The VCE VCD study design uses a design process structured around four phases: Discover, Define, Develop, and Deliver — often represented as the “Double Diamond” model. This process reflects how professional designers move from understanding a problem to resolving a solution.
In Unit 3, students work through the first three phases: Discover, Define, and Develop.
KEY TAKEAWAY: The VCD design process is not a linear checklist — it is an iterative, thinking-driven process. Designers regularly loop back through earlier phases when new information, feedback, or constraints emerge.
Discover → Define → Develop → Deliver
(diverge) (converge) (diverge) (converge)
The diamond shape represents the alternation between divergent thinking (opening up possibilities) and convergent thinking (narrowing to solutions):
- First diamond (Discover → Define): Opens wide with research, then converges on a specific problem and brief
- Second diamond (Develop → Deliver): Opens wide with many concepts, then converges on a resolved solution
The Discover phase is about opening up — understanding the problem space broadly before defining it precisely.
“What is actually happening here? What do stakeholders and users really need?”
The Define phase involves convergent thinking — synthesising all the research gathered in Discover to clearly articulate the design problem and create a brief.
A single design brief that defines two distinct communication needs — each different in purpose and/or presentation format.
EXAM TIP: The VCD design process is commonly examined. Know the distinct purpose of each phase: Discover = research and understand; Define = synthesise and brief; Develop = ideate and iterate. Being able to describe what activities happen in each phase is essential.
The Develop phase returns to divergent thinking — generating a wide range of design ideas in response to the brief.
This phase is undertaken separately for each communication need defined in the brief.
“How many different ways could this problem be solved? Which directions are most promising?”
Real design process is rarely sequential. Designers in the Develop phase often:
- Return to Discover to gather more specific research
- Revisit Define to clarify or update criteria
- Receive feedback that changes the direction
COMMON MISTAKE: Presenting the design process as a linear checklist rather than an iterative cycle. Examiners want to see evidence of iteration — moments where you gathered new information, received feedback, or encountered a constraint that caused you to revisit an earlier phase.
VCAA FOCUS: In your folio and in exam responses, use the correct phase names (Discover, Define, Develop) and describe what you actually did in each phase, not just what the phase is. “In the Discover phase, I conducted three stakeholder interviews and an online survey to understand how parents currently receive school communications” demonstrates genuine application.