The first secret of great design Tony Fadell

In the great 1980s movie
“The Blues Brothers,”

there’s a scene where John Belushi
goes to visit Dan Aykroyd in his apartment

in Chicago for the very first time.

It’s a cramped, tiny space

and it’s just three feet away
from the train tracks.

As John sits on Dan’s bed,

a train goes rushing by,

rattling everything in the room.

John asks, “How often does
that train go by?”

Dan replies, “So often, you won’t
even notice it.”

And then, something falls off the wall.

We all know what he’s talking about.

As human beings, we get used
to everyday things

really fast.

As a product designer,
it’s my job to see those everyday things,

to feel them, and try
to improve upon them.

For example, see this piece of fruit?

See this little sticker?

That sticker wasn’t there
when I was a kid.

But somewhere as the years passed,

someone had the bright idea
to put that sticker on the fruit.

Why?

So it could be easier for us

to check out
at the grocery counter.

Well that’s great,

we can get in and out of
the store quickly.

But now, there’s a new problem.

When we get home and we’re hungry

and we see this ripe, juicy piece
of fruit on the counter,

we just want to pick it up
and eat it.

Except now, we have to look
for this little sticker.

And dig at it with our nails,
damaging the flesh.

Then rolling up that sticker –

you know what I mean.

And then trying to flick
it off your fingers.

(Applause)

It’s not fun,

not at all.

But something interesting happened.

See the first time you did it,
you probably felt those feelings.

You just wanted to eat the piece of fruit.

You felt upset.

You just wanted to dive in.

By the 10th time,

you started to become less upset

and you just started peeling
the label off.

By the 100th time,
at least for me,

I became numb to it.

I simply picked up the piece of fruit,

dug at it with my nails,
tried to flick it off,

and then wondered,

“Was there another sticker?”

So why is that?

Why do we get used to everyday things?

Well as human beings,
we have limited brain power.

And so our brains encode the
everyday things we do into habits

so we can free up space
to learn new things.

It’s a process called habituation

and it’s one of the most basic ways,
as humans, we learn.

Now, habituation isn’t always bad.

Remember learning to drive?

I sure do.

Your hands clenched at 10 and 2
on the wheel,

looking at every single
object out there –

the cars, the lights, the pedestrians.

It’s a nerve-wracking experience.

So much so, that I couldn’t even
talk to anyone else in the car

and I couldn’t even listen to music.

But then something interesting happened.

As the weeks went by,
driving became easier and easier.

You habituated it.

It started to become
fun and second nature.

And then, you could talk
to your friends again

and listen to music.

So there’s a good reason why
our brains habituate things.

If we didn’t, we’d notice
every little detail,

all the time.

It would be exhausting,

and we’d have no time
to learn about new things.

But sometimes,
habituation isn’t good.

If it stops us from noticing
the problems that are around us,

well, that’s bad.

And if it stops us from noticing
and fixing those problems,

well, then that’s really bad.

Comedians know all about this.

Jerry Seinfeld’s entire career was built
on noticing those little details,

those idiotic things we do every day
that we don’t even remember.

He tells us about the time
he visited his friends

and he just wanted to take
a comfortable shower.

He’d reach out and grab the handle
and turn it slightly one way,

and it was 100 degrees too hot.

And then he’d turn it the other way,
and it was 100 degrees too cold.

He just wanted a comfortable shower.

Now, we’ve all been there,

we just don’t remember it.

But Jerry did,

and that’s a comedian’s job.

But designers, innovators
and entrepreneurs,

it’s our job to not just notice
those things,

but to go one step further
and try to fix them.

See this, this person,

this is Mary Anderson.

In 1902 in New York City,

she was visiting.

It was a cold, wet, snowy day
and she was warm inside a streetcar.

As she was going to her destination,
she noticed the driver opening the window

to clean off the excess snow
so he could drive safely.

When he opened the window, though,
he let all this cold, wet air inside,

making all the passengers miserable.

Now probably, most of those
passengers just thought,

“It’s a fact of life, he’s got
to open the window to clean it.

That’s just how it is.”

But Mary didn’t.

Mary thought,

“What if the diver could actually clean
the windshield from the inside

so that he could stay safe and drive

and the passengers could
actually stay warm?”

