Here is a lively topic originally started by J. Ambrose Litttle in the IxDA forum that I thought would be interesting to the Catalyze community.
What do you think?
J. Ambrose Little
Monday 8:39pm
I've been following the frequent allusions to Google, 37signals, Facebook, et al (including Jared Spool's presentation) as evidence that UCD is somehow broken with interest. There's no debating that these products have been successful, but it is also worth considering that they are the exception, not the rule. As such, they can't be the basis for guidance towards repeatable results.
I could be wrong (*no really*!), but it seems to me that the goal of UCD is not so much to be innovative and groundbreaking but to add some degree of reliability in terms of actually creating something that meets folks' needs. I would suggest, FWIW, that innovation is nice and sometimes quite lucrative, but you can't bank on it. You have a great, innovative idea or you don't, and UCD won't deeply affect that, but that doesn't make UCD something that should be tossed out. For the vast majority of apps that are, I hope we all agree, not terribly innovative and yet at least have the potential to serve the needs for which they were conceived, UCD is about the most promising approach to building the right thing, the right way. Agile is a close second for those who don't have the skills/knowledge for UCD.
Can you over invest? Absolutely, but abusus non tollit usum.
[I tend to think that some blend of UCD with Agile is the sweet spot for most software.]
As for innovation and the dreamy potential of advancing the industry towards some fanciful new future, well, most businesses can't bank on that, and even most who aspire to that will fail regardless of process or lack of process. I don't think it's wise to base an entire discipline like IxD upon such aspirations, nor is it wise to toss out process—the point of which is to provide some repeatable consistency, even if imperfect and not particularly sexy. By nature, process is not geared towards innovation but rather towards producing reliable, repeatable results, which is what most businesses need and want, and any sustainable profession should have the concerns, needs, and wants of business stakeholders close to heart over and above laudable, if unrealistic, dreams about the future.
So I guess I don't really get the controversy.
--Ambrose
Here is my only problem with the discussion so far. It's at best anecdotal based. (Robert - this isn't pointed at you - to the discussion, so no one should take this personal) .
"Most" "Many" etc when those are completely normative statements not backed up by real numbers. I concede, heartily, that some of the most innovative, cool, ground-breaking things that have come out in the last 10 years did not use UCD by any stretch of the imagination. Maybe they went against every tenant. Maybe the very best in the entire world worked on those projects. But at the end of the day - for every phenomenal success that didn't use UCD, let me show you 10, 50, 100, 1000 products that are complete and utter disasters - that also didn't use UCD.
You can't (well you can - but you will have little legitamacy) , argueing the failure of UCD by pointing to the 1 in 1000 products that are amazing acts of genius.
I think there are some great fundementals in UCD that can help make the other 999 products a little less crappy, a little more humane - and the truth of the matter is that you, me, and just about everyone on this list - makes our bread and butter by working on those 999 products.
On Tue, Jun 24, 2008 at 5:44 PM, Robert Hoekman Jr robert at rhjr.net wrote:
What I don't agree with is the idea that you must discard the past to move forward. For me, that's too cheap and easy an approach. I greatly respect your willingness to pay close attention to and consider opposing arguments, but this particular point bothers me. "The past" is filled with far more examples of products, innovative thinking, and success stories based on activity-centered research, magic, genius design, and just plain luck than UCD can claim even on its best day. What's cheap and easy is the idea that we can dissect a chef's work and call it [trim]
—
~ will
"Where you innovate, how you innovate,
and what you innovate are design problems"
Will Evans | User Experience Architect
tel +1.617.281.1281 | will at semanticfoundry.com
twitter: https://twitter.com/semanticwill
|