February 1st
Labels always win.
In the battle of clarity between icons and labels, labels always win.
Continue Reading: Labels always win.
Author Archive
February 1st
In the battle of clarity between icons and labels, labels always win.
Continue Reading: Labels always win.
January 30th
But former Facebook and Twitter product guy Josh Elman makes a good point in What is “Growth Hacking” really?? “you do need to find the right “hacks” that help you get to those points of sustainable growth. LinkedIn started with Reid Hoffman inviting his entire professional network to join him, Facebook started expanding college-by-college waiting until […]
Continue Reading: Growth hacking may not be the best term…
January 28th
Lots of interesting bits in Redesigning Google: how Larry Page engineered a beautiful revolution. The thesis: “We went to Google looking for the person responsible for the new design direction, but the strange answer we got is that such a person doesn’t exist. Instead, thanks to a vision laid out by a small team of […]
Continue Reading: Redesigning Google
January 27th
Never Lie About Who You Really Are is such a great post…taking the notion of being who you really are and applying it to product design. “People at all levels, especially management, witness the slow undoing of good customer service, product quality, or safety standards, and they don’t say a thing about it. Even if […]
Continue Reading: Never Lie About Who You Really Are
January 25th
Must read. In What it’s Really Like Working with Steve Jobs Glenn Reid shares his experiences working with Steve Jobs and how he really was just a product guy who happened to be CEO: “I can still remember some of those early meetings, with 3 or 4 of us in a locked room somewhere on […]
Continue Reading: What it’s really like working with Steve Jobs
January 23rd
After linking to her previous post on product management and pointing out how in my experience the tough thing to know is when to kill a product, Laura Klein has graciously dug into that very problem in another post, well worth reading: To Kill or Not to Kill. “Killing a feature or product is exceptionally […]
Continue Reading: When to kill or not to kill (a feature)
January 22nd
Hope To Better The Person is a nice post by Brandon Leedy on the aim of product design, in which he examines a video by Charles Eames and draws parallels with Apple and others. His thesis: “Ultimately, that’s what a good product does, it hopes to better the user. Not with technical specs or price, […]
Continue Reading: Hope To Better The Person
January 21st
Lots of good and potentially controversial ideas in here, a blog post by Laura Klein: Users Know: Expect More From Product Managers: “Whatever their strategy, good product managers validate their features before they build them, and that’s why their ideas are so much more likely to improve the bottom line of the company. They don’t […]
Continue Reading: Expect More From Product Managers
January 19th
For your weekend reading: one of the most comprehensive and insightful articles you’ll ever read on SaaS (software as a service): SaaS Metrics 2.0 – A Guide to Measuring and Improving what Matters. Written by David Skok of Matrix Partners. It lays out everything you need to know, from the overall model of SaaS to […]
Continue Reading: Everything you need to know about SaaS
January 18th
On a vast majority of UI design projects, the initial user experience is an afterthought. Yet, the first steps a user takes are critical for several reasons. First, the initial experience gets any data loaded or necessary setup done. Second, and perhaps as importantly, the initial experience teaches users how to use the software and […]
Continue Reading: Designing for mobile empty states