So she picked up her sketchbook
right then and there,

and began drawing what would become
the world’s first windshield wiper.

Now as a product designer,
I try to learn from people like Mary

to try to see the world
the way it really is,

not the way we think it is.

Why?

Because it’s easy to solve a problem
that almost everyone sees.

But it’s hard to solve a problem
that almost no one sees.

Now some people think
you’re born with this ability

or you’re not,

as if Mary Anderson was hardwired at birth
to see the world more clearly.

That wasn’t the case for me.

I had to work at it.

During my years at Apple,

Steve Jobs challenged us
to come into work every day,

to see our products through
the eyes of the customer,

the new customer,

the one that has fears
and possible frustrations

and hopeful exhilaration that their
new technology product

could work straightaway for them.

He called it staying beginners,

and wanted to make sure that we
focused on those tiny little details

to make them faster, easier and seamless
for the new customers.

So I remember this clearly
in the very earliest days of the iPod.

See, back in the ’90s,

being a gadget freak like I am,

I would rush out to the store
for the very, very latest gadget.

I’d take all the time to get to the store,

I’d check out, I’d come back home,
I’d start to unbox it.

And then, there was
another little sticker:

the one that said, “Charge before use.”

What!

I can’t believe it!

I just spent all this time
buying this product

and now I have to charge before use.

I have to wait what felt like an eternity
to use that coveted new toy.

It was crazy.

But you know what?

Almost every product back then did that.

When it had batteries in it,

you had to charge it
before you used it.

Well, Steve noticed that

and he said,

“We’re not going to let that
happen to our product.”

So what did we do?

Typically, when you have a product
that has a hard drive in it,

you run it for about
30 minutes in the factory

to make sure that hard drive’s going
to be working years later

for the customer after they
pull it out of the box.

What did we do instead?

We ran that product for over two hours.

Why?

Well, first off, we could make
a higher quality product,

be easy to test,

and make sure it was great
for the customer.

But most importantly,

the battery came fully charged
right out of the box,

ready to use.

So that customer,
with all that exhilaration,

could just start using the product.

It was great, and it worked.

People liked it.

Today, almost every product
that you get that’s battery powered

comes out of the box fully charged,

even if it doesn’t have a hard drive.

But back then, we noticed
that detail and we fixed it,

and now everyone else does that as well.

No more, “Charge before use.”

So why am I telling you this?

Well, it’s seeing the invisible problem,

not just the obvious problem,
that’s important,

not just for product design,
but for everything we do.

You see, there are invisible problems
all around us,

ones we can solve.

But first we need
to see them, to feel them.

So, I’m hesitant to give you any tips

about neuroscience or psychology.

There’s far too many experienced people
in the TED community

who would know much more
about that than I ever will.

But let me leave you with
a few tips that I do,

that we all can do,
to fight habituation.

My first tip is to look broader.

You see, when you’re tackling a problem,

sometimes, there are a lot of steps
that lead up to that problem.

And sometimes, a lot
of steps after it.

If you can take a step back
and look broader,

maybe you can change some of those boxes

before the problem.

Maybe you can combine them.

Maybe you can remove them altogether
to make that better.

Take thermostats, for instance.

In the 1900s when they first came out,
they were really simple to use.

You could turn them up or turn them down.

People understood them.

But in the 1970s,

the energy crisis struck,

and customers started thinking about
how to save energy.

So what happened?

Thermostat designers decided
to add a new step.

Instead of just turning up and down,

you now had to program it.

So you could tell it the temperature
you wanted at a certain time.

Now that seemed great.

Every thermostat had
started adding that feature.

But it turned out that no one
saved any energy.

Now, why is that?

Well, people couldn’t predict the future.

They just didn’t know how their weeks
would change season to season,

year to year.

So no one was saving energy,

and what happened?

Thermostat designers went back
to the drawing board

and they focused on that programming step.

They made better U.I.s,

they made better documentation.

But still, years later,
people were not saving any energy

because they just couldn’t
predict the future.

So what did we do?

We put a machine-learning algorithm in
instead of the programming

that would simply watch
when you turned it up and down,

when you liked a certain temperature
when you got up,

or when you went away.

