English Language & Usage Asked on August 17, 2020
Ten years ago, a product designer was widely understood as someone with the competency to design, prototype, build, and manufacture products. Today, the meaning of the role has expanded to include digital products (apps, websites, software). Consequentially, the job search is a challenge for designers of non-digital products.
Some designers use the words physical, hardware, tactile, analog, and tactile. However, the titles "physical product designer" or "hardware designer" lack the finesse of "product designer". Some physical product designers have also attempted to use "industrial designer" which happens to be a different design discipline.
I would love to hear what people think. Perhaps there’s a better way to formulate the title. Maybe a new word needs to be invented. It would greatly benefit people like me to stake claim to a title that helps distinguish ourselves from digital product designers.
If I were to contrast digital with something, I would contrast it with material:
[Merriam-Webster]
1 a(1) : relating to, derived from, or consisting of matter
especially : PHYSICAL
// the material world
1 a(2) : BODILY
// material needs
1 b(1) : of or relating to matter rather than form
// material cause
// the material aspect of being
To me, although closely related, material seems like a broader term than just physical. Not only does it describe the composition of something, but also describes how it might be applied and interacted with in practice.
As such, you would have these contrasting terms:
Note that I have used hyphens in both in order to avoid any ambiguity. (A computer-generated image of a product manager could be described as digital, for instance.)
A comment under the question suggested tangible.
I like that word, but one sense of tangible is not just physical, but observable:
[Merriam-Webster]
2 : capable of being precisely identified or realized by the mind
// her grief was tangible
Obviously, grief itself is not physical; however, by this sense, it is tangible. The same could be said of something like software.
Answered by Jason Bassford on August 17, 2020
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