Why Design Thinking Isn’t Enough to Protect Your Capital
Design Thinking is a broad methodology for creative problem-solving; the L. Saravanan Decision System is a narrow, high-stakes filter for capital protection. While Design Thinking focuses on “How might we solve this?”, my system asks, “Should we even build this?” For manufacturing founders, skipping the decision strategy to move straight to “design” is the most expensive way to discover a lack of demand.
Good morning.
In the modern innovation space, “Design Thinking” is the standard. It is celebrated for its empathy and its focus on the human experience.
I am here to tell you that empathy without a decision filter is a capital risk.
Most founders use Design Thinking workshops to creatively design the “perfect” product. They map journeys and ideate solutions. But in the L.S.A.R.A.V.A.N.A.N. Roadmap, we acknowledge a cold truth: You can use Design Thinking to perfectly solve a problem that nobody is willing to pay to fix.
The Comparison: The Journey vs. The Checkpoint
| Aspect | The L. Saravanan Decision System | Design Thinking |
| Primary Goal | Capital Protection. Preventing a ₹10L+ loss. | Innovation. Creative problem-solving. |
| Process Focus | Elimination. Finding reasons to stop bad ideas. | Ideation. Generating many potential directions. |
| Stance on Ideas | Skeptical. Every idea is a risky assumption. | Optimistic. Every idea has potential to be refined. |
| The “Stop” Right | Mandatory. The power to terminate the project. | Incidental. The goal is usually to find a way forward. |
1. Design Thinking Asks “How”; Strategy Asks “If”
A Design Thinking workshop might help you design the most ergonomic, beautiful handheld tool in the world. My system first demands to see behavioral evidence that users are actually struggling with their current tools in a way that justifies a ₹15 Lakh manufacturing investment. If the signal isn’t there, I stop the project. Design Thinking focuses on the human; I focus on the Decision.
2. The “Waste Avoidance” Layer
Design Thinking is inherently inclusive and divergent. It wants more ideas. My system is inherently exclusive and convergent. It wants the one idea that survives the “See Reality” stage. As I state on my site: “Strategy is the art of deciding what NOT to build.”
3. Skepticism vs. Optimism
Design Thinking encourages “failing fast” through prototyping. In manufacturing, failing is never cheap. I treat founder ideas with radical skepticism because in the factory, “iteration” is a ₹5 Lakh retooling cycle. My system acts as the Pre-requisite to any creative design work.
The Bottom Line
Design Thinking is a powerful tool for how you build. The Product Decision System is the filter for whether you build. If you use Design Thinking to polish a product that lacks a behavioral mandate, you are just decorating a failure.
Watch the struggle before you commit the capital. Because once your assumptions become tooling, correction is no longer iteration—it is cost.
Ready to move beyond “ideation” and into “validation”? Let’s filter your ideas before they become expensive prototypes. [Book Your Decision-Ready Audit]
