I don't know if you are a student or a working designer. Different companies, including different customers, have different requirements for this piece. I think my former company has taught me a lot in this area. The core logic is that your design decision, why should you target the people you choose, what are the characteristics of these people, and what they need, all need objective The research data support, your personal subjective judgment is not convincing. The research we did before will be about 30 pages. If there is a professional organization's research data will be used, not through the competition of the user comments on their own statistics, to obtain user portraits. According to the research results to provide guidance for the follow-up design.
Therefore, I think the design background you wrote earlier is only a subjective point of view statement, and the user portrait is also your own stereotype. Such research is about equal to no. It belongs to the practice of freshman and sophomore students (of course, it is also because the homework requirements in many schools are not strict). Many people (including myself) are not forced to do that kind of detailed design research until they finish their senior year. I don't even understand the meaning and logic of this matter.
Thank you for using your precious time to answer my doubts. My career planning in school is not good. After graduation, I accumulated works while gap. Thank you for your pertinent evaluation. When I was in school, I didn't pay much attention to research and thought it was more important to be handsome and good-looking. During my gap period, I also had a shallow feeling of the importance of doing research, that is, sometimes some of the products I made had no roots, maybe I will be better after work. I will pay more attention to research in the future. Thank you for your reply. It seems that there is still a lot to learn to become a qualified industrial designer!
I didn't graduate for a few years. I changed my job a few days ago. Now the larger the enterprise, the more attention to "appearance" outside the part. If you can only design the appearance, you can only get offer from some small factories. Interviewers of large factories often talk to you about thinking about user experience innovation and other aspects, and whether your innovation is logical and persuasive. This is also a point that ID designers need to pay special attention to to maintain their competitiveness in the next few years.
There is nothing wrong with what you said. I really learned a lot from your communication. Let's encourage each other, buddy. I hope you and I can become first-class designers in the future.
Excellent
very good
Sketches are good.
Research is too much water, it is better not to let go.
Therefore, I think the design background you wrote earlier is only a subjective point of view statement, and the user portrait is also your own stereotype. Such research is about equal to no. It belongs to the practice of freshman and sophomore students (of course, it is also because the homework requirements in many schools are not strict). Many people (including myself) are not forced to do that kind of detailed design research until they finish their senior year. I don't even understand the meaning and logic of this matter.
Seconds like
Special shape?