David M. Kelley (born February 10, 1951) is an American businessman, entrepreneur, designer, engineer, and teacher. He is founder of the design firm IDEO and a professor at Stanford University. He has received several honors for his contributions to design and design education.
Video David M. Kelley
Personal life
Kelley was born in Barberton, Ohio. His brother is Tom Kelley, the General Manager of IDEO and author of The Art of Innovation and The Ten Faces of Innovation. He earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering at Carnegie Mellon University in 1973, where he was a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, He is married to Katharine C. Branscomb, a former CEO of IntelliCorp, whom he met through mutual friend Steve Jobs.
Maps David M. Kelley
Work in industry
Kelley began work as an engineer, first at Boeing and later at NCR. At Boeing, he was responsible for the design of the Lavatory Occupied sign for the 747 airplane. This experience led him to return to school. In 1977, he earned his master's degree from the Joint Program in Design at Stanford University, popularly called the Product Design program. In 1978, he partnered with another Stanford Product Design graduate, Dean Hovey, to form Hovey-Kelley Design. Hovey left to pursue other interests and the firm was renamed "David Kelley Design" (DKD).
In 1984, he co-founded Onset Ventures, an early-stage venture capital firm. He also co-founded Edge Innovations, the special-effects company responsible for the whales in the Free Willy movies, among many other film credits. In 1991, Kelley merged DKD with three other design firms (Mike Nuttall's Matrix Product Design in Palo Alto, ID TWO in San Francisco, and Moggridge Associates in London, the latter two founded by Bill Moggridge) to create IDEO, which he ran as CEO until 2000.
Work in education
Kelley began teaching in the Stanford Product Design program in 1978, after earning his master's. He was briefly a PhD student. In 1990, he became a tenured professor, and was named the Donald W. Whittier Professor in Mechanical Engineering in 2002. In 2004, Kelley led the creation of the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford University, known as the "d.school."
Books, talks, and honors
David Kelley has been recognized as one of America's leading design innovators.
In 2013, David and his brother Tom Kelley published Creative Confidence, which a Forbes review called "an empowering, compelling, relentlessly hopeful and optimistic read."
In 2012, Kelley spoke on building creative confidence at TED 2012. He had earlier spoken at TED 2002 on human-centered design.
In 2009, he was awarded the Edison Achievement Award by the Thomas Edison Papers at Rutgers University for his "pioneering contributions to the design of breakthrough products, services, and experiences for consumers, as well as his development of an innovative culture that has broad impact."
In 2005, he was recognized for his "distinguished contribution to design education" with the Sir Misha Black Medal.
In 2001, the Smithsonian's Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum presented David Kelley and IDEO with the National Design Award in Product Design.
In 2000, he was honored with a Chrysler Design Award, and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering for "affecting the practice of design."
References
Further reading
- Pang, Alex Soojung-Kim, "Mighty Mouse: In 1980, Apple Computer asked a group of guys fresh from Stanford's product design program to take a $400 device and make it mass-producible, reliable and cheap. Their work transformed personal computing", Stanford University Alumni Magazine, March/April 2002.
- Solomon, Avi, "Design Thinking for Social Good: An Interview with David Kelley", Boing Boing, Saturday September 22, 2012
External links
- David Kelley at TED
Source of the article : Wikipedia