After working for a London design agency for a number of years, I was getting tired of the hectic schedule, which is when I thought it would be a good idea to specialise and ended up landing in app design. Since then I've been working with various start ups around the UK and national corporation like Nationwide and Gumtree. When I was a young boy, I painted small army figures and always had my head in a paint by numbers but I was quite into sports and wanted to be a p.e teacher but fortune had it that my school dropped physical education due to lack of popularity, so choose product design in its place and from there I haven’t looked back.
7robots is the name of the company (Steven Roberts, minus the "t" in Steven, minus the second "r" in Roberts and change the "e" to an "o" and thats how the name came about). The only staff member is myself (and occasional contractor) busy designing and building beautiful digital products, brands, and experiences.
Design is a tricky word. It means different things to different people. For myself, design is the whole thing. It's the way it looks, way it works, way it smells...it's the whole thing.
In terms of product design, I have to say I take more joy in visual design over user experience design. Mostly due to the reaction of the clients. Outside of the product sphere branding would top the list.
An app I designed in my spare time called smalltalk. It provides 6 stimulating subjects each day (a inspirational quote, a fact, a joke, on this day, word of the day and tip of the day), which has organically grown to 40k+ users, showing me that users like and want to use the app without the influence by any marketing.
Always the "need" of the client, rather than the "want", and remembering if an aspect doesn’t enhance the user experience or the brand then it's not required.
I can see user interfaces becoming more and more minimal, touch specific and voice activated. I can see there always be a place for branding and marketing.
Listen and collaboration, make sure you build a relationship with the designer. No one knows more about your company than you do. Designers know their stuff, you know your stuff, put it together and that's a whole lot of stuff we know. But there are no short cuts. To pass all that knowledge along we need to talk. And talk. And talk and talk and talk. We need to be in the same space, we need to share stupid ideas before we get to the good ideas.
The process starts with the proposal. Work with the client to understand their needs. It always beings with getting to know the client, then if we take a usual product design product for example... research, strategy, user experience, visual design, development, QA, analytics and testing.
Get your work out there, whether it's a website portfolio or uploading works to inspiration sites much as Dribbble or Behance. When designing a product, don’t be fixated on a single screen, people don’t think wow look at that one screen…
It's great to get paid for something that you love to do but on the flip side, the work never stops, there is always something you can be designing, whether its for a client or simply promoting yourself.
I would have to say working in a London design agency. The fast pace and tight deadlines meant you had to learn and develop quickly or you had to get out of the way.
My work patterns range from working on my own (with obviously collaboration with client feedback), working with other contractors/agencies and working in-house with a client's team.
After working for a London design agency for a number of years, I was getting tired of the hectic schedule, which is when I thought it would be a good idea to specialise and ended up landing in product design. Since then I've been working with various start ups around the UK and national corporation like Nationwide and Gumtree.
When I was a young boy, I painted small army figures and always had my head in a paint by numbers but I was quite into sports and wanted to be a p.e teacher but fortune had it that my school dropped physical education due to lack of popularity, so choose product design in its place and from there I haven’t looked back.
It ranges from branding projects, product design - responsive websites, mobile apps (user experience and user interface design), style guides, iconography, illustration. The designs I'd like to work with more is anything that brings a challenge, maybe new innovative technology.
Get your work out there, whether it's a website portfolio or uploading works to inspiration sites much as Dribbble or Behance, these don't have to be projects for clients, they can be self initiated.
Listen and collaboration. To pass all that knowledge along we need to talk. And talk. And talk and talk and talk. We need to be in the same space, we need to share stupid ideas before we get to the good ideas.
Design is a tricky word. It means different things to different people. For myself, design is the whole thing. It's the way it looks, way it works, way it smells...it's the whole thing.
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