I’ve always had difficulty having reasoned debates with managers and marketing departments that wanted “skinned” or themed desktop applications. All too often, theming was seen as the primary way to brand the software, almost ignoring the branding that came from the name, the logo, the website, the parent company, the adverts and so on. This, IMHO, was folly.
While a certain degree of branding can be achieved in the UI, subtlety is rarely the order of the day. The result is an application whose look and feel gets in the way of the user’s everyday work and/or a maintenance headache for the developers. In fact, I wish my current employers (who shall remain nameless) could see this too. I’ve already wasted weeks getting our themed custom controls to do what I want.
Maybe I should just point them in the direction of Microsoft’s latest advice on theming? For me, it’s great to see some degree of balance in a discussion of the topic.
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