Members of the Google User experience group wrote in person about their understanding of the "Google-style" design guidelines.
By the end of 2007, our user Experience (UX) group – Responsible for user interface design, visual design, user research, web development, and user interface writing – began to clarify guidelines for guiding Google's global design. What are the basic principles that all Google designers and researchers can accept? What kind of design method is unique "Google-style" style? How do we motivate all of Google's teams to aspire to lofty, intelligent design?
A group of groups discussed these issues and developed a Google-style design policy:
1. Focus on people-their lives, their work, their dreams.
2. Every millisecond is critical.
3. Simplicity is powerful.
4. Attract new people and tempt experts.
5. Dare to innovate.
6. Design the world.
7. Now and future business.
8. It is not a matter of mind to be in the light of one's eyes.
9. Be worthy of the trust of the people.
10. Integration into human contact.
These UX policies are natural, derived from the public mission of the 10 truth and UX groups discovered by Google: Designing products that meet the needs of our users and delight them. We call these guidelines "our ambitions" for the following two reasons:
We have a lot of work to do in the implementation process.
Every real product has to be balanced in all 10 directions.
So far, gossip less. These guidelines embody the user experience group's belief manifesto. Dressed in the "satisfaction and joy" of the performance suit, we firmly set foot on the air wire, the 10 policy of the step-by-step toss, try to maintain a balance. Depending on our performance, please give us a round of applause or boos so that we can perform better on the next show.