And you know what?

It worked.

People are saving energy
without any programming.

So, it doesn’t matter what you’re doing.

If you take a step back
and look at all the boxes,

maybe there’s a way
to remove one or combine them

so that you can make
that process much simpler.

So that’s my first tip: look broader.

For my second tip, it’s to look closer.

One of my greatest teachers
was my grandfather.

He taught me all about the world.

He taught me how things were built
and how they were repaired,

the tools and techniques necessary
to make a successful project.

I remember one story
he told me about screws,

and about how you need to have
the right screw for the right job.

There are many different screws:

wood screws, metal screws,
anchors, concrete screws,

the list went on and on.

Our job is to make products
that are easy to install

for all of our customs themselves
without professionals.

So what did we do?

I remembered that story
that my grandfather told me,

and so we thought,

“How many different screws
can we put in the box?

Was it going to be two, three,
four, five?

Because there’s so many
different wall types.”

So we thought about it, we optimized it,

and we came up with three different
screws to put in the box.

We thought that was going
to solve the problem.

But it turned out, it didn’t.

So we shipped the product,

and people weren’t having
a great experience.

So what did we do?

We went back to the drawing board

just instantly after we figured out
we didn’t get it right.

And we designed a special screw,
a custom screw,

much to the chagrin of our investors.

They were like, “Why are you spending
so much time on a little screw?

Get out there and sell more!”

And we said, “We will sell more
if we get this right.”

And it turned out, we did.

With that custom little screw,
there was just one screw in the box,

that was easy to mount
and put on the wall.

So if we focus on those tiny details,
the ones we may not see

and we look at them as we say,

“Are those important

or is that the way we’ve always done it?

Maybe there’s a way to get rid of those.”

So my last piece of advice
is to think younger.

Every day, I’m confronted with interesting
questions from my three young kids.

They come up with questions like,

“Why can’t cars fly around traffic?”

Or, “Why don’t my shoelaces
have Velcro instead?”

Sometimes, those questions are smart.

My son came to me the other day
and I asked him,

“Go run out to the mailbox
and check it.”

He looked at me, puzzled, and said,

“Why doesn’t the mailbox just check itself
and tell us when it has mail?” (Laughter)

I was like, “That’s a pretty
good question.”

So, they can ask tons of questions

and sometimes we find out
we just don’t have the right answers.

We say, “Son, that’s just the way
the world works.”

So the more we’re exposed to something,

the more we get used to it.

But kids haven’t been around
long enough

to get used to those things.

And so when they run into problems,

they immediately try to solve them,

and sometimes they find a better way,

and that way really is better.

So my advice that we take to heart
is to have young people on your team,

or people with young minds.

Because if you have those young minds,

they cause everyone in the room
to think younger.

Picasso once said,
“Every child is an artist.

The problem is when he or she grows up,
is how to remain an artist.”

We all saw the world more clearly
when we saw it for the first time,

before a lifetime of habits
got in the way.

Our challenge is to get back there,

to feel that frustration,

to see those little details,

to look broader,

look closer,

and to think younger

so we can stay beginners.

It’s not easy.

It requires us pushing back

against one of the most basic ways
we make sense of the world.

But if we do,

we could do some pretty amazing things.

For me, hopefully, that’s better
product design.

For you, that could mean something else,
something powerful.

Our challenge is to wake up
each day and say,

“How can I experience the world better?”

And if we do, maybe, just maybe,

we can get rid of these
dumb little stickers.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

在 1980 年代伟大的电影
“蓝调兄弟”

中,约翰·贝鲁西第一次
去芝加哥的公寓拜访丹·艾克罗伊德

这是一个狭窄、狭小的空间

,离火车轨道只有三英尺远

当约翰坐在丹的床上时,

一列火车疾驰而过,

把房间里的一切都震得嘎嘎作响。

约翰问:“
那列火车多久经过一次?”

丹回答说:“很多时候,你甚至都不会
注意到它。”

然后,有什么东西从墙上掉了下来。

我们都知道他在说什么。

作为人类,我们很快就习惯
了日常事物

作为一名产品设计师
,我的工作是看到这些日常事物

,感受它们,并
尝试改进它们。

例如,看到这块水果了吗?

