Meet Scopey!
An AI tool (now in beta) that helps social sector leaders launch human centered design projects.
Try Scopey
How Scopey Works
1
Answer questions about your project
Start by answering a series of simple questions about your project to outline what you are working on.
2
Engage in a chat to refine project scope
Engage in a generative-AI conversation, that includes clarifying questions and conversation summaries, to help refine your project goals and scope your design work. (This might take 10 minutes, or as long as you like.)
3
Receive project summary and continue the conversation
Scopey will share a summary of how you have scoped your project, which can then benefit from design work. You can follow-up and ask Scopey additional questions, including guidance on how to carry out the design work itself. You can also return to your conversation.
4
Request a copy of your full conversation
When you are ready click ‘Export’ to receive an email that includes the conversation summary and the full script of your conversation with Scopey, which can help guide your work going forward.
Learn more in this video
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Working with Scopey
From Scoping to Design Work
Once you have refined your project scope with Scopey, you can ask questions like, "What kind of human-centered design work do you recommend?" This allows you to begin to transition from the scoping phase into planning out the actual design work. As with all AI-generated content, take this as a suggestion, and use your own judgment.
Data Privacy and Security
Your data is secure when using Scopey. This content will only be seen by members of the Stanford d.school team and the Enchatted admins working on Scopey. It is not used to train the AI technology and will not be shared publicly without your consent, ensuring the confidentiality of your project details.
Talk to Scopey
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Note: Scopey utilizes LLMs (like Claude, ChatGPT, etc.). These generative AI tools have limitations and biases, and also built-in guardrails that may steer the conversation away from perceived controversial topics. As a result, the responses provided may be incomplete or skewed, particularly in addressing complex topics such as race, equity, and social justice. We encourage users to approach the tool’s outputs thoughtfully and consider them as one perspective among many.
Scopey was created by Stanford University's Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (aka the d.school) [[email protected]] in partnership with Enchatted.
Interested in more learning experiences? Check out our dschool offerings for practitioners ➡️ https://dpro.stanford.edu