Product Designers: Experts with the Art of Tech Craft

Product Designers: Experts with the Art of Tech Craft

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Updated on Oct 6, 2010 11:16 IST
They have designed the Eggsoskeleton a futuristic-looking headgear designed to reduce musculo-skeletal disorders and provide a clean micro-environment

They have designed the ‘Eggsoskeleton' - a futuristic-looking headgear designed to reduce musculo-skeletal disorders and provide a clean "micro-environment" inside (the product) for coal miners who manually dig out fossil fuel... they've conjured up a sleek computer monitor with a skin design depicting Devanagri letters and the mouse-cum-scanner and text-recognition device... They truly are creativity personified.

Product designers aren't people who just make cute-looking exhibition-variety items. They are required to innovate, enhance the utility of a product, and provide business solutions.

"Product design concerns itself with the design of objects and systems that affect the way we live, work and play," explains Praveen Nahar, associate senior faculty, faculty of industrial design, and activity chairperson, Design Consultancy Services, National Institute of Design (NID), Ahmedabad. "It deals with form, function, colour, graphics, packaging safety and maintenance etc."

Product design is a combination of technology, art and craft. Amit Krishn Gulati, founder and director, Incubis, New Delhi, says, "A product designer deals with, one, aesthetics, two, understanding people and their needs, and three, understanding current and emerging technology. He occupies a unique space at the intersection of these three. He is not an expert in any of them. He has to make the right connections."

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Product designers mainly work with or for manufacturing companies. Their work options range from their own design studios (or freelancing as an individual), design departments of manufacturing industries, small and medium scale industries, working on lifestyle products and promoting their own brand, non-governmental organisations and other crafts sectors. Their sphere of activity extends to software as well, which is a "virtual product" with buttons, etc, says Gulati, an NID alumnus.

While this makes the canvas look very wide, there are some limitations.

"India is a growing economy and has a lot of potential for product design. Our designers have got a lot of opportunity to work nationally and internationally in the last the eight to 10 years," says Nahar. However, design is a developing field in India, which poses challenges to domestic players to prove and establish themselves. "One of the challenges for product design in India is complimentary support system from the R&D point of view, involving engineering support, model-making, CAD etc," says Nahar. "Also with respect to society and the environment, we need to look at the diverse Indian population with diverse cultures, languages, geography and products to cater to them. Environmental sustainability is another challenge."

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