- 12/13/06 The First Step: An Intern Architect Reflects on a Journey of Decisions The beginning of the end was bitter sweet with the knowledge that life was moving drastically forward.
- 12/13/06 Innovation in Higher Education Design has never had a more promising future than it does now.
- 12/13/06 1 Qualities of Most Admired Design Program, as determined by Deans and Chairs - 2007
- 12/13/06 The Realignment of Education and Professional Practice Our Eighth Annual Survey is especially gratifying to us at the Design Futures Council because we note the positive changes happening in the way architecture and design schools are communicating with and responding to a profession in transition.
- 10/20/06 DesignIntelligence Editorial Calendar 2007
- 10/20/06 Building in the Fifth Dimension Re-visioning building design with Building Lifecycle Management
- 10/20/06 Negotiating the Future The world has changed. Further change is unfolding rapidly. Today’s practice leaders are developing fundamental yet agile viewpoints to achieve success in new ways. Designers and architects who can communicate value and who can help clients envision preferred outcomes and scenarios will have significantly higher success rates in the future.
- 10/20/06 How Cooperative Negotiators Settle Without Upending the Table Everyone who has studied negotiation in the last twenty years has read *Getting to Yes* and understands that they should be looking for a “win-win” result, ways to expand the pie and create value in the process.
- 10/19/06 Senior Fellows of the Design Futures Council Senior Fellowship in the DFC is an honor presented for “significant contributions toward the understanding of changing trends, new research, and applied knowledge leading to innovative design models that improve the built environment and the human condition.”
- 10/19/06 Let the Client Drive Your Organization Listening to young architectural graduates whine about clients being their only hindrance to doing great work used to really distress me. I began sharing my frustration with friends in other businesses and found that they were hearing the same complaint, “The customer just gets in the way of me doing my job.” Who does everyone think pays the bills?




