In the world of product design, product development, innovation, and problem solving, there are two fundamental concepts: prototyping and iteration. While they may sound like buzzwords, they’re the foundation of building both great products and solutions.
A prototype is an early model or representation of an idea. Its purpose is to test a concept or process in a low-cost, low-risk way. The primary goal is to gather feedback and improve. Not to create a perfect final product.
Prototypes can be categorised by their level of fidelity:
The core principle of prototyping is to “fail fast, fail cheap” by gathering user feedback on a basic model before significant resources are invested.
Iteration is the process of refining and improving a product or design based on feedback. It’s the cycle of build, test, and refine. After you create a prototype, you test it, gather feedback, and then use that feedback to create a new, improved version — a new iteration.
This isn’t a one and done process. It’s a continuous loop. You might go through dozens, or even hundreds, of iterations to arrive at the final product. Each loop brings you closer to a solution that is truly user-centric and effective.
This may sound like a scary, lengthy and costly process, however in reality most iterations are a natural part of the design process. In fact by encouraging an prototype and iteration culture throughout the process, huge cost savings can be achieved by correcting product faults early in the process, long before they reach your customers.
Iteration is the process of continuous refinement based on feedback. It follows a cyclical process:
This continuous loop of refinement, driven by user data, is critical for developing successful products.
When used together, prototyping and iteration form a powerful, dynamic duo. Prototyping is the starting point, and iteration is the engine that drives continuous improvement.
This cycle of building a prototype, testing it, and then iterating on it based on what you learn is how great products are made. It’s not just us it’s how companies like Dyson perfected their vacuum cleaners and how software giants refine their user interfaces.
The principles of prototyping and iteration can be applied to many fields:
The most effective way to innovate is to embrace the process of discovery. Create prototypes to test assumptions and use iteration to constantly improve. Success is not about getting it right the first time, but about making it right over time.
Our prototypes speak for themselves.