Google Designer David Hogue: How to Avoid Over-Complication in Product Design

Simplicity may not be simple, but it’s crucial to your product’s long-term success

Patrick Faller
Modus

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World-renowned UX designer David Hogue.

MMost product designers have the best of intentions with their work — they want to make quality products that solve problems for their users and strive to constantly find new ways to serve and delight them. But these noble intentions can have unintended negative consequences: Slowly, piece-by-piece, new product features, expansions, and tweaks pile up, resulting in clutter, complication, and eventually friction. It’s very difficult to remove features once they’re added to an app or service, and before a designer knows it, their once-effective user experience has deteriorated.

That’s where David Hogue comes in. An applied psychologist and interaction/UX designer, he is a UX design lead at Google responsible for improving UX quality, cohesiveness, and consistency across Android platforms and devices. He has made it his mission to help design teams avoid overly complicating their products, and to help them triage their apps and services when “feature bloat” gets the better of them.

At FITC Toronto 2019, David presented a talk called “Simplicity Is Not Simple,” focused on this very issue (along with a workshop called “Designing for

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Patrick Faller
Modus
Writer for

🦸‍♂️ Writer, journalist, & advocate for the global creative community 🦄 Founder & LGBTQ+ entrepreneur of PF Media 👾 Tech, design, video games, music.