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Robb leaves BMW

A lot of riders don't understand what the term "design" means in motorcycles.

I'm not an industrial/automotive designer, but I've been a software and interface designer for many years, so I have some thoughts on this.

The end result in many fields represents a compromise, collaboration or battle between designer and engineer. Take my field for example, then look at Microsoft. At its core, Microsoft is a software engineering company that engineers solutions to problems, then brings in designers to wrap graphic veneers around their engineering solutions. Apple, on the other hand, is more of a design company that envisions or designs solutions, then brings in the software and product engineers to implement those designs. They're two very different philosophies and approaches to solving similar problems, and both have their advantages and disadvantages.

I know nothing about the inner workings at BMW, but it's readily apparent that BMW is an engineering company where the designers are subordinate to the engineers ÔÇö not the other way around. Coincidentally, Germany's prewar Bauhaus school was also the primary originator of modern design theory. Nearly everything in modern design, from typefaces to architecture have been heavily influenced by the Bauhaus philosophy of form following function. In other words, the way things work should dictate the way they look.

There's typically an uneasy working relationship between designer and engineer. The designer regards the engineer as having no taste or sense of style, while the engineer regards the designer as a nuisance. Fortunately, the thing that keeps them together is the need for each others skills. Without the designer, BMW bikes would have all the pizzazz and user comfort of an old Soviet tractor, and despite their engineering and durability, the bikes wouldn't sell. But without the BMW engineers, the fancy-looking bike prototypes could never be built and probably wouldn't run if they were built.

I have no idea what's caused the personnel changes in BMW Motorad's design team. I do hope, however, that this change won't result in a lesser or more subordinate role for innovative design at BMW. Their motorcycles were finally seeming to achieve the right balance between engineering and design, and it would be a shame to see this change.
 
I'm not an industrial/automotive designer, but I've been a software and interface designer for many years, so I have some thoughts on this.

The end result in many fields represents a compromise, collaboration or battle between designer and engineer. Take my field for example, then look at Microsoft. At its core, Microsoft is a software engineering company that engineers solutions to problems, then brings in designers to wrap graphic veneers around their engineering solutions. Apple, on the other hand, is more of a design company that envisions or designs solutions, then brings in the software and product engineers to implement those designs. They're two very different philosophies and approaches to solving similar problems, and both have their advantages and disadvantages.

I know nothing about the inner workings at BMW, but it's readily apparent that BMW is an engineering company where the designers are subordinate to the engineers ÔÇö not the other way around. Coincidentally, Germany's prewar Bauhaus school was also the primary originator of modern design theory. Nearly everything in modern design, from typefaces to architecture have been heavily influenced by the Bauhaus philosophy of form following function. In other words, the way things work should dictate the way they look.

There's typically an uneasy working relationship between designer and engineer. The designer regards the engineer as having no taste or sense of style, while the engineer regards the designer as a nuisance. Fortunately, the thing that keeps them together is the need for each others skills. Without the designer, BMW bikes would have all the pizzazz and user comfort of an old Soviet tractor, and despite their engineering and durability, the bikes wouldn't sell. But without the BMW engineers, the fancy-looking bike prototypes could never be built and probably wouldn't run if they were built.

I have no idea what's caused the personnel changes in BMW Motorad's design team. I do hope, however, that this change won't result in a lesser or more subordinate role for innovative design at BMW. Their motorcycles were finally seeming to achieve the right balance between engineering and design, and it would be a shame to see this change.

+++1 Extremely well said.
 
A small example of the design/engineering relationship is in something I remember from a David Robb interview several years ago. He was commenting on the design changes from the 1100 to 1150 oilhead models.

Discussing the rear swingarm, he stated that the design of the swingarm was changed from linear to a more curvaceous form to make it appear "muscular". I haven't compared the parts lists, but in spite of the significant difference in appearance, I'd be surprised if there was as significant a change to the engineering of the driveline it contained.
 
I know nothing about the inner workings at BMW, but it's readily apparent that BMW is an engineering company where the designers are subordinate to the engineers — not the other way around. Coincidentally, Germany's prewar Bauhaus school was also the primary originator of modern design theory. Nearly everything in modern design, from typefaces to architecture have been heavily influenced by the Bauhaus philosophy of form following function. In other words, the way things work should dictate the way they look.

Back in the 60's and 70's, BMW relied on Italian design firms like Pinanfarina, Bertone, etc. for car body and motorcycle fairing design. In many ways, those designs were "lighter" than than today's Hummer-esque designs. Of course, in those days, we didn't feel that we needed a GS or an X5 to drive down the highway. It seems that a S/RS/RT or a 2002/320 did just fine.

But, times do change....
 
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For all the reasons Jim states above, and for the success his designs have seen in the market place (just look at the styling of the GS wanta-bes), I believe he will be a big loss to BMW. No one is irreplaceable, but some people do leave a noticeable hole in the water for a while.

Well said. :german
 
Back in the 60's and 70's, BMW relied on Italian design firms like Pinanfarina, Bertone, etc. for car body and motorcycle fairing design. In many ways, those designs were "lighter" than than today's Hummer-esque designs. Of course, in those days, we didn't feel that we needed a GS or an X5 to drive down the highway. It seems that a S/RS/RT or a 2002/320 did just fine.

But, times do change....

Yes, and some of those designs still look very modern today - IMHO especially the K100RS and K75S. I still get unbelieving stares when I tell non-BMW people that my K75S is 19 years old.
 