看到这个小贴纸了吗? 我小时候

没有那个贴纸

但随着岁月的流逝,

有人想到
了将贴纸贴在水果上的好主意。

为什么?

所以我们

在杂货柜台结账会更容易。

那太好了,

我们可以
快速进出商店。

但是现在,出现了一个新问题。

当我们回到家饿了

,看到柜台上这颗成熟多汁
的水果时,

我们只想把它
捡起来吃。

除了现在,我们必须
寻找这个小贴纸。

用我们的指甲挖它,
破坏肉体。

然后把那张贴纸卷起来——

你知道我的意思。

然后试着把
它从你的手指上弹开。

(鼓掌

)不好玩,一点

都不好玩。

但有趣的事情发生了。

看到你第一次这样做的时候,
你可能会感觉到那些感觉。

你只是想吃那块水果。

你感到心烦意乱。

你只是想潜入水中。

到第 10 次时,

你开始变得不那么沮丧

,你刚刚开始
撕下标签。

到了第 100 次,
至少对我来说,

我已经麻木了。

我只是拿起那片水果,

用指甲挖着它,
想把它弹掉,

然后想知道,

“还有贴纸吗?”

那为什么呢?

为什么我们习惯于日常事物?

作为人类,
我们的脑力有限。

因此,我们的大脑将
我们所做的日常事情编码为习惯,

这样我们就可以腾出空间
来学习新事物。

这是一个称为习惯的过程

,它是最基本的方式之一,
作为人类,我们学习。

现在,习惯并不总是坏事。

还记得学开车吗?

我当然会。

你的手在方向盘上的 10 和 2 处握紧

看着
外面的每一个物体

——汽车、灯光、行人。

这是一次伤脑筋的经历。

如此之多,以至于我什
至无法与车上的其他人交谈,

甚至无法听音乐。

但随后发生了一件有趣的事情。

随着时间的流逝,
驾驶变得越来越容易。

你习惯了。

它开始变得
有趣和第二天性。

然后,您可以
再次与您的朋友交谈

并听音乐。

所以我们的大脑习惯于事物是有充分理由的

如果我们不这样做,我们就会一直注意到
每一个小

细节。

这会很累,

而且我们没有
时间学习新事物。

但有时,
习惯并不好。

如果它阻止我们
注意到我们周围的

问题,那很糟糕。

如果它阻止我们注意到
和解决这些问题

,那么那真的很糟糕。

喜剧演员知道这一切。

Jerry Seinfeld 的整个职业生涯都是建立
在注意到那些小细节的基础上的,

那些我们每天都在做的愚蠢的事情
,我们甚至都不记得了。

他告诉我们
他拜访朋友的时间

,他只是想
洗个舒服的澡。

他会伸手抓住把手
,稍微转动一个方向

,100度太热了。

然后他把它转向另一个方向
,它太冷了100度。

他只想洗个舒服的澡。

现在,我们都去过那里

,只是不记得了。

但杰瑞做到了

,这是喜剧演员的工作。

但是设计师、创新者
和企业家,

我们的工作不仅是注意
这些事情,

还要更进一步
并尝试修复它们。

看这个,这个人,

这是玛丽安德森。

1902 年,她在纽约市

访问。

那是一个寒冷、潮湿、下雪的日子
,她在有轨电车里很暖和。

当她要去目的地时,
她注意到司机打开

窗户清理多余的积雪,
这样他就可以安全驾驶了。

然而,当他打开窗户的时候,
他把所有这些又冷又湿的空气

都塞了进去,让所有的乘客都痛苦不堪。

现在可能,大多数
乘客只是想,

“这是生活中的事实,他
必须打开窗户清洁它。

就是这样。”

但玛丽没有。

玛丽想,

“如果潜水员真的可以
从里面清洁挡风玻璃,

这样他就可以安全驾驶

,乘客也可以
真正保暖呢?”

于是,她当场拿起她的速写本

,开始
画出世界上第一个挡风玻璃雨刷器。

现在作为一名产品设计师,
我尝试向像玛丽这样的人学习

,尝试以
真实的方式看待世界,

而不是我们想象的方式。

为什么?

