The Washing Machine
That Ate My Sari—Mistakes
in Cross-Cultural Design
Apala Lahiri Chavan
Human Factors International | apala@humanfactors.com
Douglas Gorney
Human Factors International | gorney@california.com
Beena Prabhu
Human Factors International | beena@humanfactors.com
Sarit Arora
Human Factors International | sarit@humanfactors.com
[ 1] Dervis, K. Annual
Commencement
Day Lecture of the
Export-Import Bank of
India, 18 March 2008.
Perspectives on the
New Structure of the
World Economy. UNDP.
<http://content.undp.
org/go/newsroom/2008/
march/kemal-dervis-
perspectives-on-the-
new-structure-of-
the-world-economy.
en;jsessionid=
axb Wzt8vXD9>
“At purchasing power parity
exchange rates, the developing countries as a whole would, in recent
years and according to growth projections for 2008 and 2009, account for
about one-half of global GDP compared to about 37 percent in the early
1960s. It must be stressed, however,
that this increase is entirely due to
a set of middle- and lower-middle-income ‘emerging’ countries [ 1].”
—Kemal Dervis,
administrator of the United Nations
Development Program
January + February 2009
[ 2] “Innovation in
Emerging Markets.”
Deloitte Development
LLC, 2007.
[ 3] Trout, J. “Peter
Drucker on Marketing.”
Forbes. 3 July
2006. <http://www.
forbes.com/colum-
nists/2006/06/30/
jack-trout-on-marketing-
cx_jt_0703drucker.
html>
The rise of emerging markets
has fundamentally altered the
global marketplace. Actually,
it has created a global marketplace, a vast, wired network of
manufacturers, programmers,
and designers who can be anywhere. But consumers and users
are always local. And when it
comes to developing successful
products and services for these
users, there is an almost infinite
number of ways to get it wrong.
Less than half of companies
competing in emerging markets
have been very successful in
meeting their goals, according
to one study [ 2]. Bringing a new
product to an emerging and possibly untapped market is seductive. But entering the market is
an expensive proposition, and
failure to launch can be very,
very costly.
Peter Drucker said, “the business enterprise has two—and
only two—basic functions: marketing and innovation.” So successful marketers and designers are the ones who must get
emerging markets right [ 3].
Designers need to gain a deep,
almost tactile awareness of the
culture and context of their
target market, never letting the
global threads of networks and
supply chains wrap them in a
cocoon. It’s essential that they
learn from the mistakes others
have made in creating products
for emerging markets.
Slicing the Wealth Pyramid
Designers have been dealing
with cultural differences and
their impact on design since the
first exports reached the shelves
in faraway new markets. They
have started to consider the
distinct approaches required
by emerging markets only relatively recently, however, as well
as the tools and methodologies
to clearly understand them. The
design and marketing community is still in a dialogue about
how to define the topic.
Coined in the early ’80s by
fund manager Antoine van
Agtmael, author of The Emerging
Market Century, the term
“emerging markets” has proved
remarkably elastic, over time
describing economies as divergent as Russia and Botswana.
An emerging market is generally defined as one that has not
yet fully developed but that has
a middle class vital enough to
attract goods and services from
developed—and increasingly
globalized—economies.
However, the needs of the
rising middle class in Shanghai
or Bangalore are very differ-