Desire Paths

desire_paths

A desire path is a path created by usage, not a pre-determined path. Normally these paths are created by people taking shortcuts across fields to get from Point A to Point B more quickly than the pre-determined paths (like sidewalks) that have been put in place.

- Gaston Bachelard, from his book “The Poetics of Space,” (from Wikipedia)

It’s not as simple as brands and consumers having conversations with each other. It’s the conversations between consumers – people – about your brand… their experiences… their lives. Conversations are just the beginning of the story. The continuation is providing “desire paths” for people to interact in the ways they want to interact, where they want to interact. People are no longer sticking to the set paths that digital agencies create and hope they interact within. We need to understand and accommodate our visitor’s desire paths, support their goals through branded digital experiences, and allow them to go elsewhere online with the information to share, obtain peer feedback, and tell their own stories. Let people create cultural currency through their own stories with others, wherever they feel is appropriate.

We’re not going to see company websites disappear. In order for there to be a desire path, there must be at least two points. What we can do, as interactive designers, is help shape and guide these desire paths. Stop building sidewalks that people will find a short cut around, grow tired of, or avoid entirely. Understand why people are taking desire paths. Give people the ability to create their own paths. Enable them and support them. Be where they are, not where you hope they’ll go. Build engagement, not simply websites.

(Photo above from the Sweet Juniper blog.)

4 Comments…

  1. Byron said…

    Bro,

    I’m doing a similar talk this year about “designing the ordinary,” where I talk about another ornamental age of web design and how we should normalize what we do into a craft v. an opportunity to demonstrate our skills. In other words, stop with the drum solos and play a bootsy collins backbeat instead.

    1:41 pm / 6 July 2010

  2. Lynn Twiss said…

    I’ve also heard of these activities as “cow paths” or something to that effect. I personally see activity paths like this and am reminded of Lord of The Flies and the “pig trails” that the chaotic kids would follow.

    Moo! Squeel!

    8:53 pm / 6 July 2010

  3. Lynn Twiss said…

    A little wikipedia’n and I find that they were called ‘pig-runs’. My high school memory has been cleared from the physical cache…

    9:13 pm / 6 July 2010

  4. Susan Andreson said…

    Stephen, I like your thinking…I’m a fan of Gaston Bachelard! I think he like other really inspiring people are often ahead of their times. You too are opening the door to this type of thought. I’d love to get involved with the thinkers of our time here in PDX.

    1:18 pm / 25 July 2010

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