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Jessica Murray
Jessica Murray

Akendi Alumnus

Keeping the Designer Out of the Design

It is all too easy for graphic designers to influence the outcome of a design. And given their knowledge and talent in this area, you may be asking why that’s such a bad thing.  A designer’s ultimate goal should be to find the best way to communicate the underlying message or core functionality of a design. Even if something is visually appealing, is it the best solution for the design? Or have you fulfilled a design need of your own? Some designers or design studios even have a distinct style  – and are proud of it. Think about it… have they designed the right thing or have they designed the thing that fits best into their way of thinking?

Tips to Help Keep the Designer Out of the Design

What is the Design?

Ask yourself who it is for, what it is for, what the limitations are –  consider this your challenge and design accordingly. Don’t jump in with one idea because you saw something trending on an award website, ask yourself if that would work for the product or is it just an interesting approach.

Designers Should Design for the Product not Themselves

For example, you wouldn’t design a product for a 65+ demographic using a 10 point font. Such a design approach would be completely unusable and frustrating for your users.  This small font size is naturally hard to see and this difficulty only increases with age.

A Designer’s Style and/or Design Experiments Should not Drive Projects

All too often designers will attempt to replicate design trends or methods that they feel work for them, regardless if it is project-appropriate. Unfortunately, design approaches are not one-size-fits-all methodologies. Upon product delivery, this oversight only degrades interaction, contributes to a loss of user interest, confuses users, and can create the wrong look and feel overall.

Design isn’t about personal satisfaction it’s about communication. Great products will balance innovation, brand, beauty and user / product needs. Always place equal importance on interaction, content and visual design. A great design should be well thought out, elegant and simple to use. Designing something that is visually striking, but completely useless and confusing, is a failure to solve the design challenge. Think about what you are designing and who you are designing for.

Be smart, be thoughtful, design the right thing and your products will be beautiful and useful.

Jessica Murray
Jessica Murray

Akendi Alumnus

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