BLOG@CACM
Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning BLOG@CACM

Matters of Design

http://cacm.acm.org/blogs/blog-cacm

The Communications Web site, http://cacm.acm.org, features more than a dozen bloggers in the BLOG@CACM community. In each issue of Communications, we'll publish selected posts or excerpts.

twitter
Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/blogCACM

Jason Hong considers how software companies could effectively incorporate first-rate design into their products.
Posted
  1. Jason Hong "Why is Great Design so Hard?"
    http://cacm.acm.org/blogs/blog-cacm/96476
  2. Readers' comments
  3. Jason Hong responds
  4. Author
  5. Footnotes
BLOG@CACM logo

I want to take a slight detour from usable privacy and security to discuss issues of design. I was recently at the Microsoft Faculty Summit, an annual event where Microsoft discusses some of the big issues and directions they are headed.

In one of the talks, a designer at Microsoft mentioned two data points I’ve informally heard before but had never confirmed. First, the ratio of developers to user interface designers at Microsoft is 50:1. Second, this ratio is better than any other company out there.

As someone who teaches human-computer interaction, I wanted to push on this point, so I asked the hard question: "On a relative and absolute scale, Microsoft has more designers than Apple or Google. However, I think most people would argue that Apple and Google have much better and easier-to-use products. Is it an organizational issue, a process issue, a skills issue? What do I tell the students I teach?"

I want to make clear that my question wasn’t meant to be negative of Microsoft specifically. It actually hits on a pervasive issue facing the software industry today: How do we effectively incorporate great design into products? Because, to be blunt, a lot of user interfaces today are just plain bad. Painfully bad.

Companies like Nintendo, Apple, Google, and Amazon have proven that good design matters. Why haven’t other companies followed suit? Or perhaps the real question is, Why haven’t other companies been able to follow suit?

I discussed this issue with a lot of people at the faculty summit and in Silicon Valley. I used Microsoft as my example, but I think the same problems apply to pretty much every software company.

People offered five explanations. The first is the "geek culture" where engineers rule. At most software companies, there has never been a strong mandate at the top for great design. Instead, engineers tend to have wide latitude for features and implementation.

Second, there is often no one in charge of the overall interaction and user experience. As such, there tends to be no consistency and unified flow for how a system looks and feels.

Third, designers tend to be brought in the process too late, to do superficial work on a system that has already been built. One person basically said it was "lipstick on a pig." Design is more than just the surface layer of the visual interface. It’s also about understanding how people work and play, how things fit into their lives, how people see and understand things, what problems they have, and how to craft a product that fits these constraints.

Fourth, designers have no real power in most organizations. They are typically brought in as consultants, but cannot force (sometimes necessary) changes to happen.

Fifth, a lot of people in technical professions just don’t "get" design. They think it’s just putting on a pretty interface or worse, the equivalent of putting pink flamingos on one’s lawn. A lot of this is due to education in computer science programs today, which focuses heavily on algorithms and engineering, but leaves little room for behavioral science, social science, the humanities, and any form of design, whether it be industrial design, graphic design, or interaction design.

Overall, this issue of design is a fundamental problem that industry doesn’t quite know how to get its head around. Just hiring an interaction designer isn’t enough. Improving the ratio of developers to designers isn’t enough. With the advent of trends like "design thinking," the increasing number of human-computer interaction degree programs, and visibly great products, people are starting to realize that design really matters, but just don’t know how to go about making it a fundamental way for organizations to make software rather than just "lipstick on a pig." The problem becomes even harder when the system combines hardware, software, and services, which describes pretty much every system we will have in the future.

I want to make clear that we, as researchers and educators, don’t know the answer either. But, in my next blog entry, I’ll write about my discussion with someone who used to work at Apple, with some insights about how its process works. I’ll also be visiting Google next week, so I’ll be sure to ask them these same questions.


JASON HONG: "This issue of design is a fundamental problem that industry doesn’t quite know how to get its head around."


P.S. I want to get your comments and feedback, but please don’t use the word "intuitive," talk about "dumbing down interfaces," or say that users are "dumb, stupid, and naïve." These are signals that you really don’t know what you’re talking about. And, yes, not all interfaces have to be walk-up-and-use.

