What is a product designer? Exploring their vital role in innovation
Georgina Guthrie
May 24, 2024
Over the past two decades, the landscape of design has undergone a seismic shift. What once revolved around the aesthetics of color, typography, and imagery has evolved into a diverse array of disciplines, with a significant focus on interactive design. Amidst this evolution, one designation often sparks bewilderment: the product designer.
Unlike the more familiar realms of web or visual design, the role of a product designer can seem enigmatic to many. Complicating matters further, the term ‘product designer’ has undergone its own transformation in the last decade, leading to a plethora of alternative titles such as Information Architects (IA), User Experience (UX) designers, and User Interface (UI) designers.
Adding to the complexity, each of these titles represents distinct disciplines, each with its own sphere of expertise. Yet, within this intricate web of design specializations, the product designer emerges as a nexus, intersecting with and drawing from these various disciplines. Feeling lost amidst the terminology? Let’s embark on a journey to unravel the essence of what it truly means to be a product designer.
What is a product designer?
What does a product designer do?
Product designers are typically digital problem-solvers. They study user problems and use their design skills to make apps and websites that provide solutions.
What do we mean by ‘problem?’ Well, let’s say it’s cold outside. The user’s problem is that they’re chilly, and there are many ways to solve this problem. Your competition for them as a customer could be a competitor site, a shopping mall, a central heating system, a hot bath, a cozy pet, or anything else that helps them stay warm. The product designer’s goal is to be the best solution.
It’s their job to make it easy for visitors to use an app or website to top up their winter wardrobe. But creating that outcome isn’t as simple as making the product bug-free and pretty. The product designer must make the site better, more convenient, and more enjoyable than all these other options.
To achieve this, they need expertise and skills in the following:
- User-centric design: Product designers prioritize the needs and preferences of end-users throughout the product design process. They conduct thorough research to understand user behaviors, pain points, and preferences, informing design decisions to create intuitive and engaging experiences.
- Wireframing and prototyping: Utilizing tools such as wireframes and prototypes, product designers translate conceptual ideas into tangible representations. These visual aids serve as blueprints for the final product, allowing for iterative refinement based on user feedback and usability testing.
- Collaboration and communication: Product designers act as liaisons between various stakeholders, including developers, product managers, and marketers. They facilitate collaboration by effectively communicating design concepts, rationale, and insights, ensuring alignment with project goals and objectives.
- Iterative design process: Embracing an iterative approach, product designers continuously refine and enhance designs based on user feedback and data-driven insights. They iterate through multiple design variations, A/B testing methodologies, and usability studies to optimize the user experience and drive product success.
- Cross-functional expertise: Product designers possess a diverse skill set encompassing user experience (UX) design, user interface (UI) design, information architecture, and interaction design. This cross-functional expertise enables them to address multifaceted design challenges and deliver holistic solutions that resonate with users.
- Adaptability and innovation: In a dynamic and ever-changing digital landscape, product designers demonstrate adaptability and a willingness to embrace new technologies and design trends. They remain at the forefront of innovation, experimenting with novel design techniques and emerging tools to push the boundaries of creativity and user experience excellence.
What tools do product designers use?
As you’ve probably guessed, digital product designers mainly use digital tools — but not always. A product designer’s job in some organizations is broader than in others, so they may be involved in more aspects of design than discussed here. Depending on the type of product and the preferences of the design team, here are common tools that product designers use throughout the creative process.
- Pen and paper for sketching
- Physical or digital whiteboards for brainstorming and sketching
- Data analytics tools for researching user needs
- Diagramming tools for visualizing system processes, user paths, product roadmaps, information architecture, etc.
- Wireframing and prototyping tools for modeling and testing designs
- Graphic design or CAD software for product development
- Project management software for tracking the design process
Product designer vs. UX designer
In a nutshell, a product designer manages the product design process by studying customer needs and creating a solution to deliver an appropriate experience. Both UX and product design roles follow the design thinking process. But while UX designers work on products before launch, product designers work on them after.
Once a product is released, product designers typically continue working on it, adding features and updates and running tests. Their quest for perfection is never-ending. Product designers have to align user needs with business goals because a product solution also needs to be sustainable and profitable for the company.
Meanwhile, UX designers are bound by time. In other words, they have to fine-tune the website, product, or app as much as they can before the launch date. After that point, UX designers hand it over to product designers and move on to something else.
UX designers:
- Design something from scratch or rework an existing product
- Get the product to a user-ready state within a set timeframe
- Solve new problems through user-centered design
Product designers:
- Improve designs that already exist
- Continually evolve the design to create the ideal user experience
- Make it easy for users to learn about new features
The importance of product designers
Product designers play a pivotal role in any design team, serving as the driving force behind the creation of user-centric and impactful digital experiences. Their unique blend of creative vision, technical expertise, and user empathy enables them to bridge the gap between user needs and business objectives, ultimately shaping the success of a product or service.
By championing a human-centered approach to design and fostering collaboration across cross-functional teams, product designers ensure that design decisions are rooted in user insights and aligned with overarching strategic goals. Their ability to iterate, refine, and innovate throughout the design process is instrumental in delivering solutions that not only meet but exceed user expectations.
Introducing Cacoo: A valuable design tool for product designers
In the arsenal of tools available to product designers, Cacoo stands out as a versatile and indispensable asset. With its intuitive interface and robust feature set, Cacoo empowers product designers to bring their ideas to life, from initial concept sketches to detailed wireframes and prototypes.
Whether collaborating with team members in real time, creating interactive mockups, or conducting user testing sessions, Cacoo provides product designers with the flexibility and agility needed to streamline the design process and drive innovation. Its seamless integration with other popular design and project management tools further enhances productivity and workflow efficiency, making it an essential companion for modern design teams.
In the hands of product designers, Cacoo becomes not just a tool but a catalyst for creativity, collaboration, and success. Harnessing its power, product designers can unlock their full potential and deliver transformative experiences that resonate with users and propel businesses forward.
This post was originally published on December 4, 2020, and updated most recently on May 24, 2024.