Thats a very romanticised view, especially when it comes to big contracting companies. I was on many projects where things needed to be done yesterday and there was minimal input if at all from a design team. Yes this is a management problem. However if your unfamiliar with a language and you have to hit a deadline and you're unfamiliar with how to create different ui components you're going to build you know. In this instance a drop down menu with two options. Often people reviewing these UI's aren't design/UX savvy, and just think "does it work", and it gets through.
These people are as stressed as each other and are pressured to get things done. There is a difference between being unfamiliar and not knowing anything at all about a language.
You're example is a little exaggerated, so lets keep to the point. A drop down menu might seem okay to some people and not to others, point proven by this article. I am willing to bet that this was done to get the job done, not to be perfectly designed. My example was to illustrate that people in charge of these contracts don't care to much about quality but how fast they can get a job done. If they have hot bodies on seats, then they can work on this project, not caring what they are skilled in.
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Thats a very romanticised view, especially when it comes to big contracting companies. I was on many projects where things needed to be done yesterday and there was minimal input if at all from a design team. Yes this is a management problem. However if your unfamiliar with a language and you have to hit a deadline and you're unfamiliar with how to create different ui components you're going to build you know. In this instance a drop down menu with two options. Often people reviewing these UI's aren't design/UX savvy, and just think "does it work", and it gets through.
These people are as stressed as each other and are pressured to get things done. There is a difference between being unfamiliar and not knowing anything at all about a language.
You're example is a little exaggerated, so lets keep to the point. A drop down menu might seem okay to some people and not to others, point proven by this article. I am willing to bet that this was done to get the job done, not to be perfectly designed. My example was to illustrate that people in charge of these contracts don't care to much about quality but how fast they can get a job done. If they have hot bodies on seats, then they can work on this project, not caring what they are skilled in.