Category: Design

  • User Experience Design – Enjoyed my first Heavy Chef session

    The guys from Heavy Chef did a great job of getting Phil Barret from Flow interactive to share his experience and ideas with us. I was surprised at the amount of familiar faces I saw at the gathering which I only recently learnt about.

    Flow Interactive’s Phil Barrett spoke about ‘User Experience: What it is, Why you want it, and How to get it’

    Design Research is something I’ve been doing a bit of reading on lately, an area I feel I need to drastically improve my skills in. Knowing how to design an experience which will be positive, user-friendly and memorable has to be done in collaboration with the end user.

    People are exhausted

    Starting off Phil reminded all of us of an essential truth which we find across the majority of media platforms, that being a huge shortage of attention. With the proliferation of different forms of media as well as the fact that technology has made it possible for just about anyone to publish content, we are increasingly finding we have less and less attention available for our little messages significant though they may be. Everyone is just exhausted.

    The Attention Age

    We are competing in an attention economy, where attention is a valuable commodity which individuals are even being paid for nowadays. Attention or rather, eyeballs are being purchased metaphorically speaking, making companies like Google as big as they are today.

    It’s not only advertisers who are fighting for a piece of the attention pie. Anyone trying to convey any kind of message online is competing for that same attention. The traditional approach of shouting louder just does not have any sustainable effect.

    Make them Love it

    Phil went on to say that we should be investing in building it right the first time.

    “Make is speak to the customer, Make it a pleasure to use and to make sure they find it …”

    We need to be creating great experiences, whether it be the way the site looks or the words people read, from top to toe it needs to be scientifically constructed piece by piece.

    Helping your visitor get to what they are looking for, or to get to where you want them to go quickly is important. Time is expensive, so the quicker you can get something done or get a message across the better.

    Too little or too much?

    In comparing a few real estate websites, Phil highlighted how too much choice as well as too little choice can be equally negative. The trick is to have enough options but not to overwhelm people, and to get them where they are going quickly. I hate it when I order take out of some kind and I have to answer 20 questions about the flavour, size, etc. Sometimes less is more, but then again, sometimes it can be too little. It’s a fine line.

    Make it work first time

    Building simple prototypes, even paper based ones are helpful. Getting feedback from a variety of user types can be the difference between a successful first launch or needing to go back to the drawing board.

    The creation of personas in software and site testing can provide insights into how a user might make decisions when interacting with your site or application. Personas help when planning functional features and design and can save valuable time by spotting simple problems up front.

    According to some facts presented by Phil Barret, a Forrest Survey revealed that improving usability overshoots all other tactics when it comes to profitability.

    Many Huge Brands have built their success off the back of creating a superb user experience. Take Apple for example, most of what their products represent contain usability improvements over their competitors. the experience of listening to an iPod, using an iPhone or working on a macbook is what turns doubters into brand lovers in no time.

    Test it when it counts – early on

    One of the main messages coming out of the presentation was that the usability testing needs to happen at an early enough stage so it does not become too expensive. Many usability glitches discovered at the end stages of product development have cost companies huge amounts of money to fix. Investing in some testing and low cost prototyping early on saves future mishaps which ultimately have cost, time and Brand value implications.

    The following article(by the UK Design Council) discusses user centred design in more detail and might prove useful in understanding some of the techniques employed.

    The central premise of user-centred design is that the best-designed products and services result from understanding the needs of the people who will use them. User-centred designers engage actively with end-users to gather insights that drive design from the earliest stages of product and service development, right through the design process.

  • WordPress Meetup T-Shirt Design, what do you think?

    tshirt-design

    I’ve become so bogged down with client work lately that doing this little T-shirt Design for the upcoming WordPress meetup was a nice little break from the norm.

    I’d like to know what you guys think of the design. Those attending will be receiving a free T compliments of the Sponsors (FormFunction, Radiiate & World Wide Creative), thanks to our generous sponsors. We’ve catered for 30 people attending.

    To register for the WordPress Cape Town Meetup which will be happening on 28th May, 4 – 7pm at the Bandwidth Barn, click here and add a comment saying you’ll be there.

  • Recent Project – Praxia Technologies Branding & WP website

    greyA nice little Branding & Web design project I recently completed was for Praxia Technologies.

