Design as Brand Expression

What guides your design choices? Can you explain how the choices build value for your client’s brand? I think every designer should be able to. To me, good design is the expression of a clients’ brand that improves the business and the experience for the people interfacing with brand/design.

The Brand should be the common language between designer and client. Because, in the end, it’s the brand that absorbs the impact of the choices being made, especially when you’re designing experiences for mobile and web–the designed experience IS the product, which is the ultimate expression of the brand you’re building.

Before I ever draw a single pixel or drag my pencil across the paper of my sketchbook. I want need a sense of what the brand stands for: What does this brand mean to the team or company I’m working for? What does it mean to the end-users interacting with the experiences I’m designing? This is why I love working with start-ups or teams working on special projects because the passion is so potent, that sense of meaning comes very quickly.

The other important element, which is sometimes a little tougher to unearth, is the brand’s purpose. What is the brand’s core value to their customers? Where is the brand’s place in the market? What is its place in the world? It’s commonplace these questions can’t always be answered definitively, especially for really early stage start-ups. But, here’s what I’ve discovered about this: purpose often reveals itself through an iterative process of executing a brand’s meaning. In other words, being guided by meaning will lead you to purpose.

The third element is the constraints and objectives of the project at hand.  It’s the translation of these objectives and constraints into a designed experience that is the platform for the brand expression we’re talking about.

With these guiding elements in place, we have purpose, we have meaning and we have specific context in which we can make wise design choices about how to express our clients’ brand. This perspective also provides context to discuss how we make the business better and challenge clients on assumed notions and loosely formed ideas.

I welcome any experience or wisdom around this. Please share in the comments.

“Beauty without expression is boring.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

Social TV Players: IntoNow

Social TV Players is a series of posts about the most interesting Social TV apps and my perspectives and experiences with them.

IntoNow: The Gorilla in the Social TV Room

Yahoo! owned IntoNow is a TV check-in app powered by patent-pending audio fingerprinting technology–a technology you’re going to see in a lot of Social TV apps. IntoNow offers information about shows you’re checked into, including information and content related to the specific episode you’re watching. It also presents genre specific content. For example, IntoNow takes advantage of the vast resources at Yahoo! to present real-time sports stats, scores and play-by-plays. During the Oscars this year, they even displayed all the award categories and their winners as they happened.

Checking into a TV show with IntoNow is a very neat experience. You just open the app and press the big, green button and your device begins to listen to what you’re watching and a few seconds later you’re checked in and presented with a description of the program you’re watching, the cast members, links to related IMDb and Wikipedia entries, and a Twitter backchannel tuned to the hashtag and celebrities from the program.

At this point, IntoNow doesn’t really offer much more than the the magic of their check-in and a nicely executed app. IntoNow half-assly provides a discussion mechanism, it’s hardly a rewarding experience to actually discuss things, apparent by the fact there is usually no discussion actually happening. IntoNow’s founder Adam Cahan did hint at the Social TV Summit in San Francisco this past March that we are going to see their app engage people around their interests (the TV shows they’re watching) in the next 6-8 months.

From where I’m standing, IntoNow knows they’re the app to beat in Social TV, at the moment. The opportunity for them to be the preferred social tv app is theirs to lose, in large part to the magical experience of their app and the fact that Yahoo! is behind them, placing big bets in next generation TV technology.

Yahoo!’s connected TV software powers many of the smart TVs on the market today. It’s looking like Yahoo! is trying to pull a living room ecosystem together via software. (Definitely more on this later.)

So, yeah. IntoNow is the gorilla in Social TV room… for now.

IntoNow is available on the iTunes App Store for iPhone and iPad, and on Google Play for Android devices.