Iron Triangle of Design

Iron Triangle of Design

The Iron Triangle (also called Project Management Triangle) is a well-documented business management model, which can be applied to a variety of fields. To summarize the model, each corner of the triangle represents an attribute or factor relating to the successful completion of a project. While they are interconnected, the attributes are also in opposition to each other, meaning that one may increase but at the cost of the others.

Typically, the three corners represent SCOPE, SCHEDULE/TIME, and RESOURCES/COST

Project Management Triangle

Traditional Iron Triangle or Project Management Triangle

Here is an adaptation of the Iron Triangle, applied to design projects with accompanying results.

Iron-Triangle-Venn-02-web

This is the reality of every design project.

At the outset, there must be an understanding and appreciation for the give-and-take that goes into each project. The client may need to readjust their expectations and think about their priorities for the project.

Do you want it FAST, CHEAP, or GOOD

You cannot have all three, so you need to decide what is most important and valuable to you? 

If you say you want all three, the answer will be NO. It is not possible. Unless, of course, you are running a high-quality, professional, pro-bono design charity that regularly pulls all-nighters.

For any design BUSINESS, however, expecting “fast, cheap, AND good” is unrealistic, devalues the work of the designer, and impacts their ability to serve other clients. 

The three properties of a project are INTERRELATED, and it is not possible to optimize all three – one will always suffer.

In other words you have three options:

    • If you want a design done quickly and to a high standard, then it will not be cheap
    • If you want a design done quickly and cheap, then it will not be of high quality
    • If you want a design with high quality and cheap, then it will take more time