    Praxia Positions itself in the following manner.

    “Our mission is to help our clients realise the full potential of their network, communications and computer hardware and software.”

    Saeed of Praxia Technologies approached me, firstly to refresh his web presence and put something up there he could manage himself. This has become pretty much a standard request for web design projects as no-one wants to have to call up an html coder each time they want to update a page on their site.

    As usual I recommended WordPress, due to it’s quick and simple framework and user friendliness, especially for Praxia’s simple CMS(Content Management System) needs. I found a template which suited their requirements and went about giving it a complete facelift. Praxia’s logo also needed a change and I was happy to oblige as logo design is one of my favourite areas of focus.

    First Things first – Establish a new Brand

    We started off with the logo design so we could base the site’s look & feel on the Brand and create a nice consistent looking online presence.

    praxia-logo3 praxia-logo4

    After exploring various directions as I usually do with logo design projects the client was split between 2 logo options and we had some back & forth discussion on the pros and cons of each direction.

    cybersoftdrafts1.6

    We settled on the more practical option, the other being the 3 dimensional X element. The focus on the X stems from their original logo and was maintained to keep some kind of consistency going in the re-brand.

    cybersoftdrafts1.6

    Next comes the site in WordPress

    grey

    We decided to re-use the 3D X element with each component of the X representing a specific business unit as the client still liked the element and wanted to maintain it somehow.

    Because Praxia is an IT Tech company focusing every element of a clients IT Tech needs they wanted to go with something which links well with the technology they use. A few stages of design drafts and the client was pretty happy with the look though felt something was missing, and with the inclusion of the brushed metal background we’d settled on a design which the client was very excited about.

    draft2 draft4

    draft5

    To see the final coded result visit www.praxia.co.za. Let me know what you think.

  • Ad Designed with no electricity, Ogilvy tackles Power Crisis

    I found this interesting story on biz-community.com

    Ogilvy Cape Town’s art director Jennifer Macfarlane and copy writer Cuan Cronwright are the winners of The Times Young Creatives Competition, held 23 – 26 February 2008 at this year’s Design Indaba Expo.

    Winning Ad Designed without using any electricity

    A PR stunt no doubt saw creatives pitting their skills against each other in a fishbowl style space with Public onlookers. Pity the procedings had to be screened on Plasma screens which would have used a fair amount of power themselves. Kind of defeats the purpose a little but I suppose it was about driving a message home and this little stunt certainly did that.

    The winning agency was rewarded with a full page ad they can use for any pro bono client of their choice worth about R50000. Check out the article with all the details.

  • Design Indaba 2008 ends off SA design Week

    design_indaba(2)Gone are the good ol days when the big ad agency I’m working for sends me on an all expenses paid Design Indaba Conference. Sniff, being an Independent at the early stages of starting a business means I just can’t afford to attend a conference of this nature, in fact it almost went by without me noticing.

    I did a bit of browsing on the Design Indaba portal and was shocked to find out they’re using blogger to power their blog, can you imagine that. I’m not a big fan of blogger based blogs, they all just look a certain way and don’t interest me at all, in fact none of the blogs I subscribe to are blogger blogs. Come on Design Indaba, haven’t you heard of WordPress?

    I’m not anti DI at all, far from it, I would have loved to have been there as there seems to be more activity than all the previous years. One interesting aspect is the “Most Beautiful Object in South Africa” awards.

    Of course the Conference is booked out already, but there’s still a chance to book for the Simulcast screening which will play the presentations on a large Screen and will be hosted in a different Auditorium. If you’re under 25 you’ll pay R950 and over 25’s pay R1500, still a bit steep for my liking but gives anyone who’s really keen but can’t foot the higher main conference bill or those who missed out on the bookings a chance to see the conference. If you have the cash and are into design it’s worth a visit.

    design-indaba-magazine lastly if you miss it all there’s still the quarterly Design Indaba Magazine which is packed with juicy local & international design bits. I have my own collection of mags from the last few years though they usually go walking after I’ve had them for a year or 2 so keep yours safe.

    Design Indaba's primary aim is to advance the cause of design as a communication fundamental, a business imperative and a powerful tool in industry and commerce.