-
•
Scope decisions in complex projects, such as Canada's COVID exposure app, can unintentionally exclude vulnerable populations, undermining intended impact.
-
•
Meaningful work in sensitive domains demands utmost respect for users’ dignity, privacy, and emotional state, influencing every design detail.
-
•
The familiar startup motto “move fast and break things” is often inappropriate and harmful in healthcare and other sensitive fields.
-
•
Seeking smaller, quicker projects that avoid most obstacles can boost team morale and sustain motivation for longer, slower initiatives.
-
•
Direct connection with end users, such as site visits to cancer centers, revitalizes teams with empathy and real-world insight.
-
•
Anchoring work in a core meaningful purpose—whether a corporate vision, a symbolic detail like a Periwinkle carpet, or the ethical mantra—provides resilience amid challenges.
Notable Quotes
"I still kind of pause in my tracks when I see our corporate vision: a world without fear of cancer."
"Don’t kill grandma is our mantra reminding us the stakes of the tiny design details we face every day."
"Regulations aren’t obstacles to dismiss but tools to respect and embrace that help us protect grandma."
"Quick fixes rarely exist in these domains because beneath every problem are layers of complexity."
"The scoping of Canada’s COVID app protected people with new phones, but left vulnerable populations unserved."
"Working in healthcare means every tiny moment in a patient’s experience can either uphold or erode their dignity and sense of control."
"Move fast and break things doesn’t work when you’re designing for cancer patients or disaster victims."
"Shipping smaller, less complex side projects helps build team morale and energizes us for the big slow work."
"Site visits with users don’t just give actionable insight; they give us raw, humbling inspiration to keep going."
"You need to find your own mattress—a grounding purpose or phrase—that you can rely on when progress feels hopeless."
Or choose a question:
More Videos
"How we are at the small scale is how we are at the large scale—our personal care practices scale to community care."
Sahibzada Mayed Lauren LinCultivating Design Ecologies of Care, Community, and Collaboration
October 4, 2023
"You have to keep the fight, keep looking back at where you started."
JD Buckley Margot Dear Jim Kalbach Janaki KumarCOMMUNICATE: Discussion
June 14, 2018
"If there isn’t safety and connection, you get a culture of transaction and silence that kills innovation."
Alla WeinbergDesign Teams Need Psychological Safety: Here’s How to Create It
September 8, 2022
"Does the fact that you can count the change in your pocket make you a mathematician? No, of course not."
Andy WarrUnder My (Research) Umbrella: The Benefits and Challenges of Building a Unified Insights Function
March 25, 2024
"Good UX is good business."
Product and Design at Bloomberg: A 15-year Evolution
December 6, 2022
"We hadn’t really thought about governance up front at all, which is not the ideal way to do something like that."
Dave Malouf Amy ThibodeauPanel: Design Systems and Documentation
November 7, 2017
"You can chat with large sets of data in real time, not waiting hours or days for answers."
Andy Barraclough Betsy NelsonFrom Costly Complexity to Efficient Insights: Why UX Teams Are Switching To Voxpopme
September 23, 2024
"AI is better seen as augmentation to make us more efficient, not automation to replace us."
Russell Blair Milan GuentherKilling the blank page
June 5, 2024
"Hidden curricula are the invisible rules and knowledge needed to navigate environments successfully."
Alba VillamilStereotyped by Design: Pitfalls in Cross-Cultural User Research
March 30, 2020
Latest Books All books
Dig deeper with the Rosenbot
What principles from multiplayer game communities can be used to foster positive social interactions in products?
How can teams create sustainable collaboration squads across time zones and competing priorities?
What are examples of AI failures that highlight the need for bias testing and regulation?