ERDMANN DESIGN

HUMAN CENTERED DESIGN
SWITZERLAND

YES!
WE UNDERSTAND YOU.

INVESTORS

INVESTORS

Today life science investments are in high demand. Erdmann Design takes a vital role in life science investments: Through active involvement early in the product and service development process we spark start-up companies’ early growth.

MEDICAL

MEDICAL

Medical doctors and life science experts are seeking to bring their own product ideas to the market. The patient is their focus: Doctors and other experts address the patient’s complete health experience not just their symptoms.

EXECUTIVE

EXECUTIVE

Swiss industrial partners strive for high manufacturing quality as well as clinical efficacy in their work. As an innovation partner we collaborate to find solutions, including solving regulatory issues. We build a reliable design and production network to bring the product from idea to realisation.

EXPERTS

EXPERTS

Success in medical design, engineering and manufacturing teams requires experienced project leaders. Our goal: Synthesizing experience and creating opportunities for the company. 

USERS

USERS

In addition to ease of use, clinical efficacy and safety, we designers are looking for the good solution. This solution lowers costs and provides patient satisfaction. 

«Erdmann Design’s active involvement early in the product and service development process is an absolute benefit for Naviswiss. Erdmann creates intelligent medical products and drives innovation.»

Christian Walsoe, CFO, Member of the board, Naviswiss AG, Switzerland

Mindmap

NAVISWISS

New Navigated Surgery  
Switzerland

UNDERSTANDING THE DESIGN CONTEXT

What users believe they know about a product strongly impacts how they use it. A mental model is based on belief, not facts.


Designing for others means drawing on knowledge of mental models and requires entering users‘ understanding.

Raimund Erdmann

«I was surprised to find out how similar the design process is to the patient history and documentation which we surgeons use to exchange experiences among each other. Since then we have worked together with designers.»

Prof. Dr. Hans-Florian Zeilhofer, Founder Mininavident AG

Mindmap

DENACAM 
3D realtime navigation system for implantology
by Mininavident AG Switzerland

ON THE LEVEL OF USE 

The aim of design is to encourage interfaces that move effortlessly from recognition, to exploration, to reliance, until the user is satisfied.


Affordings include direct perceptions: bendability, twistability, pushability, rotatability, graspability, steerability, heaviness, and danger.


Affordances are irreducible cultural habits and difficult to modify. Designers should make them easily recognizable and bring forth the consequences that users expect, ideally without unnecessary constraints.

Raimund Erdmann

«The creative impulses of the Erdmann Design Team are crucial for our success. They think up surprising solutions!»

Ueli Breitschmid, Owner and CEO Curaden AG, Switzerland

Mindmap

CURAPROX  
HYDROSONIC ORTHO
Hydrodynamic sonic toothbrush

MULTISENSORY REDUNDANCY

The design of products and interfaces must assure that all senses are accounted for.


In designing a product, attention to all senses provides the end-user with a richer experience.


Our process includes testing within the context of use. Testing a product in a real-life light and acoustic situation is crucial to the understanding of the user’s behavior and interaction.

Raimund Erdmann

«Humans learn all the time. Meanings change in use. Users should be able to enter the interface of a system on any skill level and advance their competencies at their own pace. Users should also be permitted to introduce variations on successful scenarios, finding shortcuts, economizing efforts, and having fun.

Stryker’s navigation must acknowledge what users know today, but be designed for learnability.»

Project team leader at Stryker

Mindmap

STRYKER   
PROFESS Navigation System
Pattern Recognition Optics for Functional 
Endoscopic Sinus Surgery

ROBUST SYSTEM

An ideally robust system in one in which most foreseeable mishaps are prevented. When something unintended does slip through, it provides an opportunity for learning something new.


It is a challenge for designers to anticipate what the users of a product might do and provide the necessary clues to prevent interfaces from being disrupted, or worse, causing harm.


Early prototyping with input from medical disciplines and end-users make risks visible, understandable and solvable.

Raimund Erdmann

«Data availability is growing at an exponential rate. Data for patients, for physicians, and for manufacturers. As an industry, we have to get better at using that fragmented data to its full potential by integrating it into new therapeutic concepts to improve outcomes for patients. At the same time, we need to ensure we comply fully with data-privacy law and regulations.»

Cédric Gysel, Human Centered Design Innovation Lab & Make Space Switzerland

Mindmap

JANSSEN    
Practice injecting with this reusuable training device. by Cilag, Janssen  
Switzerland

INTERACTION FEEDBACK

Feedback on any user action should be as immediate and as direct as possible.

Usability workshops with stakeholders to validate the systems interfaces and interactions will give us the necessary relevance to the task.

Raimund Erdmann

Go to article: Home | For Sale: Med Tech MalwareGo to article: In This Issue Go to article: Formacoat Company InsightGo to article: FormacoatGo to article: Contents Go to article: MPS Microsystems Company InsightGo to article: MPS MicrosystemsGo to article: NewsGo to article: Cap Biomaterials Company Insight Go to article: Cap BiomaterialsGo to article: Protomatic Medical Company InsightGo to article: Protomatic MedicalGo to article: The Medical Industry Briefing Go to article: Telemed Company InsightGo to article: TelemedGo to article: Under the skin: the medical device industry and the dark webGo to article: Braxton Manufacturing Go to article: ARPA Company InsightGo to article: ARPAGo to article: AI and open sourcing: a new frontier for prosthetic leg designGo to article: Ginolis Company InsightGo to article: GinolisGo to article: Accurate BiometricsGo to article: Accurate Biometrics Company InsightGo to article: The age of the autonomous pharmacy Go to article: Sandvik Company InsightGo to article: Sandvik Go to article: Q&A: LifeBank on the challenge of getting blood from A to B in Nigeria Go to article: Mecmesin Company InsightGo to article: MecmesinGo to article: 5G meets medicine: separating fact from fictionGo to article: Maraca InternationalGo to article: Adhesives ResearchGo to article: Meril Life Sciences: leading a growing Indian medtech sectorGo to article: PI CeramicGo to article: Erdmann Design Go to article: Making electronic health records workGo to article: Thermal Press InternationalGo to article: Euroquartz Company InsightGo to article: EuroquartzGo to article: Snooze, you lose: the devices helping to understand the science of sleepGo to article: OptelGo to article: US makes strides in below-the-knee use of drug-coated balloonsGo to article: 3BYGo to article: Continuous glucose monitoring is quickly becoming standard-of-care for diabetes Go to article: Bright PlasticsGo to article: Bariatric surgery is driving factor for medical tourismGo to article: Art of TechnologyGo to article: Opportunities and challenges in China’s wound care marketGo to article: Tech NHGo to article: Bayer AG acquires BlueRock TherapeuticsGo to article: EventsGo to article: Next Issue