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100 cosas MÁS sobre la gente que cada diseñador necesita saber

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Este es un momento ideal para los diseñadores. Existen multitud de cosas que se pueden y se deben diseñar. No se trata solo de software, sitios Web y aplicaciones para móviles, estamos pensando también en diseñar cómo utilizar la tecnología incorporada a nuestra vida cotidiana. Necesita saber qué motiva a los usuarios a los que va dirigido el producto final, necesita conocer la psicología de sus clientes. La primera edición de este libro " Diseño inteligente. 100 cosas sobre la gente que cada diseñador necesita saber " tuvo en España una notable acogida porque enseñaba a utilizar los últimos descubrimientos en psicología, neurociencia e investigaciones sobre el cerebro. Un compendio de la información esencial sobre lo que un diseñador tiene que saber. Pero en los últimos cuatro años han pasado muchas cosas. Este libro contiene contenidos totalmente inéditos. Si quiere mantenerse actualizado, estos consejos le servirán para diseñar sus creaciones encaminadas a la forma en que aprendemos, trabajamos, pensamos y jugamos. Es un nuevo referente. Todo el material se puede aplicar de inmediato.

256 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 2015

77 people are currently reading
1143 people want to read

About the author

Susan M. Weinschenk

33 books169 followers
Susan Weinschenk has a Ph.D. in Psychology and over 30 years of experience as a behavioral psychologist. She applies neuroscience to predict, understand, and explain what motivates people and how to get people to take action.

Dr. Weinschenk is the author of several books, including How To Get People To Do Stuff, 100 Things Every Presenter Needs To Know About People, 100 Things Every Designer Needs To Know About People, and Neuro Web Design: What makes them click? She is the founder of the Weinschenk Institute. She teaches, speaks, mentors, and consults with Fortune 1000 companies, start-ups, non-profit agencies, and educational institutions, and writes a popular blog: www.theteamw.com/blog, and the “Brain Wise: Work better, work smarter” blog for Psychology Today.

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44 (15%)
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Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Graham Herrli.
104 reviews80 followers
June 15, 2017
I found this book (100 More Things) to be inferior to the original (100 Things).

Some of the studies referenced gave me some ideas for designing, but many of the 100 "things" seemed to have been added just to get to 100. For example, there's a section of how demographics impact design that just pulls out seemingly random datapoints from recent Pew surveys. Although the introduction makes the claim that there have been so many studies since the first book that a second book was necessary, many of the "things" in the second half of this book don't appear to be based in recent research. For example, it's not new information that old people's eyes become presbyopic (thing 78), a list of devices that monitor health is hardly something that can be turned into a design principle (thing 94), and Weinschenk states that the theory of cognitive dissonance was formulated in 1957 without citing any more recent developments (thing 64).

The first half of the book seemed much better grounded in research. The design principles derived from this research didn't seem as much of a stretch. Two ideas I found interesting were:
•using images in the periphery of a webpage to give context of what the page is about while keeping high-resolution information such as text in the page's center (thing 4)
•avoiding images looking directly at people when you're trying to convince them of something (thing 8).
Profile Image for Steph Myers.
345 reviews3 followers
November 28, 2015
Super-fast read filled with interesting research and facts. Each page has a new thing to know. Examples:

By 2020 Generation Z will make up more than 50% of consumers.
People prefer curved shapes to angular shapes.
Toddlers learn more when they are laughing.

Then for each, the nifty thing to know is tied back to design (graphic, web, logo), social media or marketing.

Fun if you like Mental Floss-type stuff. (which I do)
Profile Image for Reinhardt.
272 reviews2 followers
February 6, 2019
The psychology of design and persuasion.

Following the format of the first volume (100 things...) Dr. Weinscenk covers a lot of general design principles, like the preference for curves and symmetry and how color impacts perception. She also writes about how emotion, especially positive, exited emotion is the most effective way to elicit user action.

She then shifts more to the persuasive aspects. To improve credibility, repeat and then repeat. Also, a relevant photo improves the credibility of the accompanying text. Also, to speed up people's decision making, show all the evidence they have accumulated to support their decision.

Age-related considerations are considered for many aspects. Older people prefer more color on websites and are more likely to use intuition and feeling when making decisions.

Some counter-intuitive aspects of persuasion and memory are highlighted. Text that is in a font hard to read is more memorable. Also using a noun instead of a verb makes people feel like they belong to a group. For example, don’t say, 'vote,' say, 'be a voter.'

She talks a bit about how reading has changed. Deep reading that occurs when reading physical books has shifted to skimming and scanning on screens.

Like many other people, she recommends the use of stories to influence others to buy into your program. Have a dramatic arc, even in a business presentation.

Dr. Weinshenk then writes about embodied understanding. Our body is intertwined in our minds. Space and physical effects matters. Important to remember, but somewhat difficult to apply.

She goes on to talk about the different brain networks. The executive network, the part the is active when you are actively working on a problem. The default network, the part that works in the background when you’re not actively thinking. And the salience network that sorts through all the sensory input to keep the relevant stuff. To come up with creative solutions, you have to use all three. Active thinking, take a break, and rest.

Overall, some good information about the psychology of design and persuasion, some of it well know, some of it sketchy, but all thought-provoking. The problem is the organization of the book. The 100 things structure create a scattershot approach which makes it hard to get a big-picture summary. The printed version is formatted better than the kindle edition.
Profile Image for Sophia Exintaris.
162 reviews25 followers
July 21, 2020
An absolute must-read for designers, this sequel to the classic “100 things every designer needs to know about people”, is full of further cognitive and behavioural psychology insights.

