There’s a saying, much popularised by Apple, that distinguishes certain products:
"It just works."
It seems like a very low bar on the surface, doesn’t it?
Surely every product works, to some extent.
“It just works” only becomes a selling point when you consider how much hassle most products are to use.
Remember the last time you bought anything significant — was it entirely effortless? Was it a pleasure? Was it obvious at every step what you needed to do to start getting value from it?
I think this concept applies to services and experiences as well as products. I've written before about the experience of using my gym for the first time. And there are plenty of restaurants and hotels I've been to that fall short of the mark when judging them by the "it just works" assessment.
I don’t believe these are exhaustive, but here are a few principles that come to mind for building a product or service that just works:
- “It just works” means a lack of cruft and complexity.
- "It just works" means the product is reliable and consistently so over its lifetime.
- “It just works” means the maker has an opinion.
- “It just works” cuts to the chase, and gets the user to their desired outcome as quickly as possible.
- “It just works” eschews end-user choice for simplicity and obviousness.
- “It just works” means prioritising the primary function of the product above all else, even if that is at the expense of other meaningful uses.
These are easy to write, but very hard to achieve in a team building a real product.
It begs the question, then, why do so many products and services not “just work”?
I believe most products on the market exhibit some combination of the following:
- A lack of care. The designers and makers just don’t care enough about the end user.
- There is a misunderstanding of the core purpose of the product.
- Feature creep. In a drive to make the product more attractive to more people, extra features are added in.
- Short-term financial incentives drive cost-cutting and profit over product quality.
There are too many products that fall short of the "it just works" goal. Fortunately, that leaves tremendous opportunity for makers willing to go the extra mile.
A few products I’ve used recently that just work:
- Granola — we’ve all been on a Zoom call that has had some form of AI note taker unexpectedly join. We’ve all experienced how useless a transcription can be. And we’ve all tried taking notes from a meeting only to find we either weren’t paying attention or missed a critical piece of information. Granola is the first note taker I’ve found that truly “just works”. You install it on your Mac, there are no awkward bots, and the results I've seen have been exactly what I wanted. It just works!
- The Journal app — one of Apple's more recent new apps. I've used countless journalling apps over the years, and started toying with Journal recently. It's stuck so far not because of additional features (in fact, it's quite limited compared to most other options) — but because it's just so easy, fast, and obvious. It just works.
- My Braun alarm clock — my parents have a similar model and I think their one is older than me! I love how this clock just works from the moment you unbox it — set the time, set the alarm, and you're done. There is nothing unnecessary — no radio, no extra options around the type of alarm you want, no AM / PM setting. It just works!
Have you recently purchased a product that just works? I'd love to hear what it was!
Links and interesting things
- The best piece I read on the demise of the Humane Ai Pin: Oh, the Humane-ity I also wrote some thoughts on the shutdown of Humane that seemingly got people's attention.
- The team and I helped at an east London food bank. We also had pie and mash, one of the oldest forms of "fast food" at an iconic London pie and mash shop.
- Carbon Neutral Fuels — I had the pleasure of speaking with Sophie for an upcoming episode of the EcoSend Podcast. Making aviation fuel from reclaimed carbon. Could air travel be a step closer to becoming guilt free
- Wikitok — it’s like TikTok but nourishing for your brain. Wikipedia pages instead of trash videos.
- The hardest working font in New York. Nostalgic and full of typographic geekery.
- Is this the most beautiful camera ever made? Sigma BF.
- Jony Ive on Desert Island Discs. It’s wonderful to hear Jony speak about his life. Most people are not this intense while also seemingly so calm. It was also fun to learn about some of his favourite songs — I share his love of Debussy's Clair de Lune.
Quote
"If you want a golden rule that will fit everything, this is it: Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful." — William Morris