The Case for Boring Design
The most impressive interfaces are often the least interesting to look at. That is the point.
I have been designing digital products for eleven years. And in that time, the work I am most proud of is almost always the most boring to show in a portfolio review.
Not because it lacks craft. Because the craft is invisible.
What boring design actually means
Boring design is not lazy design. It is design that has absorbed so much complexity that none of it leaks to the surface. It is the checkout flow that users complete without noticing. The dashboard that answers the question before it is asked. The error message that does not need to be read twice.
Exciting design, by contrast, announces itself. It draws attention to the design rather than to the task. And attention to the design is, by definition, friction.
The hardest part
The hardest part of boring design is that it is hard to defend in reviews. "It is clean" is not a compelling argument when there's a visually rich alternative on the table. Boring design requires a deep belief — backed by data, ideally — that simplicity serves users better than delight.
I have learned to frame it this way: delight is a tax. A small, often pleasurable tax — but a tax. Every animation, every surprise interaction, every visual flourish takes a moment of attention. Multiply that by ten thousand sessions a day and you have a product that is working harder than it needs to. Boring design is the compound interest of those moments returned.