This week, we weigh the pros and cons of working on a product that you love to use every day. Is it really so bad to be your own power user? In The Sidebar, we discuss steps to take when exploring vague problem areas.
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Jayden TranJordan JenningsBrandon HiteDrew RosierTal CohenThe Sidebar:The Sidebar is an exclusive weekly segment for our Patreon supporters. You can subscribe starting at $1 per month for access to full episodes going forward! Sign up at https://patreon.com/designdetails.
In this week's Sidebar, we talk about how to begin exploring broad-space problem areas. How do you A/B test when the problem is too vague? What is the value of intuition and past experience? This, plus more!
Tweets:Sanketh shared a work in progress website collecting all of our Cool Things from past episodes - check it out!Main Topic:What are the pros and cons of working on a product you love?
ProsIt's fun and easy to get excited about the work.You can feel like a user and encounter user problems.It's easier to find bugs and inconsistencies.Becoming a power user happens naturally over time.It's often easier to stay at a company due to higher quality “work time” - there is potential for a higher quality of life overall. Work doesn’t feel like work, it’s play!It becomes highly motivating to solve your own problems, or the problems of people you work with each day.ConsIt can be easier to lose sight of problem areas, confusing flows, new user experience issues, and positioning/branding problems.Power users can memorize and get used to awkward flows that would otherwise suck - it’s hard to identify and fix these.It can make you stop liking the thing itself - it blends work and pleasure so that there’s less of a clear boundary.Navel gazing: it's harder to see opportunities for order-of-magnitude improvements or innovations. It can be hard to kill the things you love using.Potentially: slower skill development.Potentially: easier to feel "trapped" - the golden handcuffs keep you at the place for longer than you would have otherwise stayed.Cool Things:Brian shared The Last Dance on Netflix, a 10 episode documentary about the Chicago Bulls and Michael Jordan's epic career. Even for non-sports people, like us, this is inspiring.Marshall shared Robert Parker, a musician creating really wonderful 80's-synth, perfect for putting on in the background while working.Design Details on the Web:📻 We are @designdetailsfm🎙 Brian is @brian_lovin🎙 Marshall is @marshallbock📬 Don't have Twitter? Email us at designdetailsfm@gmail.com🙌 Support us on Patreon - your support literally makes this show possible. Thank you ❤️❓ Got a question? Ask it on our Listener Questions Hub, and we'll do our best to answer it on the show :)⭐️ Enjoying the show? Leave us a review on iTunesBahhh byye!
304: Interviewing the Interviewer
303: Building Design Teams (feat. Stacy La)
302: Designing Dark Patterns
301: Android vs. iOS
300: Looking Back on 300 Episodes
299: Balancing Management and IC Work
298: Designing a Design Curriculum
297: Day-to-Day Design Struggles
296: Google I/O
295: Public Critique and The Facebook Redesign
294: Designing UX for Games (feat. Tea Chang) (& Endgame Discussion)
293: Is AR a Gimmick?
292: Building Design Systems (feat. Linzi Berry)
291: Figma's UI Redesign and Public Critique
290: Transitioning to Product Design
289: Design File Hygiene
288: Articulating Design Rationale
287: A Peek Behind the Curtain
286: Bask in the Awkwardness
285: Deadly American Idol
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