I think we are getting somewhere now. We have very fundamental differences on 
how we think a team should work on a project. Our own personal experiences are 
informing us on the best approach. Could then the difference in our approach 
just be a difference in the types of projects we have worked on in our careers?

While I have worked on a lot consumer facing applications over the years (I 
worked on both Hallmark's and Victoria Secret's first e-commerce sites). Most 
of my projects are on either applications which people will be using 8 hours a 
day as a part of their job (e.g. Call center application) or applications with 
very complex business rules that no single source of knowledge about them.

In these cases, I have found the Interaction designer is best at being mainly 
responsible for making sure the design of the interactions allow the user to 
operate as quickly and efficiently as possible while the role of the other 
designer is dedicated to making sure all of this information is as cleanly 
displayed as possible.






Nick Iozzo
Principal User Experience Architect

tandemseven

847.452.7442 mobile

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.tandemseven.com/



 
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