I have no idea what's caused the personnel changes in BMW Motorad's design team. I do hope, however, that this change won't result in a lesser or more subordinate role for innovative design at BMW. Their motorcycles were finally seeming to achieve the right balance between engineering and design, and it would be a shame to see this change.

great post on the element of design in the overall user experience with a product. as an Apple fanbois, I am right there with you.

word is that David Robb was being increasingly subjected to design "guidance" from the car people at BMW and that wasn't sitting will with the bike people.

Very unfortunate because Robb is about as good as they come.

Here.... this video pretty much summarizes how effectively Microsoft can screw up a simple idea:

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/G9HfdSp2E2A" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
great post on the element of design in the overall user experience with a product. as an Apple fanbois, I am right there with you.

word is that David Robb was being increasingly subjected to design "guidance" from the car people at BMW and that wasn't sitting will with the bike people.

Very unfortunate because Robb is about as good as they come.

Here.... this video pretty much summarizes how effectively Microsoft can screw up a simple idea:

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/G9HfdSp2E2A" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Well, that is just about the best demonstration of the differences between to entirely different philosophies that I've ever seen. Spot on. Thanks, Ian. :thumb
 
Well, that is just about the best demonstration of the differences between to entirely different philosophies that I've ever seen. Spot on. Thanks, Ian. :thumb

The video might well show the differences in philosophy, but unless i crank up my PC, i'll never know.

See, my iPad does not permit me to see Flash videos. Apple's philosophy...

Perfection continues to elude all organizations, but it's great fun to watch each of them persue it.
 
The video might well show the differences in philosophy, but unless i crank up my PC, i'll never know.

See, my iPad does not permit me to see Flash videos. Apple's philosophy...

There's some sort of irony in that.

Perfection continues to elude all organizations, but it's great fun to watch each of them persue it.

Very true. And it's good for us as consumers when one company gets on a hot streak and produces great products we all want.
 
Good for us when...

And, it's even better for us when others figure it out, and bring us equivalent technology a few months later at one-third the price.

Where would we be if we had to by all of our electric lights, music players, and movie tickets from Thomas Edison? Yet, it takes little from his importance that he was also thrown out of his own company (GE).

Jobs fixed up a company with some great ideas, tyrannical control, and terrorized underlings. It would be a mistake to make him into the Savior, and to think that he did it for all the unwashed children running around listening to iPods, texting nonsense on iPhones, and playing games on iPads.

He did it for their money, and he got it right. Be a disciple if you like, but pay attention to the concept you are evangelizing. (And, don't drag your monk's sackcloth habit in the mud.)
:lurk
 
Where would we be if we had to by all of our electric lights, music players, and movie tickets from Thomas Edison? Yet, it takes little from his importance that he was also thrown out of his own company (GE).

Jobs was essentially thrown out of Apple, formed Next and fomented Pixar.

The vision is a seamless content experience across devices.

The conflict is between proprietary and open architectures.

As it stands right now, the only way to assure a seamless content experience is a proprietary architecture.

That could change. If the phone companies had a clue, we'd have it by now. But they don't and probably never will.

Ian
 
I'm glad you posted this Greg, because I've been shopping for an ST, and recently pulled up a bunch of old road tests. So here's Kevin Ash of the Telegraph, working over my favourite bike: :ha

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/motorbikes/2734118/Preaching-to-the-converted.html

Exactly. Did you notice that he/they apparently didn't ride the ST enough to burn a whole, entire, tank of gas? For me, any review that doesn't involve using several tanks of gas over a variety of conditions is only misinformation - worse than no review at all - but that's often the way it is in the motorcycle press.
 
I'm a little disappointed to see how much influence the "motorcycle press" has within the BMW corporate structure. I guess I'm not surprised that a couple of dozen riders with english degrees can push the market buttons so effectively, but it's sad to know I trust their opinions more than my own, and I'm not sure why. On the other hand, I sell paint for a living, and the annual Consumer Reports paint tests have made and broken a lot of careers in my business.
 
I'm a little disappointed to see how much influence the "motorcycle press" has within the BMW corporate structure.

What evidence supports this? BMW stopped producing the ST because it didn't sell well, not because Kevin Ash didn't like it. And Ash's review wasn't responsible for the poor sales - the bike's unusual looks were. Mechanically it was a perfectly-BMWish piece of machinery; esthetically, it didn't make people swoon when the garage door was raised.

If BMW corporate paid attention to the motorcycle press, BMW's unusual turn-signal controls would have been abandoned decades ago.
 
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Not likely. BMW knows that the top two reasons that people buy a given motorcycle are 1) the magazine reviews, and 2) the test ride - in that order. Pieter de Waal told me directly that the RS-type bikes are gone because they didn't test at the top of any recognized category of motorcycles (as defined by the motorcycle press). He said BMW can not afford to build bikes that don't test at at the top or near top of these categories, and because the RS was a jack of all trades and master of none (my words), it had to go. That breaks my heart as I've always been an RS-guy, but I can see the marketing realities of this decision. I'm keeping my K1200RS until they throw the dirt over me. :D

This is the quote I should have included in my earlier post. Sorry for any confusion.
 
If BMW corporate paid attention to the motorcycle press, BMW's unusual turn-signal controls would have been abandoned decades ago.

They didn't start listening until just a few years ago. We all have to remember that they are in the business - and only the business - of selling *new* motorcycles, and some battles just aren't worth fighting.
 
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