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What Rams, Ive, and Jobs Understood

Justin Bartak · Leadership · July 9, 2025 · 3 min read ·

What Rams, Ive, and Jobs Understood

TL;DR

Great design is timeless. It does not shout for attention. It whispers with confidence. It solves real problems quietly and beautifully.

Great design is timeless. It does not shout for attention. It whispers with confidence. It solves real problems quietly and beautifully, until the solution feels so obvious you forget it was ever hard.

Dieter Rams gave us a standard that still cuts through the noise: "Good design is as little design as possible." Jony Ive carried that ethos into the physical and digital world with an almost unreasonable commitment to craft. Steve Jobs went further and framed design as something deeper than aesthetics, calling it "the fundamental soul of a human made creation."

Different eras. Different personalities. The same obsession.

Three shared truths

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication

They believed the work was not to add, but to remove.

Simplicity is not minimal surface area. It is maximum clarity. It is the discipline to eliminate what does not matter so what does can shine. It is choosing one path over five options. One moment of truth over a dozen features.

Simplicity is how a product earns trust quickly. It is also how it stays timeless.

Design is empathy made visible

They did not design for users in theory. They designed for people in reality.

Empathy is not asking what someone wants. It is understanding what they need, what they fear, what they are trying to accomplish, and what will make them feel capable. It is seeing the invisible burden in a workflow and removing it without asking for applause.

Empathy is why products feel human. Even when the technology underneath is complex.

Design connects function and emotion

They understood that usefulness alone does not create love.

A product can function perfectly and still feel cold, confusing, or forgettable. The best work connects capability to feeling. It makes the user feel calm, confident, and in control. It makes the interaction feel inevitable.

Function earns adoption. Emotion earns loyalty.

Why this matters today

We are building in an era defined by complexity.

AI layers. Feature sprawl. Interfaces that look like control panels. Products that keep adding without ever deciding what they are.

The lessons from Rams, Ive, and Jobs matter more now because they remind us what to protect.

Do not overwhelm. Invite. Guide. Disappear.

The best products become part of life without friction.

A call to designers and founders

Look back at these giants not to imitate, but to internalize.

Build with restraint. Design with empathy. Create with soul.

Because great design is not just seen or used.

It is felt.

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Justin Bartak, VP of AI and AI-native product leader

Justin Bartak

4x founder and VP of AI. $383M+ in enterprise value delivered across regulated fintech, tax, proptech, and CRM platforms. Recognized by Apple. Built Orbyt solo in 32 days with Claude Code. Founder of Purecraft.

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