How To Make Designers Love You
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How To Make Designers Love You

Communicating with designers isn’t necessarily as straightforward as it may seem—and there are multiple reasons for that.

UX specialists work with an extremely specific part of a product, and while satisfying business needs is part of their responsibilities, their focus revolves around user behavior.

Designers craft experiences by leveraging an entire arsenal of pretty?occult rules and principles?that stem from psychology, sociology, human-computer interaction, and a variety of other disciplines.

As a result, when developers, project managers, and even C-suite officers provide them with feedback, an array of misunderstandings may arise.

This article is a quick guide towards more effective and frictionless communication with designers for non-designers.

Let’s jump into it.

Involve designers as early as possible

A common mistake businesses make is not?involving UX designers early?in the development process. By leaving these specialists out, companies are opening themselves out to a product that might fail to meet user needs, which is pretty much synonymous with failure.

Furthermore, it’s vital to create an environment where designers will feel like a valuable part of the product and, ideally, have a sense of ownership. Instead of just shipping your ideas to designers and having them work in a vacuum, ensure that you’ll have their input at the earliest stages of the development process—you might be (and probably are) missing out on some crucial insight into your product.

Thinking of designers as people that “need to step in and do the stuff” causes a pretty widespread scenario that most UX specialists have been part of more times than they’d please: “Hey, uh, I’ve designed the app myself, and?I need someone to ‘do the UX’?for me.

In order to ensure a product’s superior user experience, it’s imperative to understand how designers work and what the UX design process looks like, which brings us to our next tip.

Take some time to understand the process

To understand how designers work, it’s imperative to have a good grasp of the fundamentals of the discipline itself. This will invariably allow you to?see the big picture, even though it may seem like there’s no immediate value to it.

UX specialists conduct a wide array of activities like discovery workshops, user research, and?usability testing?that are meant to yield informative insights about users and the optimal parameters of the product. It would be a huge waste not to take in this information rather than leaving it within the confines of the designer team.

Furthermore, the UX design process allows companies to take a very in-depth look at who users are, as well as understand more about their fears, preferences, and aspirations. Businesses are naturally driven to maximize profits and touch success milestones, but doing so without investing time and effort to learn about and empathize with your users is merely impossible.

Don’t cut corners

Assuming that you’ve invested some time to better understand the UX design process, it’s crucial to underline that cutting corners is not an option if you’re looking to have a well-thought-out product and avoid spending a bunch of money on fixing bugs.

Let’s put it this way: if you’re knowingly trying to cut corners in the UX design process, you’re deliberately sabotaging the success of your project. We know this may seem dramatic to some, but we’ve seen this happen an uncountable number of times.

Yes, things like budget or time constraints might dictate your priorities. However, experienced designers can create a “good enough” product even in those conditions. Whatever you do, make sure to communicate these constraints to your crew of designers so you can find a common denominator.

Provide quality feedback

Probably one of the most important things you should take into account when providing designers with feedback is context. Any suggestions should be made with goals and metrics in mind. If the context is left out, it can and probably will be misconstrued as personal opinion, which is by no means helpful in design.

Avoid phrases like “I don’t like it” or “It just doesn’t pop”— this is not quality feedback. At the same time, never be dissuaded from voicing your design-related concerns. However, it’s essential to be visual when conveying some ideas or feedback. Consider using a pen and paper to sketch out the things you’re looking to change or discuss. Rest assured, nobody’s going to criticize your drawing skills.??

Leave your ego at the door

“I’ve been in the business for over twenty years. Trust me, I know better.” How would you feel if you were presented with this kind of argument? Designers won’t appreciate it either.

More importantly, one of the fundamental tenets of UX design states that “You are not your user." Therefore, the users should be the ultimate judges of design, not clients — this is how UX designers validate their decisions. At the end of the day, they won’t mind following your recommendations, but fundamentally, it won’t benefit anyone but your own ego.

The bottom line

Communication ain’t easy. Efficient communication is even harder.

When discussing work with designers, it’s essential to take their professional principles into account. UX design is a very complex, interdisciplinary practice, and it’s crucial to consider that when providing feedback to user experience professionals.


If you found that helpful feel free to?share it with a friend. ??


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Chaitanya Toraskar

Directing Ideas And Producing Reality | Story Teller | Collaborator | Product Designer | Web Designer | UX Designer | UX Researcher

10 个月

UX and Business make the best products

回复
Oluwakayode Adeniji

Helping Solo/Small Law Firms Save Time, Reduce Costs, Increase ROI, and Achieve 2-4x Growth Without Significant Upfront Investment || Lawyer | Brand Design | UI/UX/Legal Design | Automation

1 年

Thanks Boss, truly not involving UX designer earlier in the development stage of the project eventually cause delay in the project delivery time. currently experiencing this with my legal team. Will love to learn under your supervision Adam if you will accept me ??

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Pavlos Vasileiadis

CEO and Co-Founder at Upiria

1 年

Great article Adam! Agree with all points, especially the first one. Often, we share the "what" we need from UX designers and not the "why" we need it. Personally, I made this mistake many times.

Dmytro Trotsko

???? Senior Marketing Manager at Excited!

1 年

I was thinking flowers and chocolate, but these tips will do too ??

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