design for life

The products that take design seriously and incorporate it from the start are going to be the ones that connect with people in a way that really makes an impact in the world.

An Important Time for Design

The cost of technology continues to plummet and this causes it to creep into our everyday lives more and more. It wouldn’t have made sense to carry a Cray super computer around in your pocket, but now that we do it needs to look good and work well. Just building something to great specs isn’t going to cut the mustard any longer, certainly not in a retail environment. Places like the Designer Fund are pinpointing designers to start businesses. Best to have a design centric ethos baked in from the beginning rather then adding it in once it is too late.

The famous target prescription bottle shows how smart design can improves life in a very day to day manner, and the NEST thermostat mashes up great UI design and smart internals. Good design is an a steady march into our lives not as a fashionable add-on, but a fully integrated part of our daily lives.

There is a massive opportunity for design and technology to make the difference in this $100 billion+ home health market. That’s not to say that the health care industry does not already have excellent designers and technologists in the ranks. However, there is a big opportunity to shift what those talented people are able to focus on.

The Biggest Opportunity For Disruption Today: Health Care Products That Work

WiiFit can get you off the couch and move around, but what about taking your blood pressure medicine, or checking your glucose levels religiously? What about helping to track your REAL caloric intake? I think that good design can help make the word a better place and your fat butt is a great place to start. Full body wellness is a lofty goal that design can make a priority at a consumer level.

Cloud & Ground: Get your UX files under control

Cloud and Ground information flow

There are tons of tools that manage communication for design projects (Basecamp, Wrike, etc.). Developers have Github and such and even the visual designers have Layervault. The multifaceted nature of UX work doesn’t really lend itself to a clean singular solution. Stakeholder interviews have Evernote audio files and notes, wireframes could be in Omnigraffle, Balsimiq or Indesign. Prototypes could be a local Axure file, or shared via something like Beanstalk. This doesn’t even touch on shared google docs for competitive analysis and general collaboration. Just to add to the mayhem we can add in some loose .png images of whiteboard sessions.

ARGH!! SO MUCH INFORMATION!!

First and foremost this is a management issue. Somebody needs to have a strong voice to wrangle all of this things and have the will to implement a solution. Our assumption is that there is leadership with the will and commitment to address the issue, the question is how to bring all of these things together?

Using a service called CloudHQ I am able to provide a system that gives designers the freedom to continue along as they want to work but the backend and sync advantages that turn a messy on-boarding and archive process into an elegant samba of seamless productivity. Gone is the “Where is that file?” and their ilk…designers are unleashed to focus on solving the client’s problems and no longer are bumped out of the “zone” because they have all the project information right at their fingertips.

If you are interested in the more detailed information flow you can check out this PDF (43k).

Looking to improve your design life for $500?

Site-maps and process flows become a zoom and pan & dance very quickly. You can kill a few trees and print it out if you have access to a large format printer, but that is terribly inefficient for quick iteration.

What do you do when you want to move from the drawing board to the screen, but want to see the whole system at once?

At our office, we just equipped all of the programmers’ workstations with Seiki 39″ 4K televisions as monitors. At $500 a piece, you should be doing the same. For the time being, there is no single higher-productivity display for a programmer.

4k is for programmers by Brian Hauer

At $500 those things will pay for themselves in a matter of weeks. Right now they are available via Sears and Amazon.