因为它很容易
解决几乎每个人都看到的问题。

但是很难解决
一个几乎没有人看到的问题。

现在有些人认为
你生来就有这种能力,

或者你不是,

好像玛丽安德森生来就注定
要更清楚地看世界。

对我来说不是这样。

我不得不努力。

在 Apple

工作的这些年里,史蒂夫·乔布斯向我们提出挑战,让我们
每天都投入到工作中

,从客户

、新客户的角度看待我们的产品,新客户

对他们的新技术产品可以发挥作用感到恐惧
和可能的挫折感

和充满希望的兴奋

直接为他们。

他称其为初学者,

并希望确保我们
专注于那些微小的细节,

以使新客户更快、更容易和无缝地完成它们

所以我
在 iPod 的早期就清楚地记得这一点。

看,回到 90 年代,

作为一个像我一样的小玩意儿,

我会冲到商店
买非常、非常最新的小玩意儿。

我会花所有时间去商店,

我会检查,我会回到家,
我会开始拆箱。

然后,还有
另一个小贴纸

:上面写着“使用前充电”。

什么!

我简直不敢相信!

我刚刚花了这么多时间
购买这个产品

,现在我必须在使用前充电。

我必须等很久
才能使用这个令人垂涎的新玩具。

这太疯狂了。

但你知道吗?

当时几乎所有的产品都是这样做的。

当它里面有电池时,

你必须在
使用它之前给它充电。

好吧,史蒂夫注意到了这一点

,他说:

“我们不会让这种
情况发生在我们的产品上。”

那么我们做了什么?

通常,当您的产品
中包含硬盘驱动器时,

您会
在工厂运行大约 30 分钟,

以确保在客户将其从包装盒中取出后,该硬盘驱动器
将在数年

后为客户工作

我们做了什么?

我们运行该产品两个多小时。

为什么?

嗯,首先,我们可以制造
出更高质量的产品,

易于测试,

并确保
它对客户有利。

但最重要的

是,电池
开箱

即用,充满电。

这样客户就可以
带着所有的兴奋

,开始使用该产品。

这很棒,而且奏效了。

人们喜欢它。

今天,几乎所有
由电池

供电的产品开箱后都充满电,

即使它没有硬盘驱动器也是如此。

但当时,我们注意到了
这个细节并修复了它

,现在其他人也都这样做了。

不再是“使用前充电”。

那我为什么要告诉你这个?

嗯,它看到了看不见的问题,

而不仅仅是明显的问题,
这很重要,

不仅对于产品设计,
而且对于我们所做的一切。

你看,我们周围都有看不见的问题

我们可以解决。

但首先我们
需要看到它们,感受它们。

所以,我不愿意给你任何

关于神经科学或心理学的建议。 TED 社区中

有太多经验丰富的人

他们
会比我知道的更多。

但是,让我给
你一些我做的

、我们都可以做的小窍门,
以对抗习惯化。

我的第一个提示是看起来更广泛。

你看,当你解决一个问题时,

有时会有很多
步骤导致这个问题。

有时,
在它之后有很多步骤。

如果你能退后一步
,放眼更广阔,

也许你可以在问题出现之前改变其中的一些框

也许你可以把它们结合起来。

也许您可以完全删除它们
以使其更好。

以恒温器为例。

在 1900 年代刚问世时,
它们使用起来非常简单。

你可以调高或调低它们。

人们理解他们。

但在 1970 年代

,能源危机袭来

,客户开始思考
如何节约能源。

所以发生了什么事?

恒温器设计师
决定增加一个新步骤。

您现在必须对其进行编程,而不仅仅是上下转动。

所以你可以告诉它
你在某个时间想要的温度。

现在这看起来很棒。

每个恒温器都
开始添加该功能。

但事实证明,没有人
节省任何能源。

现在,这是为什么呢?

好吧,人们无法预测未来。

他们只是不知道他们的周
会如何随着季节、年复一年的变化而变化

所以没有人在节约能源

,发生了什么?

恒温器设计师
回到绘图板上

,他们专注于编程步骤。

他们制作了更好的 U.I.s,

他们制作了更好的文档。

但是,多年后,
人们仍然没有节省任何能源,

因为他们无法
预测未来。

那么我们做了什么?

