Overview
Part 1
Overview
Every transformative design begins with a moment of insight.

For Sam Farber, it came while watching his wife struggle with a kitchen peeler, her arthritis turning a simple task into a painful ordeal. For Keller Rinaudo Cliffton, it arrived as he reviewed a database in Tanzania—a real-time log of people dying because medical interventions couldn’t reach them in time. For Deborah Adler, it was the sight of her grandmother’s chaotic medicine cabinet, where medications became dangers.
These moments share a quality that transcends their specific contexts. They represent the instant when someone stops accepting “the way things are” and starts imagining “the way things could be.”
Each narrative stands alone, a complete journey from problem recognition to scaled impact. Yet together, the five transformative designs recounted here form something larger: a portrait of what design can achieve when it begins with genuine human need and pursues solutions with dogged intent.




“You can walk up to a lake, open the cap, and draw water straight through the straw with minimal resistance,” Thamer Abanami explained in S3:E2 episode of With Intent.
As you read these stories, please pay attention not just to the solutions but also to the choices their creators made along the way. Notice how they defined problems, engaged communities, navigated systems, and measured success. These patterns—these recurring lessons in how to design for real transformation—can sometimes be subtle in individual stories, but they will become the foundation for the practical lessons outlined in Part 2.
But first, let yourself be immersed in these remarkable journeys. From the rural clinics of Rwanda to kitchen drawers across the United States and beyond, from British computer labs to contaminated water sources worldwide, these designs have touched millions of lives. The protagonists in these stories are people who saw differently—authentic innovators who can help you see differently, too.