I folded the most corners in “how people read and interpret information” and “how people relate to other people and technology”.

This is yet another fascinating collection of insights based on scientific research into human biology, psychology and behaviour. If you want to understand yourself or other humans better and if you work in an industry where communicating with humans is involved, you will improve your interactions by deepening your understanding of said humans.
And if you work without any humans, please tell me where? I don’t think we have removed ourselves from the equation just yet.
Profile Image for Cat.
174 reviews
December 4, 2020
Weinschenk has a gift for distilling research into key insights and extracting takeaways for designers. While I loved her earlier books, this one fell a little short for me. It seemed like she had several really great chapters and then had to stretch to fill the full 100. In the later chapters, the research was very fresh and I question if it will still feel relevant in a few years as we better understand the subtleties around how people interact with emerging technologies.
Profile Image for oldb1rd.
404 reviews16 followers
November 12, 2023
Це якийсь стид, честно говоря.

Шелуха и скорлупа из просроченных трендов, смешанная с банальностями по типу «экстраверты чаще постят чем интроверты» и откровениями а-ля «скоро тихое поколение отойдет, а костяк сформируют зумеры». Или «веселая и удивляющая реклама дает лучший результат».

Добавим к этому же перевод в духе «я состояла в джаз-банде» и Роберта «Саполски».

Закроем, выкинем.
Profile Image for Sashko Valyus.
214 reviews11 followers
January 24, 2020
Варто читати як легкий научпоп а не книгу по дизайну. Часто дуже натягнуто, якщо автор взялась не за 100 а за моцних 50 мабуть був би толк. Для себе відмітив цікаві моменти про перефирійний зір та інстайти про старе покоління
Profile Image for Mari Dumitrache .
22 reviews
December 10, 2021
This book was full of information and knowledge about design. This is very helpful an teaches you about users and people and how their brains work, complementing the first book 100 things every designer needs to know about people.
9 reviews
April 17, 2022
If you are a designer this book helps you know people better. Telling different examinations and results help you know people more. I recommend this book to every designer because it's really fun and easy to read.
Profile Image for Dimitra Miha.
2 reviews
December 7, 2017
Touches different issues than the 1st book. But still very valuable, including more expert issues. Always fun to read it
Profile Image for Alex Khomutov.
1 review
October 14, 2018
The first half of the book is a little bit naive and stupid.
But the second half is awesome. I've got a lot of interesting facts and studies.
Profile Image for Carl Stevens.
Author 4 books82 followers
March 19, 2019
Lightweight overviews of a 100 topics designers should now go read up on.
Profile Image for Salar.
22 reviews6 followers
Read
August 6, 2021
Important psychology principles!
Profile Image for Álvaro.
77 reviews8 followers
July 27, 2022
Un libro imprescindible para los que nos dedicamos al diseño. Menos sorprendente que la primera parte pero no por ello menos relevante en los contenidos y afirmaciones que aporta.
Profile Image for Ilya Potapov.
4 reviews
January 24, 2023
Местами интересно, но очень много поверхностной или устаревшей информации. Особенно в последней трети. Некоторые пункты явно добавлены просто для количества.
Profile Image for Вікторія Слінявчук.
138 reviews13 followers
June 28, 2019
Предыдущая книга Уэйншенк "100 Things Every Designer Needs to Know About People", название которой на русский перевели почему-то как "Сто главных принципов дизайна. Как удержать внимание", стала очень популярной, так что в 2015 году вышло "продолжение". Новую книжку некоторые ругают за то, что она не нас��олько практична, как первая. Вынуждена согласиться, многие факты, хоть и любопытны, имеют довольно ограниченную область применения именно в дизайне... Зато кое-что применимо в области маркетинга! Да и вообще - это просто познавательный научпоп, который можно читать даже тем, кто ни дизайном, ни маркетингом не занимается и не интересуется :)
Сьюзан Уэйншенк приводит много интересных фактов о том, как люди воспринимают информацию, читают, принимают решения, решают творческие задачи и так далее.
Profile Image for Laurel.
Author 1 book41 followers
June 24, 2020
100 concise and bite-sized facts (or opinions in some instances) that are helpful for anyone creating something a person will use.

I was a huge fan of two particular sections, How People Read and Interpret Information, and How People are Influenced by Stories. As a reader and a student of literature it was great to see scientific evidence of some of the 'facts' my teachers have reiterated to an English class. It was also a fun thing to smile at - after all, not just literature students make use of things like rising and falling action in a story or common plot tropes. I enjoyed her information dump about haptic feedback and digital reading as well.

Overall it was a fascinating book, and one I think I would love to hand to people and be like "Read #28! or #57!".
21 reviews
January 3, 2016
The coherence/cohesion between the main text & the end-of-chapter summaries seems to lack a little bit towards the end, but overall I found the book to be very informative. It covers psychology, sociology across genders/countries/ages/education levels/etc, technology, physics & neurology, & more! It definitely gave me ideas on how to help my friend edit the website/social media pages for their business. & there were things that I had never considered before or been familiar with - especially in medical technology & how different generations interpret certain pieces of technology.
Profile Image for John Hieb.
95 reviews1 follower
February 9, 2019
Great collection. Sometimes a little random (from a design perspective), but, I must have said "wow" close to 100 times.
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews

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