
Dear
Fellow Consumer,
Have you every bought a product and them become frustrated because
it was difficult to use? You probably don't have to think back
very far to remember having difficulties using one or more of
the products you purchased. The reason so many products you buy
are difficult to use is that many product manufacturing companies
focus product design with the goal of achieving manufacturing
efficiency rather than ease-of-use. In other words, the end user's
needs become secondary in the design.
Our
mission at Tripod Design is to restore and improve the relationship
between products, their design, and their users. With the goal
of designing products that have superior ease-of-use, we have
been developing a concept we call Human Centered Design. The Human
Centered Design process takes a product from concept through final
design by researching the ergonomic usability needs of people
of all ages and physical abilities.
The
goal of HCD is to make sure that every person at Tripod involved
in designing a new product account for the needs, both physical
and psychological, of each and every individual consumer who might
interact with the product. Particular focus is given to those
consumers with physical disabilities.
A
Better Approach to Product Design
Why
focus design on the needs of those consumers with physical disabilities?
Our contention is that segmenting people with and without physical
disabilities, as the vast majority of consumer product manufacturing
companies do, is in many cases unnecessary. In addition, product
development based on such segmentation is disadvantageous to both
groups of consumers because many products on the market today
cannot be used effectively by those with physical disabilities,
and since the products were not developed based on the needs of
persons with physical disabilities the products are actually more
difficult to use for persons who do not have physical disabilities
(more on this below.)
Most
of the consumers who are not physically disabled are not even
consciously aware that many of the products they buy every day
are difficult to use. This in spite of the fact that difficult-to-use
products sometimes cause them pain, either immediate or long term,
or are so difficult to use that they cause stress from frustration.
For
example, most people without a physical disability would not put
the standard cylindrical pen or pencil in the "difficult-to-use"
category. However, most of these same people have probably experienced
"writer's cramp" in their hand at one time or another,
and almost all probably have a callous built-up on the side of
the middle finger that holds the pen or pencil in place as they
write.
It's
not until a product comes along that challenges the status quo
do we consumers pick up on just how difficult-to-use the existing
product was.
For
example, not many consumers questioned ease-of-use in kitchenware
until an upstart company called OXO International (www.oxo.com)
introduced a new product line called OXO Good Grips in 1990. The
design concept was simple: Make kitchenware products that are
comfortable and easy-to-use no matter the user's physical abilities.
Usability needs for those consumers with physical disabilities
was the primary focus of design development. OXO's designs incorporated
large resilient handles that were oval in cross section which
enabled better distribution of forces on the hand and enhanced
gripping capability, even when the user had wet hands.
By
the year 2000, OXO product lines were being produced for specialty
stores like Bed Bath and Beyond, Bloomingdale's, Crate&Barrel,
Linens N' Things, and department stores such as Target (Soft Works)
and Wal-Mart (Sensables), as well as direct mail-order catalogues.
The
key point of this success story is that a large number of customers
who buy OXO's products have no particular physical disability.
What
OXO discovered was that a product designed so that it can be
used effectively by those with physical disabilities also becomes
much more comfortable and easy to use for those who are not physically
disabled.
OXO
has been successful because all consumers naturally gravitate
towards useful products that are easy-to-use. In addition, by
making its products aesthetically attractive OXO recognized that
all consumers have a psychological attraction to products that
not only work well, but also look nice.
To
learn more about Tripod's Human Centered Design process please
click here.