Falling in Love with Scandinavian Design Nokia Smartphones
Raun Forsyth and Alasdair Mcphail, design
directors at HMD Global, led the team behind the new Nokia smartphones – the
Nokia 3, Nokia 5 and Nokia 6. Here they take us behind the scenes for an
intimate look into the design process from start to finish, the principles of pure
Scandinavian simplicity and functionality, staying true to the Nokia design heritage,
and what it means to add purpose to beautiful design.
How does
the creative process begin?
It all started with a strong team vision, we
got together with one goal - to create something mind-blowing. As a newly
established product team, we began by drawing on our intimate understanding of
Nokia’s brand heritage and defining a solid common vision for what we are
heading towards.
The goal was to deliver fantastically
durable and smart devices that are at the same time so beautiful you fall in
love with them. However, we believe that love develops over time. Whilst others
try to trap your attention with shiny, over-the-top designs, we take a more
understated approach. Our smartphones will not blind you, they will just keep delighting
you as you use them until you end up in love, the gradual and undemanding
process it should be.
What
are your main design principles?
·
Get the bones right first - a thorough understanding of the
fundamentals of what you want to achieve. The design
and engineering departments work separately in a lot of organisations but we
work together. Phones have such intricate internals that you cannot design the
exterior without understanding the functionality of each part. Otherwise, you
will affect the performance. Take the antenna, for example. We have seen in the
past how disappointing the user experience can be when design is the only
driver behind repositioning it. So we worked with our experienced engineers to
create a beautifully plain back panel by hiding the antenna lines on the edge
of the phone without negatively impacting the performance.

·
Scandinavian simplicity and purity as opposed to complexity –
reducing the unnecessary. If you take away what’s
not essential from a device, the features that remain are naturally better
quality as there is more attention and space for them. Think about Formula 1
racing cars – the engine is now part of the chassis, it is all in one piece,
reduced and simplified. And they have never been more powerful. Also, let’s be
honest, the more superfluous parts you can remove, the less chance there is for
quality issues. And by focussing on essential features, you can reduce the overall
size of the smartphone too.
·
Design with purpose. When deciding which
materials to use for the chassis, we started by determining what qualities are most
important to us and the Nokia users. We wanted phones which are solid, durable and
feel good in the hand. Metal provides durability but piecing together separate
parts to create a shell results in a higher risk of them breaking apart and disrupting
the structural integrity – not something we were prepared to compromise on. So
we invested in a metal unibody – each Nokia smartphone is carved from a single
block of aluminium, a process which takes 12 hours per unit. And with the shell
being made out of a solid metal block, we didn’t need to add a supporting
structure inside to hold the parts together which reduced the space requirements
and resulted in the compact size we were looking for.
·
Excellence
in visual mechanics. People
buy on emotion. We can’t help but react to how the look of something makes us
feel. That is why, often, beauty overrides logic – consumers are known to
choose the aesthetically pleasing device over the supercomputer. It’s a
hard-balancing act to fit performance into a shell designed in isolation, which
is why we work from the outset with engineering, making it possible to bundle
functionality and usability with a sleek and beautiful design. Once the bones
of the structure are in the right place, we look at form and colours, the
all-important visual side of things, to deliver the complete package.
You
have chosen two very different product form factors, what was the logic behind
the choices?
Not everyone has the same preferences when
it comes to the size, weight, shape and colour of their smartphone. So instead
of trying to get it almost right for the largest set of consumers, we decided
to get it exactly right for everyone by creating a portfolio.
First, we focused on creating a natural,
pebble-like, soft ergonomic form factor. It is a very human shape and although
it takes a lot longer to manufacture than a flat line, we were determined to
invest in it to trigger that emotive response we all have to natural objects.
Emotions are not easily measurable and certainly not logical but it has taken
us many years of experience in the industry to know what triggers them. And we
are willing to break the rules and invest in those subtle features, like the
pebble shape, which our customers may not even realise are there in the first
instance. However, it is these features that will make them fall in love with
their phones over time.

Then, we experimented with designing
ergonomics that stop short from being completely rational - a shape that is
ultra-cool, edgy and different. With sharp machined side walls that could kill,
this design has attitude, it is not trying to be loved. The smartphone makes a
strong statement to our customers who are looking for something meaningfully different.

How
do you discover those irrational desires?
We conduct a lot of research. It is not
about asking people to tell us what smartphone designs they want. We want to
find out more about the other brands and products they like. Then we use our
knowledge of consumer behaviour to draw our own conclusions on the common
factors behind those affections and the emotive triggers they provide.
Talking
about other brands and products, what did you draw your inspiration from?
Coming from our roots, we draw inspiration
from the minimalism and simplicity of Scandinavian design and architecture. The
most iconic object for us is the wavy glass vase by Scandinavian architect and
designer Alvar Aalto. His pieces are simple but also memorable and confident in
their uniqueness.
We also look at popular fashion. We noticed
that copper, for example, is making a subtle comeback into houseware as part of
the trend for natural metal colours to be incorporated into everyday fashion. The
metal colours we are using are honest and natural, avoiding the bright cheap
metals which could be perceived as Christmas decorations. Another colour we
used was the colour of tempered steel – when heated to 600 degrees, steel turns
a very deep, rich, silky blue. This colour also triggers pleasant familiarity
from its resemblance to the dark denim
and deep blue leather goods Italian fashion houses featured in their
recent collections.
Any
concluding remarks?
Things we are fighting for as designers are
not logical, some of our choices may, to the untrained eye, look the same and
cost more. However, those are the features which give a smartphone its
emotional appeal. And we’ve learned when to break the rules. Even when phones
sell, the design team often doesn’t get the kudos as people often assign the
success to technical specifications. But it is easy to get bored by the spec
race so it is time to give people real choice, and the only way to do that is
through design.
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