Why the shift into product design?
Thinking about UX design as product design means going beyond just thinking about the problems that users face and designing to solve those problems. Product design includes thinking about the emotional experience surrounding its marketing, the medium, as well as ways to innovate.
Recently there has been a growing respect for design thinking (a solutions-based approach) as a paradigm for end-to-end product development, a strategy that has not always been encouraged nor trusted by those in senior management positions. Now, the more forward-thinking companies have let their designers loose on entire projects instead of relegated to the design-phase of a project, and have shown success. Companies that have kept a rigid hierarchical and departmentalized structure have languished, especially companies in the fast-evolving industries like tech and digital applications. Why is that?
Traditionally, companies looked to the hard sciences to solve problems: demographic research, quantitative data, analytics, and focus groups. In a predictable environment, that approach can work, and it has worked in the past.
Design offers an alternative path, that of understanding people in the context and culture they live in to develop authentic experiences and empathy-driven approaches, and testing and iterating solutions with customers to explore the validity of decisions. Often this means relying on intuition to guide decision making when the data isn’t clear, a skill that the principles and methods inherent in design have a uniquely positive impact on.
The examples of the incredible success of design-lead companies like Apple, Airbnb, Nike, Starbucks, and Nest, it is easy to see why smart execs and senior management would have a change of heart.
The most innovative companies in the world share one thing in common. They use design as an integrative resource to innovate more efficiently and successfully. Over the last 10 years design-led companies have outperformed the S&P by 228%. -DMI.org
Even the development process has evolved to increase the scope of responsibility by designers and cross-functionality with the team and collaboration. Those process frameworks such as Agile and Lean are increasingly popular.
Product Design Thinking
The core user experience is not a set of features. The product will work regardless of certain features but a feature won’t work without the product.
Thinking about the project as product design gives designers an advantage over others. It helps designers think of the product as a whole, not just the features or the interactive or visual elements but enables designers to think about the problems that users would run into, it is a solutions-based approach.
Taking the holistic approach of product design creates a better customer experience, builds loyalty, and opens the way for innovation.