Product Design is a discipline that stemmed from and outgrew a similar one: Industrial Design. A role born during the mass production era that took place in the interwar period and right after the Technological Revolution, Industrial Design is defined by the Industrial Designers Society of America as the “professional practice of designing products, devices, objects and services used by millions of people worldwide every day. Industrial Designers not only focus on the appearance of a product but also on how it functions, is manufactured and ultimately the value and experience it provides for users.”
Since industrialization allowed for inexpensive products to reach millions of people that were now able to purchase them, Industrial Designers helped manufacturers in the process of creating these new products that now were not only functional but also aesthetically pleasing, thus initiating the phenomenon of mass consumption we are now familiar with.
With new technologies emerging, the Internet and an increase of mobile phone usage worldwide, Industrial Design evolved into its own category, known as Product Design. As we previously mentioned, Product Design concerns the development and design of digital and virtual products, and, in their case, the Product Design process is grounded in the thorough study of users’ wants, needs and expectations (UX Research) while it also involves elements that have to do with providing the best usability and a pleasant interface design.
What is UX Design?
As we previously discussed with Product Designers, we will now aim to define what User Experience Design is and what the main characteristics of this field are before getting into the technical aspects and daily tasks of this position.
To begin with, it’s important to highlight that in the design academia there isn’t consensus when it comes to defining what UX Design means. Or, to put it simply, there is not a single, universally and commonly accepted definition when it comes to laying down every aspect of this field and what it actually includes. The latter implies that there are multiple interpretations of what a UX Design is and what a UX Designer should do. This is also in part thanks to the fact that User Experience Design is a concept that has a multitude of dimensions and that includes a wide range of disciplines: from information architecture, visual design, usability, UX Research to interaction design and human-computer interaction, you might now understand why it seems difficult to categorize each specialization and provide a one-fits-all definition of what UX Design actually entails.
Despite not being able to lay down its definition, we can talk about UX Design objectives applied to a product or a project. To sum up, the goal of UX Design is to improve customer satisfaction and loyalty through the utility, usability and joy that’s provided in the interaction with a product or service. The Designer’s objective is to deliver an experience that follows a certain group of tasks: is aesthetically pleasing, provides users with value, follows the brand’s image and helps achieve business goals.