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To benefit from AI, your organization’s learning loops must evolve

Pavel Samsonov
UX Collective
Published in
11 min readMar 25, 2023
Three loops connect at one inception point. They are labeled: Is this the right problem to solve? Do the requirements describe the best solution to this problem? Does the implementation meet the requirements?
In the foreseeable future, AI-powered delivery tools will operate comfortably at the single-loop level. But human intellect will still be needed to steer those outputs towards valuable outcomes.

Single-loop learning and the race for velocity

“The more efficient you are at doing the wrong thing, the wronger you become.” –Russel Ackoff

Double-loop learning and opportunity cost

“You can do anything, but not everything.” –David Allen

Steering the loop with design critique: the most important customer benefit

A series of nexted loops. From smallest to largest: Expertise — Does this decision make sense within my conceptual model? Critique — Does my conceptual model make sense within our scoping of the opportunity? Experiment — Does the scoping of the opportunity make sense within the user’s context of needs and goals? Position — Does fulfilling these needs create the future we want?
The design process consists of nested feedback loops. The faster inner loops seek the local maximum. The costlier outer loops provide answers to the more valuable questions that identify a global maximum.

Experiments and leading indicators

“If you can’t judge the quality of the answer, asking is pointless.” Amy Hoy

In specific context, the behavior people perform to reach goal has friction — a problem hypothesis. Overcoming the friction improves key result, leading to objective — a business impact hypothesis. Solution provides the capability they need to overcome the friction — a solution hypothesis.
Hypothesis-driven design is a framework for making underlying assumptions explicit and discrete from one another, and therefore testable.

Triple-loop learning and the desirable future

“The compass determines direction. The navigation determines the route. The route leads to the destination. In that order. The order is key.” –A.R. Moxon

A pyramid with a North Star at the top: Total   monthly  items received  on time. A line runs down multiple options to trace a course of action: the chosen input metric (size of order), the opportunity (customers can’t find their brand), the primary user benefit (discovery), and a potential solution (a peer social feed)
Tracing the provenance of decision-making down from the north star metric to a potential solution that the responsible product team might test.

Applying the design process to the third loop

Quadruple loop learning

A diagram showing how the learning loops cycle through their various steps to drive actions.
The anatomy of organizational learning loops, via Lee, Hwang, and Moon

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Written by Pavel Samsonov

Problem designer. Sick of rectangles. Design is the rendering of care. https://pavelsamsonov.com

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