Tag Archives: Sigit Adinugroho

The Irony of Million-Dollar Investments

I had a very interesting conversation with my design colleague from the United States who worked for Yahoo!. We were having breakfast at his hotel and discussing about Indonesian startups. Go-Jek was easily the one that came up in the conversation.

Immediately, he said, “I saw the app, but why do I think that for a startup that has a lot of money invested into them, the app doesn’t feel and look polished enough? As if they don’t care about user experience.”

I quickly recognize the same problem, and in fact, it has been my pet peeve for the app.

When asked about the details of what bothered him, he answered, “Well, first thing, some of the icons of the subservices aren’t the correct version, they look blurry, and somehow some of them don’t represent what the subservices are.”

I immediately agreed, and added that so many details go rampage, like inconsistent element designs, various font sizes, and different form-filling experience across the subservices. I said to him that I know personally that they use different vendors for the different subservices, thus the differing qualities and details for each subservice.

This is very ironic for a product design point of view because if a company’s performance is defined by products that serve and delight the customers, they should have invested more in user experience, and paid more attention to details.

I can probably see why it’s missing from Go-Jek’s products and services. It’s a typical Indonesian company problem, and this goes by many dimensions:

  • Internal politics. Usually, there are so many stakeholders. Each of the stakeholders feels that they should have a say in what the product should look, feel and be like. Hence, design by committee.
  • Success bias. When companies like Go-Jek get hundreds of millions of investments, it becomes an illusion that they are successful, thus comes the snobbery of the people working inside. They don’t think it’s important to build and polish the product, when they focus mostly on growth. This is why I never fully trust invested companies.
  • Lack of focus. When you aim solely for growth, you lose focus of what’s more important. In Go-Jek’s case, the focus is more to diversify and expand their businesses by adding more subservices, not to actually improve the existing products and services. Feature bloat comes in, as a consequence. With organic growth like this, and by using different vendors to build their digital products, it’s entirely impossible to get in sync and to create a coherent system.

What I see in every startup in Indonesia who are invested is that they are too busy in burning money and trying to pay that money back to investors, instead of making, and further polishing their products.

If they think digital user experience is important to achieve key performance indicators, then they must invest time, effort and money to prioritize product development, and hire a design team internally to help.

An app can be ugly, laggy, and awkward, but it can work. It is understandable if you don’t have money yet and try to create a first-stage product like an MVP. However, if your startup is invested in the millions—let alone hundreds of millions of dollars—it’s pretty shameful to present a mediocre product experience, don’t you think?


This article has been republished with editing and permission from Sigit Adinugroho. Original source is from Medium.

Sigit designs digital products for a living and for life. He works in the intersections of customer experience and design.

He writes at and collects his work at

The Biggest Lie of Startups: “We’re Going to be Big”

I don’t know how people are so sure about “the next big thing” and if something would “work out” and something else “wouldn’t”.

Call me naive, unexperienced, and skeptical.

I know those who are actually into entrepreneurship and startup-y thing are actually very well-informed and have an instinct as sharp as a knife. You have all the networks you have to convince (or un-convince) you.

I just hope that with their experience and skill, please don’t mislead others, especially selling puffy promises to the team(s) they’re building.

There are some reasons on why keep repeating “it’s gonna be big” or “you’ll have a very good opportunity later on” or essentially, anything that promises some huge benefits later on if “you commit now” would not convince me, or I believe any designers out there.

Market insight

First of all, do your homework. If you’re going to market a product in a locality, like Indonesia, and think it’s going to be big as something else in the United States, think again. You have to live here for years to really know the local landscape. Thinking it’s going to be big in a place you know less about will only make your claim very gimmicky.

Wait, who are you?

If somebody’s going to make a promise or claim, that somebody better got a reputation that proved similar. If you never truly made any big thing in the past, chances are you don’t know what you’re talking about.

The scale (and scope) of big

What is the “bigness” that you think of in this regard? Is it by revenue stream? Is it by a solid product? Is it by user acquisition? What exactly? Wait a minute. Your perception of “big” and my perception of “big” have to match, or else, I couldn’t work for you.

Gimmicky exposure

Trying to convince someone to work on your product on the basis of “we’re just a startup starting something” and “you’re in for a good ride in the rocketship” is exactly the same as bad clients who don’t pay appropriate amount of compensation to freelancers or agencies in the hope of “getting that big exposures later on”.

You’re worse if you promise these things to more junior employees who think startups are really rocketships for their future fame. No, please. Don’t exploit them.

Try a solid presentation with solid data, and sensible prediction or projection.

Is “big” nice enough?

Do you think aiming to be “big” is enough? Do you have a solid product team inside your company who can actually pull this off? What comes to the adage that says “good product sells on its own”? Can we aim for delight, instead?

Here are some suggestions on how you can actually build your team to build the next delightful product.

Hire the right team

Hire the right product team and look at the composition. Positions vary from company to company, but I’d suggest you to hire not only good engineering team, but designers and product managers. Also, sales team who understand digital products so that they don’t look embarrassing when using technical terms.

Do not sugarcoat

Never try to sugarcoat your available opportunities to future candidates with investment money (how much of that money goes into their pockets, anyway?), promises to be “big”, promises that they’ll have a “time of their life”, or “we have plush toys in our office for you to fiddle with”. Any of those are such bags of air, and go right to the substance instead: the product that you’ll build, and how you think it would be useful or delightful.


This article has been republished with editing and permission from Sigit Adinugroho. Original source is from Medium.

Sigit designs digital products for a living and for life. He works in the intersections of customer experience and design.

He writes at and collects his work at