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Who is it for?

Mickey Mellen
2 min readOct 18, 2022

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Seth Godin has talked for years about people needing to remember two simple things when creating something: “who is it for?” and “what is it for?”.

I find people misplacing “who is it for?” quite often, and a funny example of that just came up.

The bank I use recently went through another merger, and those are always painful. When you download the new “Cadence Treasury Mobile” app to manage accounts on your phone, they have the shortcut on the phone simply say “Mobile”, which is of zero value to users. Couple that with the fact that they’ve unveiled a new logo this year, and they’re just begging for confusion. See the icon in the top row here:

This happens on both Android and iOS, so it wasn’t a one-off mistake. I could excuse the fact that they had a ton of work to do and didn’t have time for this, but relative to developing the app itself, naming it took 0.001% of the development time.

However, I can see it from their end. They developed custom apps for Windows and Mac as well, so this was indeed the “Mobile” app. From their eyes, that makes sense; there is a “Windows” app, a “Mac” app, and the “Mobile” apps. They simply forgot who they were making the app for, and how ridiculous that naming convention is for an end user on a phone. “Who is it for?” never entered the discussion.

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Mickey Mellen
Mickey Mellen

Written by Mickey Mellen

I’m a cofounder of @GreenMellen, and I’m into WordPress, blogging and seo. Love my two girls, gadgets, Google Earth, and I try to run when I can.

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