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Archive for the ‘Limina Perspective’ Category

Invincea in Action

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

One of Limina’s more exciting projects from 2010 was working with Invincea’s Web Browser Protection .  Last month they posted a video showing off some of the cool features and demonstrating key product differentiators in the web borne threat detection and management arena.

It’s really cool to see our designs in action.  Read more about our project with with Invincea. You can find more of their demos and webcasts on their YouTube Channel.

Enjoy!
-Jon

Looking forward to the “Big Data” DC Tech Meetup

Friday, May 20th, 2011

Big Data is the topic of discussion at the upcoming DC Tech Meetup. We’re all excited to hear what AddThis/Clearsping have to share along with OPower, Living Social and others. The data challenge is technical, yes… it’s true, how to collect, clean, store, query, mine and report, but it’s also a design problem as well.  How can we provide access to the data in a way that informs our perception? Looking at the deluge of data in overwhelming amounts we can all get pretty easily lost.

Dave McCandless‘ TED gives a great talk on the Beauty of Data Visualization. This talk covers all of the valuable considerations for why providing the right visualizations can make a big difference in how we understand the data.  You can learn a lot from looking at raw data, but when you ask the right questions, and have the relevant visualizations, things can become far more meaningful.

A huge Hat Tip to Jeff Wong, Creative Director at AddThis.

 

Agile Usability Enablers

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

Being a virtual company has it’s challenges – communicating, planning, collaborating, tracking, managing and delivering have many potential pitfalls.  We wanted to take a moment to highlight some products that have been helping us to drive more efficiency in our virtual structure.

In recent months, Limina has been picking up the pace in collaborating with UX personnel in the field and delivering our services.  This has been, in no small part, due to our use of collab-ware.  We’ve recently migrated our intranet, client extranets and project collaboration space to OneHub workspaces.   For the past 5 years, we’ve been  using GoToMeeting to facilitate our internal project checkpoints, along with a host of user research activities and client presentations.  And we’ve recently started using ClickTime as our user friendly time reporting product.

Other enablers we’re tinkering with in our lab include: Pidoco, iRise,and iMockups, to name a few. Add into the mix Skype, GoogleDocs, chat and mail clients and you’re well on your way!

We just thought we’d give a shout out to technology products that’ve been making deploying our user centered research and design services  not only more efficient for a decentralized UX practice, but fun and easy!  Our clients and field agents love how we’ve brought these products into our process and service delivery suite.  And we couldn’t think of any better way to say: “We <3 These Great Products!”

-Jon

Onehub Workspaces

Customizable workspaces for online collaboration. Manage projects, share files and collaborate with others.

Gap – Lessons in a Logo Makeover Fail

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

We’ve been tracking this story for about a week now – trying to see where things would end up. Here’s just a brief overview an analysis, along with some interesting links on what you might have missed.

On October 5th,  2010 – GAP, inc.  quietly swapped out their logo on their website (soft launch) without warning or announcement.

On October 6th, 2010UnderConsideration posted an article “Don’t Mind the Gap, or the Square” where they provided a little background on the company, the history of the logo and some initial reactions to the new logo.

Gap’s Facebook Page starts getting customer comments on the new look… and Gap responds:

Thanks for everyone’s input on the new logo! We’ve had the same logo for 20+ years, and this is just one of the things we’re changing. We know this logo created a lot of buzz and we’re thrilled to see passionate debates unfolding! So much so we’re asking you to share your designs. We love our version, but we’d like to see other ideas. Stay tuned for details in the next few days on this crowd sourcing project.
Gap’s Facebook status update

October 7th, 2010idsng.org posts a roll-up of reactions to the new logo and Gap’s plans to crowd-source, or not.

October 8th, 2010 -  UnderConsideration pulls together the Mother-load post “Followup: Gap Gate” – demonstrating that gap consumers, designers, bloggers and the social web weren’t going to swallow the new logo and were ready to poke fun and actually compete for the title of “I designed the new Gap logo”

The Gapify Tumblr demonstrated how asinine the design decisions were and how applying them completely oversimplify and disregarded the key brand identity in any logo.

And my personal favorite CrapLogo.Me took a more in-your-face approach to describe how they feel about the new logo by creating a Gap logo meme.

By far the most controversial of reactions (see below)  is Gap’s marketing pivot – “Let’s crowd source the logo design” which spurs into motion a $500 logo design competition by 99 Designs.  The competition rang in a healthy 4660 entries – which spanned  wide range of humorous satirical design to some legitimate attempts to resolve the company’s desire to move their brand forward.  While this competition is not officially sponsored by Gap, we’re awaiting to learn the outcome of the, now closed, competition and what 99 Designs intends to do with the winning design.  (UPDATE 10.18.10 – below)

Post-post Analysis Post: Everyone is all excited about crowd-sourcing design..  aren’t they?  Wait…  not everyone.  Crowd-sourcing has done wonders for open technology platforms like Drupal and Jquery and opened content platforms like Wikipedia,  but is it right for design?  The main complaint to the world of crowd sourced design is that it appeals to the bottom feeder in design consumers and the desperation of a struggling designer which has a downward spiraling effect on the design market.   Mike Monteiro from Mule Design sums it up in his “Gap, I have your new logo” post from Off the Hoof.  Another jab at 99 Designs and Crowd sourced design at BonFX.

Oct 11, 2010 – Gap Inc. Issues an official press release- “Gap Listens to Customers and Will Keep the Classic Blue Box Logo”

Oct, 11, 2010 – AP Marketing Writer, Emily Fredrix,  picks up the story and posts:  Gap’s logo back to blue after fans gripe about new – now headlining on Yahoo.com Oct.12, 2010.

Oct 12, 2010 – Richard Grefé, Executive Director of AIGA| the professional association for design, (re) posts his position on Spec work with a letter sent to the Gap on October 7th.

If you want quality, if you have respect for the design process (research, conceptualization, design, testing), along with an ounce of self respect – you’ll pay the designer the true value of the labor and the product.

Why does Limina care about this?  Our customers are primarily software, web-app and website design oriented, looking for ways to improve the user experience.  While this resides heavily in user research and user centered design, it often touches and occasionally includes heavy consideration for brand identity.  We don’t take the subject lightly – use acceptance can make or break a product.  As we’ve seen with Tropicana and now with Gap – this level of market rejection can be costly – fortunately for Gap they didn’t roll out the new design across all of the product lines, stores, packaging, bags and collateral.

UPDATE 10.17.10 – Things just went from bad to worse.  99Designs sent out a blast to the community to participate in “voting” for the best Gap logo design.  It’s as if the 99Designs crew got cold feet  in fear of a backlash from the design community if they picked a weak design.  So they’re throwing it back at the crowd.  “Here…  you guys sort out this mess”.

-Jon Fukuda