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Selecting An Interior Designer For Your Home Remodeling Project
A good interior consultant is as important to a remodeling project as a builder is to a new home construction. If you decide to work with one, the designer should bring a wealth of experience and product knowledge to the table to help you with your remodeling or new home construction project.

Hiring a good designer - good interior consultants are like good therapists. They don't tell you what to do, rather they guide you through a process of selecting options that best suite your style and provides the best outcome. So how do you find a good interior consultant? Well, the best way is through word of mouth and referrals. Talk to your friends to see if any of them recently used an interior specialist and if they were satisfied with the outcome of the project. Interior designer web sites can be helpful, but also visit local builders and model homes to obtain referrals. Another great source for referrals can be your local furniture store. Many furniture store retailers provide interior referrals or have local designers that moonlight in the evening. Your local parade of homes or builder show rooms are also good sources.

Review the designer's portfolio - You should interview a few interior consultants before making your final selection. Be sure to review their portfolio including pictures of recent projects. Ask each designer about his/her education, training, professional affiliations and other credentials. Ask for referrals and contact their prior clients to assess their level of satisfaction. It's

 
 
 

important that you develop a good relationship with your interior consultant. Be prepared to show multiple photographs of what you desire. This will help you communicate your desires and help you determine if the designer's style aligns with what you are envisioning.

Meeting your objectives - Many interior designers will appear to be listening, but then respectfully ignore your suggestions. This can be good and bad. It's acceptable only when the designer is very good at what they do, have taken the time to understand your goals and then choose to ignore the suggestions that do not fit with their overal plan you have previously approved. It's bad when an inexperienced designer ignores your suggestions and then ultimately you are not happy wiith the end results. An experienced designer will create a delicate balance between the two. It is important that you feel the designer is listening to you. You should also feel comfortable discussing your budget and feel comfortable saying no. In the end, you need to feel like there was a common goal between you and the designer.

Experience matters - The ideal interior consultant will have at least ten of experience working with builders, vendors and other suppliers. They should have expertise in fabric, appliances, furniture and other accessories. After listening to your desires, they should be able to take you to the showrooms, fabric stores and other vendors that will supply you with furniture and accessories that will develop and complement your individual style.

Selecting the right Interior Consultant will help ensure that when the home improvement project is finished, you love the results.

Kristi Cole is a interior and
home improvement specialist at www.inhomeimprovements.com
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Change the Constraint, Change the Guidelines

These days, I'm a lot better known for my writing on agile processes and management than for anything I ever tried to do in user interface design. In my book, I apply something called The Theory of Constraints to software engineering. TOC as it gets called is really very simple. Just 5 focusing steps.

  1. Identify what constrains a process - its bottleneck
  2. Protect the constraint to maximize the throughput at the bottleneck
  3. Subordinate all else to the decision to protect the constraint
  4. Elevate the constraint
  5. Do not let inertia stop you from repeating from Step 1 by finding the next constraint.

So how is this relevant to UI design, usability and interaction? Good question. First a digression...

Jakob Nielsen has followed up with his latest guidelines on link color for optimal web usability. Somewhat surprising some of the web design community actually feel he is adding value. This funny and educational piece from Design By Fire gives it the thumbs up but suggests that it is time for a makeover at Jakob's own site. So they assemble their own fab five with a design eye for the usability guy.

Didier suggests that Jakob's site is ssssoooo 1996. However, those of us who remember useit.com back in 1996 will tell you it wasn't nearly as cute looking in those days. The current design dates from about 2000 but I'm sure Jakob could tell us more precisely. We have to remember the raison d'etre for Jakob's design (lets be charitable on this). He was primarily preaching that page load time was the key to usability. Long load times turned people away and as his client base was e-commerce web sites, that meant lost sales. So the message was keep it simple, keep it under 100K per page and keep it fast. Keep those clicks coming. It would be fair to say that Jakob was arguing that bandwidth was the primary constraint to usability. Notice that this is step 1 of our 5 step process.

So if we have identified a constraint what do we do next - we protect the constraint. How do we do that? We keep page sizes under 100K and smaller if possible. What next? We subordinate all else to the decision in step 2. That means you can forget those nice graphics and complex table layouts.

But then we get to step 4 - elevate the constraint. And there have been a few threads running there. The web development community has not been idle. Nowadays we have standards which reduce markup size and use CSS for layout [uidesign.net isn't up with the times yet, is it? Ed.]. But the real elevation came with the adoption of low cost broadband. In most developed countries adoption is around 50% already and dial-up connections are faster than they used to be for many people. The bottom line here - bandwidth is no longer the constraint!

What that means is that all bets are off. All the rules and guidelines, all the policies designed to protect the constraint and subordinate all else to the decision, are history. We need new rules which identify the new constraint.

So the question is, from a usability perspective are we letting inertia stop us from going and searching for the real new issues which constrain web sites from achieving their goal, or are we moving on, forgetting the last war, and actively out looking for that new constraint and seeking to write the new rules for a world where broadband is ubiquitous?

 
 
   

 

 

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