
UX done right
From individual role to team player:
UX done right
Many companies still place UX as an individual role in marketing, thereby squandering enormous potential. In the product context, good User Experience arises only in an interdisciplinary team and plays a crucial role in efficiency and quality in development. The full article explains why this is the case and what role external partners play in this.
Many companies have now recognized that UI/UX Design is a central success factor in product development. In practical implementation, however, a structural misunderstanding often emerges: UX is understood as an isolated role—often not unlike a "one-man show," organizationally anchored in marketing.
Particularly in the context of product and especially Industrial UX, this approach is not goal-effective.
UX Design is not a single discipline, but an interdisciplinary process. A reliable user interface concept arises from the interaction of development, construction, product management, user research, and design. The quality of the User Experience depends crucially on how well user requirements are understood, technically implemented, and iteratively checked. Individual roles cannot represent this complexity—neither technically nor organizationally.
The effects are immediately measurable: studies show that early user-centered development reduces development times and avoids costly iteration loops. Errors recognized only in late development phases or in the field cause multiple costs compared to those identified already in the conception phase—often a factor of up to 100 is spoken of here.
Especially with physical or industrial products, this effect intensifies: changes are not only software-based but often also constructionally and production-technically demanding. UX thus becomes a critical lever for efficiency in the entire product creation process.
Against this background, it also becomes clear why UX belongs organizationally in product development—and not in marketing. It is not about visual enhancement or brand staging, but about usability, safety, efficiency, and error prevention in the real application context.
Product UX—especially in the industrial environment—shares only limited overlap with classic web design or corporate design. While digital interfaces in the marketing environment are often focused on visual consistency and brand impact, Product UX deals with work processes, interaction logics, and cognitive relief for users in often complex usage scenarios.
Only at a higher level—for example, in the form of design systems or holistic corporate UX—are these disciplines brought together again. However, the basis remains a user-centered design deeply rooted in product development.
Another crucial point is the question of necessary skills and resources. Building a complete UX team requires different roles—from user research to interaction design to usability engineering. Many companies face the challenge of not being able to cover this breadth internally fully.
This is where a meaningful application area arises for external partners like BUSSE Design+Engineering.
External UX and design service providers bring several advantages:
Interdisciplinary teams instead of individual roles: Companies gain access to efficient teams with complementary skills rather than isolated UX roles.
Experience from various industries: Best practices and solutions from different industries can be transferred internally, often lacking depth in this breadth.
Methodical maturity: Established processes in research, testing, and iterative development provide reliable results.
Scalability: External teams can be used on a project basis and scaled flexibly—without long-term personnel commitment.
Especially for companies that already have an internal UX role, such partners offer clear added value: They reinforce existing structures, bring new perspectives, and help further develop UX organizationally and methodically.
In summary:
UX in the product context only unfolds its full value when understood as an integral part of product development—interdisciplinary, methodically grounded, and strategically anchored.
An isolated UX role in marketing does not meet this demand. Companies that instead focus on collaborative structures and deliberately incorporate external expertise lay the foundation for better products, more efficient development processes, and sustainable market success.

