Sunday, July 5, 2009

You're Not Getting Enough Value From Your Web Team

Whether they have an in-house Web team or use an external agency, many organizations fail to get the most from their Web designers. Web designers are much more than pixel painter. They have a wealth of knowledge about the Web and how users interact with it. They also understand design techniques, including grid systems, white space, color theory and much more.


Treating designers as pixel painter wastes their design experience

It is therefore wasteful to micro-manage by asking them to "make the logo bigger" or to "move that 3 pixels to the left." By doing so, you are reducing their role to that of a software operator and wasting the wealth of experience they bring.


If you want to get the maximum return on your web team, present it with problems, not solutions. For example, if you're targeting your website at teenage girls, and the designer goes for corporate blue, suggest that your audience might not respond well to that color. Do not tell him or her to change it to pink. This way, the designer has the freedom to find a solution that may even be better than your choice. You allow your designer to solve the problem you have presented.

Design by Committee

Design is subjective. The way we respond to a design can be influenced by culture, gender, age, childhood experience and even physical conditions (such as color blindness). What one person considers great design could be hated by another. This is why it is so important that design decisions be informed by user testing rather than personal experience. Unfortunately, this approach is rarely taken when a committee is involved in design decisions.


Instead, designing by committee becomes about compromise. Because committee members have different opinions about the design, they look for ways to find common ground. One person hates the blue color scheme, while another loves it. This leads to designing on the fly, with the committee instructing the designer to "try a different blue" in the hopes of finding middle ground. Unfortunately, this leads only to bland design that neither appeals to nor excites anyone.