See no boundaries
Article by
Liz DanzicoMay 27, 2010.
To create patterns is natural. In fact, not only as designers,
but also as humans, we make sense of a wild environment by taking
haphazard shapes and concepts and giving them form and meaning. We
categorize them: poster, website, building, typography,
interactive, stone, and so on. Creating categories, then, gives our
experiences boundaries.
For designers in this era, however, seeing boundaries can be a
disadvantage. At a time when websites are spilling off desktops
onto sidewalks and computing in public spaces is dissolving into
behavior, technology itself has shown boundary blindness. And
humans are following suit. We carry our televisions in our pockets.
We pay with our phones. And we read more than ever before on an
unpredictable number of screens. It is possible to see beyond the
small fences of the familiar, but first you must see no
boundaries.
Yet even this is not enough. As you become comfortable in this
open field—no matter the discipline—what is common is that you
design for people. And an understanding of where design intersects
with human behavior is critical to raising both the meaning and
value of products and services. The studies of how people think
(cognitive psychology), how people interact (interaction design),
how people behave (behavioral economics), and the design of
services for them (service design) can complement and enhance your
understanding of your pursuit.
So, start by reimagining your design studio. It's not just the
place where you have a desk, a chair and some tools—it is also the
place beyond those walls. It is there, in your design studio at
large, that you'll find those who will inspire and instruct you
that seeing no boundaries is one of the greatest lessons for a
young designer. Going beyond yourself, then, can become a natural
extension of your every day.
This essay originally appeared in the 2010AIGA|Aquent Survey of Design
Salaries.