Subtraction.com

The State of Design Tools: An Unscientific Survey

Last week, along with a few of the folks from Adobe with whom I’ve been working on Adobe Comp CC, I visited a handful of design teams at companies here in New York City. The original inspiration for the meetings was to share some of the thinking that’s driving Adobe’s new creativity software (like Comp CC—really, you ought to check it out). But we also wanted to engage designers in conversations about the tools they’re using.

I’ve repeatedly stated my belief that this is a golden age for innovative new software and services geared towards the needs of working designers. What the Adobe team and I wanted to learn firsthand was how this change is being experienced by some of the best shops around town. Our mini-tour took us to a media company, a large design firm, a big tech company, and two boutique design studios. All of these teams do some flavor of high-end digital product design, both on the Web and for native apps. We also held a breakfast event at General Assembly that was open to the public and had a great turnout of designers.

When we sat down with these people we asked about what software they’re using and why, what’s working for them and what’s not, and what they’re excited about and what’s frustrating to them. Here’s a very unscientific overview of a few of the trends I noticed.

None of these revelations is exactly earth-shattering, but hearing them from real people where they work really opened my eyes to ideas and trends that I might have been aware of beforehand but didn’t pay much attention to. Chalk it up as another win for the power of getting out there and meeting real users. Overall, the visits confirmed to me that the landscape is significantly changing for how we designers do our work and what tools we use, but it seems clear that there’s room for a lot more innovation going forward.

If you have thoughts or comments on the tools and workflows your team is using that you’d like to share, please drop me a line via the form at the bottom of this post.

Update: Also see the roundup of reader reactions to these trends and suggestions for other tools in my follow-up post “Reader Comments on the State of Design Tools.”

+