The difference between reacting and deciding. ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­    ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­  
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We’ve all been in that moment.

A design direction is on the screen. People go quiet for a second. Someone says, “I don’t know … it feels a bit cold”. Or, “I just don’t love it”.

 

At that point, the conversation can go in two different directions:

One direction is taste. Everyone reacts from preference. I like it. You don’t. The client expected something else. Someone wants it bolder. Someone wants it softer. The work starts moving, but not necessarily forward.

 

The other direction is judgment.

 

Judgment is what happens when we stop treating reactions as conclusions and start treating them as clues. It doesn’t reject taste. It translates it. Taste gives us the first signal, but judgment helps us understand what that signal means.

 

That difference matters in branding, especially in B2B, where decisions rarely live in a vacuum. They have to move through leadership teams, product realities, sales contexts, investor conversations, and audiences that may not speak the language of design.

 

In that context, “I like it” can be honest, but it cannot be the argument.

 

A brand direction can be beautiful and still be wrong. It can be elegant, distinctive, and well-crafted, but create the wrong signal. It can look great in a presentation but fall apart when it enters product, sales decks, or even internal adoption.

 

That’s where judgment becomes valuable. It just asks better questions.

 

What’s this design making people believe? Is that belief useful for the brand? What’s helping clarify? What tradeoff are we accepting?

 

So if someone says, “It feels too cold,” the answer isn’t automatically to make it warmer. There’s a better question: What does “cold” mean here? Maybe the typography feels too mechanical, maybe the system lacks humanity, or maybe the work is simply more mature than what the client expected.

 

And each of those answers leads to a different creative decision. That’s the point though, because taste helps us react, but judgment helps us decide.

 

Clients are not buying our taste alone. They’re buying our ability to reduce uncertainty: to understand what to keep, what to change, and why.

 

Good taste may get the work started. But judgment is what keeps it useful.

alvaro_sig

Álvaro Ramos
Brand and UI Designer

L I N K   R O U N D   U P

 

1. Game+Logo
Classic logos of consoles and video games, in case you need a refresher. The GameCube logo really needs to be appreciated in all its animated glory, though.

2. Make Product Design Distinctive Again
Max Ottignon, co-founder of Ragged Edge, discusses the need for difference in the world of product design. “The democratisation of design and coding tools has unleashed a torrent of indistinguishable mediocrity. The great irony of vibe coding is that it seems to result in products with zero actual vibe.”

3. Piet Zwart: Brand Architect
Have you thought about Dutch modernist Piet Zwart recently? Perhaps you should. “Discover the designer who showed how type alone could carry a brand’s voice.” And if you find yourself in San Francisco, consider visiting the Letterform Archive’s current exhibition.

4. A New Design for Microsoft 365 Copilot
In case you missed it a few weeks ago, one of our designers shared in Slack, “The Microsoft Copilot update is looking more and more gorg.” It almost feels like a response to Max Ottignon’s article above: making product design, even one rooted in simplicity, feel distinctive (and harder to copy).

 

C R E A T I V E   S P O T L I G H T

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Source: Lynn Fisher

Every year since 2007, web designer Lynn Fisher has rebuilt her personal site, “experimenting with the web as a creative medium.” Luckily for us, they’re all saved in her Archive. We’re particularly fond of 2021 and 2018 (make sure you resize the windows). When she’s not rebuilding her site annually, she’s making delightfully niche websites like a collection of films within films, the meaning behind every airport code, and illustrations created with a single div.

N O W   H I R I N G

Senior Product Designer at LeafLink
Remote

 

Marketing Operations Manager at Seamless
Remote, U.S.

 

Senior Product Manager at Pinpoint
Remote, U.K.

 

Staff Product Designer at PolyAI
Remote, U.K.

 

Lead Product Manager at Nitrogen
Remote, U.S.

 

Senior Director, Product Strategy & Operations at Salesloft
Remote, U.S.

 

Product Designer at Iterable
Lisbon, Portugal

 

Staff Product Designer at Outreach
Prague, Czechia



 

I N   C A S E   Y O U   M I S S E D   I T

Seamless Case Study
Seamless had long been categorized alongside contact databases, but it had grown into a full-stack GTM platform. With over a million users and enterprise clients across the market, it was time for a brand to match.

 

A Business Decision Disguised as a Creative One
In the latest episode of The Debrief, Bill Kenney sits down with the Head of Marketing at Giga Energy, Sam Burns, who knows firsthand what it looks like when brand and business momentum collide.

 

Why Choosing a New Logo Feels So Hard
Most leaders expect an instant connection with a new logo. Like they'll just know when they see the right one. But the goal isn't love at first sight. It's choosing something you're willing to stand behind while it earns its meaning.

 

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