Close Menu
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Wellbeing & Mental Health
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
Trending
  • “My business almost died, twice – here’s how I saved it”
  • How to become a High Growth SME
  • Hospitality industry risks collapse
  • Whistleblowing and the Cost of Silence: Why SMEs Must Have Policies in Place
  • Rewiring the UK’s investment landscape with AI
  • What Swedish SME Managers Can Teach UK Businesses About Remote Work
  • The 5 biggest VC negotiation mistakes and how to avoid them
  • Entrepreneurs Circle Makes £5M move with 15,000 sq ft HQ acquisition
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Wellbeing
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • RSS
You are at:Home»Features»What is ‘Good’ Design?
Dieter Rams in his office. © Gary Hustwit and Film First, Fair-Use

What is ‘Good’ Design?

0
Posted By sme-admin on June 21, 2023 Features

Good design is a concept defined by industrial designer Dieter Rams’s principles, ensuring that a product is useful, understandable and innovative amongst other things, while at the same time, involving as little design as possible.

Ultimately, designers strive for good design, and as Dieter Rams has said, “You cannot understand good design if you do not understand people.”

Rams’s ten principles highlight that good design:

  • Is innovative
  • Makes a product useful
  • Is aesthetic
  • Makes a product understandable
  • Is unobtrusive
  • Is honest
  • Is long-lasting
  • Is thorough down to the last detail
  • Is environmentally friendly
  • Involves as little design as possible

Mads Soegaard, Founder of The Interaction Design Foundation, comments: “The term “good design” sounds deceptively self-evident. When designers are practising, it needs to be clear which design elements actually make good design, and don’t over-complicate the design.

“Design is a field where we understand, communicate with and enhance the world around us, particularly by improving people’s lives. Indeed, the cost of bad design is frustrating users and a damaged brand name.

In order to ensure that you provide good design, in line with Rams’ suggestions and principles, the following points are crucial:

  1. Strive for innovation

Being innovative in design means moving alongside the developments in innovative technology. So, try to keep in step with those developments rather than attempt a novel design for the sake of it.

  1. Let form follow function, alongside the psychological and aesthetic aspects for your users

Users/customers want to enjoy good experiences (or at least be spared from frustrating ones) and have expectations for you to satisfy.

  1. Go for good looks and sensations

The products we use every day affect our personal well-being. So, if your design is around users and is something you’ve crafted well, they’ll enjoy it all the more if it’s visually appealing.

  1. Make your design speak clearly

An intuitive look and feel will inform users what to do with your design. If you can coax them to cross that magic bridge where they take to your product without having to stop to think (i.e., become confused), you’ll optimise how they can achieve their goals with it.

  1. Make it unobtrusive

Your design serves a purpose. It’s up to the users to express themselves through your design. That’s why a neutral and restrained approach works, as a clean and simple aesthetic is more helpful to potential users.

  1. Keep it honest and upfront

Users want promises kept, not false hopes dangled before them, so your design should only be as innovative, powerful and/or valuable as it claims to be. When you consider the solution/s it offers to what problems and design for those, you can help maintain this balance.

  1. Keep it unfashionably in style

Good design never looks dated or antiquated. Classic, clean looks help prevent the unwanted signature styling that pegs a product to an era and makes it discardable.

  1. Pay attention to details

When you pay attention to the tiniest elements, it tells users you cared enough to follow them on their list of design wants. This could be anything from an extra button on a wearable device to a failsafe feature that shows users all their activity and messages.

  1. Conserve the environment

The world’s problems are complex, and pollution can arise from wasted resources throughout your product’s lifecycle. The big-picture view means creating additional devices we can recycle more easily, with fewer resources invested.

  1. The least possible is the best possible

When you focus on just the essential aspects of your design, you can make the best of their purity. For example, the clean feel of a UI with well-defined, simple buttons is a winning “formula” compared with the clutter of options users would experience if you inserted every nice-to-have feature.

For more information about “good” design, check out the full article: https://www.interaction-design.org/literature/topics/good-design

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

“My business almost died, twice – here’s how I saved it”

How to become a High Growth SME

Five steps to building a healthier sales pipeline

Comments are closed.

Follow SME Today on Linkedin and share all the topics you find interesting
Get £100 of free trades - ii trading account

The Newsletter

Join our mailing list for the best SME stories, handpicked and delivered direct to your inbox every two weeks!

Sign Up
Events Calendar
    • Marketing
    June 16, 2025

    “My business almost died, twice – here’s how I saved it”

    June 5, 2025

    Why marketing budgets are wasted without sales alignment

    • Finance
    June 13, 2025

    Rewiring the UK’s investment landscape with AI

    June 12, 2025

    The 5 biggest VC negotiation mistakes and how to avoid them

    • Health & Safety
    January 29, 2025

    UK takeaways guilty of shocking hygiene failures:

    December 18, 2024

    Comment on Covid Corruption Commissioner Investigation

    • Events
    May 27, 2025

    Jose Ucar Confirmed for Leadership Live 2025 Speaker Line-Up

    November 19, 2024

    Seventeenth Global Entrepreneurship Week (GEW)

    • Community
    June 2, 2025

    National Charity Accelerates Children’s Reading Through New Corporate Partnership

    May 14, 2025

    Social care experts launch an online marketplace to disrupt a sector in crisis.

    • Food & Drink
    June 16, 2025

    Hospitality industry risks collapse

    June 4, 2025

    Creative Nature Launches Its First-Ever Kids’ Snack Bar Range in Tesco Nationwide

    • Books
    April 24, 2025

    Values-Driven Professionalism: A Path to Client Loyalty

    December 2, 2024

    Banish the banshee boss: how to lead without fear – addressing the issue of fear-based management and how NOT to be this manager

    About

    SME Today is published by the same team who deliver The Great British Expos’. We have been organising various corporate events for the last 10 years, with a strong track record of producing well managed and attended business events across the UK.

    Join Our Mailing List

    Receive the latest news and updates from SMEToday.
    Read our Latest Newsletter:


    Sign Up
    X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    Most Recent Posts
    June 16, 2025

    “My business almost died, twice – here’s how I saved it”

    June 16, 2025

    How to become a High Growth SME

    June 16, 2025

    Hospitality industry risks collapse

    June 13, 2025

    Whistleblowing and the Cost of Silence: Why SMEs Must Have Policies in Place

    June 13, 2025

    Rewiring the UK’s investment landscape with AI

    Categories
    • Books
    • Community & Charity
    • Education and Training
    • Environment
    • Events
    • Features
    • Finance
    • Food and Drink
    • Health & Safety
    • HR & Recruitment
    • In Profile
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • News
    • Property & Development
    • Sponsored Content
    • Technology
    • Transport & Tourism
    • Wellbeing & Mental Health

    Copyright © 2020 SME Today.

    • ABOUT SME TODAY: THE GO TO RESOURCE FOR UK BUSINESSES
    • Privacy
    • Contact
    Copyright © 2025 SME Today.
    • ABOUT SME TODAY: THE GO TO RESOURCE FOR UK BUSINESSES
    • Privacy
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.