Back to Top

Readers’ comments

On one side we have the "geek culture" people, oblivious of what happens to the user, doing self-referential design. On the other hand, we have the designers with their MacBooks, reluctant to delve into technical issues.

Between them there is a void that supports the "nobody is in charge" stance. Actually, the void was created before everything happened, before the software was written and way before the designers cringed. The void is, in fact, the lack of a usable user interface (UI) definition in the requirements and software design stages. If it’s not specified then, the outcome might be anything. For example, the outcome might be a good UI every now and then, as it happens nowadays, making you say "a lot of user interfaces today are just plain bad."

Functional analysts and software architects have to raise the flag, not graphics designers.

See, for example, some writings by Larry Constantine. He got it many years ago, and he is a geek like Alan Cooper and Jakob Nielsen. Not a designer. See http://www.foruse.com/articles/whatusers.htm or other articles in http://www.foruse.com/publications/index.htm.

The design activity that determines the usability of a nontrivial UI is the one that happens before writing the first line of code. Moreover, before starting to envision a disposable prototype.
        —Juan Lanus

Many of these observations are spot on—even uncomfortably accurate. However, perhaps a missing observation is that these five different issues are not independent and many share a similar root cause. Much of it comes down to the leadership in the company and the resulting decision-making processes. Projects, resources, and timelines are typically dictated at a very high level, often by those who exclusively focus on a multiyear competitive business strategy. That calculus is generally of the form "To improve our performance in market X, we need to create product Y, with features Z by Q2 of next year because our competitors A, B, C are likely releasing E, F, and G."

The notion of "good design" ends up becoming a product "feature" that just like any other feature has to be scoped and completed by a particular deadline and preferably not revisited. Good design is typically not at the essence of a product’s reason for existing. More often than not, projects are green-lit based solely on whether there is a pressing business need, rather than on the belief something genuinely great could or should be created. This core issue, in my opinion, sets into place a series of processes, priorities, and corporate culture that accounts for nearly all of your observations. Prioritizing good design requires a culture where by "creating a great experience" is a slightly higher priority than "maintaining a strategically competitive market share." It’s a little bit of a "built it and they will come" mentality—which, understandably, is not a pill many executives readily swallow, especially if their compensation is connected to the stock price.

Occasionally, business needs and good hw/sw/ux design do happen to align. But it is fairly rare. A leadership team that can see past the battlefield of business needs with enough vision and taste to identify the seedlings of a great and profitable experience … is rarer still.
        —Johnny Lee

I’d change the question to "Why is great design so infrequent?" because we have solved much harder problems. It requires a leader who needs to enforce the principle of profitability—i.e., "We are going to design a product that will outsell our competitors’ products because they will want to buy it"—and the infrequency of great design is a result of the infrequency of these leaders. I suspect they are often only one person who comes to the project with a picture of what is needed…. [Y]ou don’t need 50 design engineers; rather, what’s needed is one responsible "profit" engineer—one who is willing to delay each step of development until trial users give their feedback. You can’t predict what users will want, but you can put prototypes in their hand and have them tell you what they want.
        —Neil Murphy

Back to Top

Jason Hong responds

One of the goals of emerging human-computer interaction programs is to cross-train "Renaissance teams" that can combine the best of design, computer science, and behavioral science.

I take the term "Renaissance team" from Randy Pausch, who noted that given the scope of knowledge today, "Renaissance man" is a near impossibility today. Plus, people tend to listen to me more when I quote him.:-)

On the computer science side, I’ve been advocating that all computer science undergrads should be required to take at least 1) a machine learning course, and 2) a human-computer interaction course. My rationale is that these two themes are fundamental to the future of computer science. Taking a machine learning course is an easy sell in CS departments and starting to happen, but it’s less so with HCI.

I’m not sure yet what to advocate on the design and behavioral science side of things, though.

Back to Top

Back to Top

Join the Discussion (0)

Become a Member or Sign In to Post a Comment

The Latest from CACM

Shape the Future of Computing

ACM encourages its members to take a direct hand in shaping the future of the association. There are more ways than ever to get involved.

Get Involved

Communications of the ACM (CACM) is now a fully Open Access publication.

By opening CACM to the world, we hope to increase engagement among the broader computer science community and encourage non-members to discover the rich resources ACM has to offer.

Learn More