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+ Too many cooks in the proverbial design kitchen?

02.19.08 | Permalink |
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Great post about how a poorly conceived design feedback process can really undermine an otherwise potentially successful design.

Group intelligence is multiplicative when idiots are involved - combining a half-wit with another half-wit does not result in a full-witted person, it results in a quarter-witted person (1/2 x 1/2 = 1/4). Combining a full-witted individual with a half-wit still only yields a half-wit.

The most important thing is to solicit feedback form the right kinds of people, who can be:

* Anyone with an eye for great design, no matter what their job title is
* Usability experts who offer advice that has actual experience behind it
* Those who offer constructive criticism. My favorite example of the wrong kind of criticism is when someone says “it doesn’t feel right.”
* Those that understand that they hired YOU, the designer, to create something great. They may understand their business better, but ultimately they’ve left their trust with you to deliver a quality design.

SEOmoz | How to Ruin a Web Design - The Design Curve

In: Design, Process



« Design in the Wild: Cloverfield and Relative sickness | Apple patent suggests the advanced multitouch in the MacBook Air is only the beginning »