Airlines Redesigning Uniforms Find Out How Complicated It Is

I’m a fan of the commitment, iteration and heavy testing that goes into the design of airline uniforms. Martha C. White reports for The New York Times that the process can take 2���3 years from start to finish.




Uniforms also have to reflect the realities of life
on the road, with fabric blends that resist stains
and wrinkles and can be laundered, if necessary, in
a hotel sink. They also need to keep the wearers comfortable,
whether their plane touches down in the summer in Maui
or in the winter in Minneapolis.



Before giving the new uniforms to employees, the airlines
conduct wear tests. The roughly 500 employees in American���s
test reported back on details that needed to be changed.
For example, Mr. Byrnes said, an initial dress prototype
included a back zipper, but flight attendants found
it challenging to reach. So the zipper was scuttled
in favor of buttons on the front.



For its 1,000-employee wear test, Delta solicited feedback
via surveys, focus groups, an internal Facebook page
and job shadowing, in which members of the design team
traveled with flight crews to get a firsthand view
of the demands of the job.



���We had about 160-plus changes to the uniform design���
as a result of those efforts, Mr. Dimbiloglu said.




The depth of the process makes sense because these uniforms define not only the company brand, but also impact the working life of thousands of people. Come to think of it, that’s true of pretty much any enterprise software, too. If you’re the designer of such things, are you bringing the same commitment to research, testing, and refinement to your software projects?




New York Times | Airlines Redesigning Uniforms Find Out How Complicated It Is
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Published on July 09, 2017 12:58
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