ÄûÃʵ¼º½

News

YLE and Aalto University collaborate to design future streaming service for children and youth

Aalto University and the Finnish Broadcasting Company YLE have partnered to develop and design ideas for a new branded streaming service for children and youth.
VCD students collaborating with Yle
Team Sandbox's concept, Justus Arvelin, Emma Hansén, Joonatan Koponen

The project was part of a six-week Experiment Process course, and second-year visual communication design students collaborated in small teams to create a unique brand identity and user experience for the service.

The student teams were tasked with creating a visual identity that would appeal to the target audience while maintaining YLE's brand identity. They also proposed new features and functionalities for the service, considering how it could evolve as the child grows and stay relevant for its audience throughout their youth. The double-diamond design process gave structure to the project work, and YLE's design team supported the students with valuable insights and feedback. 

"We're excited to collaborate with YLE on this exciting project. Our students have a unique opportunity to apply their design and thinking skills to real-world challenges while learning about design strategies, branding streaming services, addressing user needs, and improving user experience. YLE benefits from our students' fresh and innovative ideas, and this collaboration is a great way for students to practice teamwork and relevant work-life skills," says Markus Joutsela, Senior University Lecturer from the VCD programme at Aalto University.

“We were positively surprised how great results the students achieved in a short time, without previous experience in this kind of design process. Meetings with students and hearing their presentations were especially inspiring for the YLE team. Many findings from the research phase and themes brought up by the students supported our own thinking, but the concepts also contained new ideas and surprising solutions that we would not have thought of ourselves. This was a great collaboration, the results of which are a pleasure to present.†said Maria Leinvuo, Service Designer, working with Audience Insight and Customer Experience at YLE.

The project culminated in presentations to YLE's Design team, who were impressed with the students' creativity and professionalism. The proposed concepts were rich and diverse, with many novel ideas for the brand identity, user interface, and user experience and interaction, but also novel proposals for community building, the use of different features and strategies such as gamification, artificial intelligence (AI), or augmented reality (AR). 

The collaboration between Aalto University and YLE highlights the benefits of combining academic expertise with industry knowledge to produce innovative solutions. The project also provided valuable insights into the streaming habits of children and youth. The success of this collaboration showcases the talent and creativity of the students and the importance of collaboration between academia and industry.

VCD students collaboration with YLE
The dial-like user interface and user experience for this concept are clever and original providing a new kind of interaction and engagement to the service.

Team Sandbox: Justus Arvelin, Emma Hansén, Joonatan Koponen

"We wanted to create an original streaming service that stands out from the crowd with its circular UI, social interactions, and AR features — something new and exciting for the kids and youth."

VCD students collaborating with Yle
The graphic design is different for the younger audience.

Team Sandbox continues: "Throughout the project, we were guided by the insights we gleaned from interviews with children. We realized that kids need a safe platform for socializing and expressing themselves."

VCD students collaborating with Yle
Streaming services can also have a supporting role in everyday life within families.

Team Ylelyönti: Anna Miettinen, Aurora Näsi, Samu Pitkänen

"Our group wanted to focus on YLE's role in the larger societal context, so we decided to combine slow tech, AI, communication and streaming to create design that adds real value to its users on individual and communal level. Our main focus was on parental burnout and loneliness in an individualistic age."

VCD students collaboration with Yle
Design is also problem-solving and team Ylelyönti identified societal and social issues which provide a good backdrop for ideating new concepts and solutions to address these issues.

Team Ylelyönti continues: "We created a concept of an AI-story time nanny, that supports burned-out parents by teaching, entertaining and guiding the smallest kids. We also created an easy-to-use screen time planner to create boundaries for kids’ screen time usage. We integrated age-appropriate ways to navigate the streaming service according to the user's development. For older kids we created a group watch option with video contact; apparently, a lot of teens were already doing that via Facetime!"

More information:

Markus Joutsela, Senior University Lecturer, Aalto University
markus.joutsela@aalto.fi
Tel. +358 50 409 4405

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Person in dark suit presenting ELLIS Institute Finland slide with colourful icons in a lecture room
Cooperation, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

ELLIS Institute Finland is launching machine learning fundamentals out of the lab

Research moonshots, foundation models for healthcare, and AI for RDI
Close-up of rainbow-coloured oil slick swirling on dark, dirty water surface with floating specks
Cooperation, Studies, University Published:

Join a summer school on environmental contaminants, held in the French Alps

Explore environmental contaminants through expert-led lectures, hands-on workshops, and international collaboration— with selected students receiving funding for travel and accommodation.
Studies Published:

Students learning field-specific terminology through glossary tasks

I interviewed two Aalto University instructors who have used glossaries created by students as coursework in a subject course and a field-specific language course. The assignments are based on active learning methods: the glossaries are not created by the instructor, but by the learners themselves. The interview focused, among other things, on the teaching philosophy behind developing the glossary tasks, how the learning of field-specific vocabulary can be linked to the overall learning objectives of the course, and what technical solutions enable students’ active learning in glossary assignments.
Smiling man in a hydraulics laboratory
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

Mobile work machines are electrifying rapidly — a new research environment supports the industry’s product development

The LEMMI development and testing equipment for mobile work machines supports the electrification in the field and strengthens cooperation between academic research and industry.