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Tips and tricks to turn you into a faster, smarter web designer

Productivity-boosting ideas to guarantee great results

October 18th 2008 | Tell us what you think [ 3 comments ]

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WordPress is one of a number of off-the-shelf products that web designers are increasingly using as the basis for new sites, to avoid regularly reinventing the wheel

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Ever had a day when you don't seem to have achieved anything? Ever worried you're not going to make your deadlines? Does that project you're working on seem like it will never end?

We all want to become faster and more efficient – but it often seems like there's no time to make improvements to the way we work. We can laugh at the self-defeating nature of this circular logic, but that doesn't get us any closer to a practical solution.

Yet working smarter doesn't have to mean taking a month off to design a totally new system. In fact, it's often the most simple changes that are the most effective.

What follows are some straightforward, easy to implement ways to maximise effectiveness and efficiency in all areas of your work, from initial concepts through to design and programming, and also in terms of work environments and project management. Get it right and your work could be in a future list of 20 websites that changed the world.

As you'll see, the best in the industry aren't only those who output visually stunning or massively useful and usable projects – they're also the ones who work most productively.

Back to basics

Given the digital age we live in, it's hardly surprising that many of us leap straight into Photoshop and Dreamweaver upon receiving a brief. This is, to put it mildly, jumping the gun, and not the way to efficient, solid work.

"Efficiency in the design process is making sure you're working on a good idea in the first place," counters Lateral's Simon Crab. "Software can help streamline the working process but if the idea is shit, no amount of tools will help."

Crab's advice is this: get away from the computer. "Believe it or not, there was once an age when designers produced virtuoso work with only a pen and scalpel," he reminds us. "But today's web designers have a subconscious belief that the computer will provide an answer as long as they sit in front of it for long enough."

The problem, he reckons, is that by doing this, you envelop yourself in a cosy but limited world, devoid of the chance collisions of unplanned events that typically shape ideas and provide inspiration. Instead of sitting gaping at Photoshop, he suggests going outside, seeing exhibitions, reading books and just walking around.

Crab also notes that a back-to-basics approach is often key in figuring out if ideas are any good. "A foolproof test is verbally explaining an idea to a non-designer," he says. "If you can't succinctly explain a concept and get across how it will look and feel, it's probably not a great idea."

He advocates drawing ideas on paper prior to using a computer, as the rawness of the pencil favours simplicity, and thus better concepts. "Computers just add surface gloss and obscure clarity," he says.

Usability expert Jakob Nielsen is also an advocate of starting with basic tools. "The most important tools for a smart designer are a pen and plenty of paper," he argues. "This is all you need to do user testing – no fancy lab required. Just sit next to a customer as they attempt to use your website."

 

Your comments (3) Click to add a new comment

stewsofdoom


October 21st 2008

3. im the real stews of doom.

stew says: get a real job

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leroy


October 19th 2008

2. I agree that getting your ideas on paper is 'the' most important step. If you can like what you see on paper, you are most likely to love it when you get it onto the computer. Thats what I have observed from my few years of designing and coding websites.

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Leroy Fernandes

www.fuelmediaworks.com

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floridaskater07


October 19th 2008

1. Hey, if it makes one smarter AND faster, then its a good thing!

Jiff

www.online-privacy.se.tc

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