// Book comparison
The Design of Everyday Things vs Man's Search for Meaning
Which should you read? A side-by-side comparison of The Design of Everyday Things by Don Norman and Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl.
The Design of Everyday Things
by Don Norman
★ 4.9/5
Man's Search for Meaning
by Viktor Frankl
★ 4.9/5
At a glance
| The Design of Everyday Things | Man's Search for Meaning | |
|---|---|---|
| Rating | ★ 4.9/5 | ★ 4.9/5 |
| Pages | 368 | 165 |
| Reading time | ~9.2 h | ~4.1 h |
| Published | 1988 | 1946 |
| Author | Don Norman | Viktor Frankl |
| Category | Pemasaran & Jualan | Keberkesanan Peribadi |
| Publisher | Basic Books | Beacon Press |
Choose The Design of Everyday Things if…
- → You're interested in pemasaran & jualan.
- → You want the higher-rated book (4.9/5).
- → You want the more recent perspective (1988).
Choose Man's Search for Meaning if…
- → You're interested in keberkesanan peribadi.
- → You prefer a shorter read (~4.1 hours).
Key takeaways — The Design of Everyday Things
- ✓ Utamakan Discoverability dan Feedback, pastikan setiap elemen produk anda memberi isyarat secara jelas tentang fungsi dan mengesahkan tindakan pengguna secara segera.
- ✓ Sesuaikan reka bentuk produk anda dengan Model Mental Pengguna, sedar bahawa manusia berinteraksi dengan teknologi berdasarkan pengalaman lalu dan analogi intuitif.
- ✓ Gunakan Constraints sebagai Perisai Strategik, secara sengaja mengehadkan pilihan pengguna untuk mengelakkan kesilapan besar dan membimbing pelanggan ke jalan kejayaan yang paling efisien.
Key takeaways — Man's Search for Meaning
- ✓ Gunakan Kebebasan Sikap dengan menyedari bahawa anda mempunyai kuasa mutlak untuk memilih reaksi terhadap sebarang kemunduran strategik, memastikan anda tetap proaktif dan berpegang teguh.
- ✓ Bangunkan Keinginan untuk Makna dalam organisasi anda dengan menyelaraskan tugasan harian dengan tujuan yang lebih tinggi, yang merupakan cara paling berkesan untuk mencegah keletihan dan perletakan jawatan pekerja.
- ✓ Amalkan Optimisme Tragis semasa menghadapi ketidaktentuan pasaran yang tinggi, fokus kepada potensi pertumbuhan dan inovasi yang wujud walaupun dalam krisis yang paling mencabar.
The verdict
If you want the higher-rated, more acclaimed read, start with The Design of Everyday Things. If you specifically need keberkesanan peribadi, Man's Search for Meaning is the better fit. Both summaries are free — no signup required.
❓ FAQ
Is The Design of Everyday Things or Man's Search for Meaning better? +
The Design of Everyday Things has the higher reader rating (4.9/5 vs 4.9/5), but "better" depends on your goal. The Design of Everyday Things focuses on pemasaran & jualan, while Man's Search for Meaning focuses on keberkesanan peribadi. See the verdict below.
Which is shorter, The Design of Everyday Things or Man's Search for Meaning? +
Man's Search for Meaning is shorter (165 pages, ~4.1 hours) compared to The Design of Everyday Things (368 pages, ~9.2 hours).
Should I read The Design of Everyday Things or Man's Search for Meaning first? +
If you want the quicker, higher-rated read, start with The Design of Everyday Things. Otherwise read whichever matches your current goal — both summaries are free on BookHubs.