As a designer, this is such a clear example of how good design does not just come from a designer. Clear business priorities lead to great content design, great content design leads to an intuitive user experience, and an intuitive user experience sets a designer up perfectly to create clean and delightful UI.
It works the other way as well, a good UI designer is always looking to make their design look visually appealing and intuitive. If unclear priorities impede this goal, they should raise questions, do research, and suggest options with clearer priorities.
That's why it's important to have a designer who is part of the problem-framing and solution building process, speaking to stakeholders, and working with the whole team.
When everything is a priority, nothing is a priority! This is especially true in UI design...
Imagine trying to focus on one loud conversation in a room full of people shouting. That’s how a user feels when lots of elements on a screen yell for attention. It’s tempting to make everything big, bold, and red – headlines, buttons, labels – but the result is an overwhelming and chaotic experience. This defeats the purpose of hierarchy. Instead, reserve high-contrast urgency for crucial moments, guiding the user’s eye toward the most important actions.
https://bit.ly/44i53Sm
#UXDesign #VisualHierarchy #Usability