我们使用了一种机器学习算法,
而不是

简单地观察
您何时打开和关闭它、

何时您喜欢某个温度
时起床

或何时离开的程序。

你知道吗?

有效。

人们
无需任何编程即可节能。

所以,你在做什么并不重要。

如果您退后一步
查看所有框,

也许有一种方法
可以删除或组合它们,

以便您可以
简化该过程。

所以这是我的第一个提示:看起来更广阔。

对于我的第二个提示,它是仔细观察。

我最伟大的老师之一
是我的祖父。

他教会了我关于世界的一切。

他教我
如何建造和修复它们,

以及
成功完成项目所需的工具和技术。

我记得
他告诉我的一个关于螺丝的故事,

以及如何
为正确的工作配备合适的螺丝。

有许多不同的螺钉:

木螺钉、金属螺钉、
锚、混凝土螺钉

,不胜枚举。

我们的工作是为我们所有的海关自己制造
易于安装的产品,

无需专业人员。

那么我们做了什么?

我记得
我祖父告诉我的那个故事

,所以我们想,


我们可以在盒子里放多少个不同的螺丝?

是两个、三个、
四个、五个吗?

因为有很多
不同的墙类型。”

所以我们想了想,我们优化了它

,我们想出了三个不同的
螺丝放在盒子里。

我们认为这
将解决问题。

但事实证明,它没有。

所以我们运送了产品,但

人们并
没有很好的体验。

那么我们做了什么?

在我们发现
我们没有做对之后,我们立即回到了绘图板上。

我们设计了一种特殊的螺丝,
一种定制的螺丝,

这让我们的投资者非常懊恼。

他们就像,“你为什么要
花这么多时间在一个小螺丝上?

出去卖更多!”

我们说,“
如果我们做对了,我们会卖得更多。”

事实证明,我们做到了。

用那个定制的小螺丝,
盒子里只有一个螺丝

,很容易安装
和放在墙上。

因此,如果我们专注于那些微小的细节
,那些我们可能看不到

的细节,我们会说,

“那些重要

还是我们一直这样做?

也许有办法摆脱这些。 "

所以我的最后一条建议
是年轻一点。

每天,我都会遇到
来自三个年幼孩子的有趣问题。

他们提出了诸如

“为什么汽车不能在交通中飞来飞去?”之类的问题。

或者,“为什么我的鞋带
没有魔术贴呢?”

有时,这些问题很聪明。

前几天我儿子来找我
,我问他:

“跑到邮箱
去查一下。”

他不解地看着我,说:

“为什么邮箱不自己检查一下
,告诉我们什么时候有邮件?” (笑声)

我当时想,“这是一个
很好的问题。”

所以,他们可以问很多问题

,有时我们会发现
我们只是没有正确的答案。

我们说,“儿子,这就是
世界运转的方式。”

所以我们接触的东西

越多,我们就越习惯它。

但是孩子们还没有
足够长的时间

来适应这些事情。

所以当他们遇到问题时,

他们会立即尝试解决

,有时他们会找到更好的方法,

而且这种方法确实更好。

因此,我们牢记在心的建议
是让年轻人加入你的团队,

或者拥有年轻头脑的人。

因为如果你有那些年轻的头脑,

他们会让房间里的每个人都
思考得更年轻。

毕加索曾经说过:
“每个孩子都是艺术家

。问题是他或她长大
后如何保持艺术家身份。” 当

我们第一次看到这个世界时,我们都更清楚地看到了这个世界

在一生的
习惯阻碍之前。

我们的挑战是回到那里

,感受那种挫败感

,看到那些小细节,

看得更远,

看得更近,

更年轻地思考,

这样我们才能成为初学者。

这并不容易。

它要求我们反对

我们理解世界的最基本方式之一。

但如果我们这样做,

我们可以做一些非常了不起的事情。

对我来说,希望这是更好的
产品设计。

对你来说,这可能意味着别的东西,
一些强大的东西。

我们的挑战是每天醒来
并说:

“我怎样才能更好地体验这个世界?”

如果我们这样做,也许,只是也许,

我们可以摆脱这些
愚蠢的小贴纸。

非常感谢你。

(掌声)