When you've been doing something for a long time, you tend to not always think about what you're doing. A flow just happens. In our case, you learn, you sketch, you think, you repeat. Ideas come and solutions materialize. Inputs become outputs. Requirements get checked off. Curveballs get thrown and batted away. And sometimes you swing and miss. I'm not saying it's easy or it isn't work, but experience usually helps make the process fluid, comfortable, and productive.
The upside to this proficiency is efficiency. I hope you've heard the story of how the legendary designer Paula Scher sketched Citi's logo on the spot. But the important part of that story isn't those short seconds, it's the lifetime of experience that led up to that moment.
“It took me a few seconds to draw it. But it took me 34 years to learn how to draw it in a few seconds.”
—Paula Scher, on designing the Citi logo
A downside to experience can be sameness, predictability, laziness—phoning it in. A lack of curiosity. Not being critical enough. Not pushing yourself. Safety. Same ol', same ol'. Following your rut instead of your gut.
A while back I made myself curious—what have I learned in all this time doing this? Do I have a process beyond the clichéd (yet classic) "Discover | Design | Deliver?" From start to finish, what are the most important things I consider when creating the information-based visuals that Tremendousness is known for?
And finally, could I capture that?
Here's what I came up with, starting from the bottom up. I know it's a pretty tactical take, but let's consider this a first draft and see where it goes. I think I'll try to dive deeper into each of these things in future posts (we already touched on frameworks a few years ago).
That's it. I understand this is probably just another way to look at a process that's been looked at many times before. But it feels right to me. It feels like something I knew but had never captured.
*Information design: When we use this term, we're using it in reference to our core offerings—high-end infographics and animations that help explain a complex subject. Our work is very illustration-based as opposed to being dataset-oriented. We tell stories. These principles probably also align nicely to graphic design, web design, &c.