FROG design company

 

 


Frog works with the world’s leading companies, helping them to design, engineer, and bring to market meaningful products and services. With an interdisciplinary team of more than 1,600 designers, strategists, and software engineers, frog delivers connected experiences that span multiple technologies, platforms, and media. frog works across a broad spectrum of industries, including consumer electronics, telecommunications, healthcare, energy, automotive, media, entertainment, education, finance, retail, and fashion. Clients include Disney, GE, HP, Intel, Microsoft, MTV, Qualcomm, Siemens, and many other Fortune 500 brands. Founded in 1969, frog is headquartered in San Francisco, with locations in Amsterdam, Austin, Boston, Chennai, Bangalore, Gurgaon, Johannesburg, Kiev, Milan, Munich, New York, Seattle, Shanghai, and Vinnitsa. frog is a company of the Aricent Group, a global innovation and technology services firm.


Frog product design

 

Frog interaction design

 

Frog software engineering

 

Frog technology

 

Frog design research

 

Frog innovation strategy

 

Frog think

 


The Early Years

 

Frog began as Esslinger Design in 1969 when Hartmut Essslinger and partners Andreas Haug and Georg Spreng opened a studio in the Black Forest of Germany to promote the concept of emotional design. They viewed every act of creation as a small step towards improving the everyday lives of individuals. Soon after its inception, the company received its first big break: a commission from German electronics giant WEGA. A few years later, when Sony bought WEGA, frog found itself working for a massive corporation. The partnership was a huge success, spanning decades and generating more than 100 products, including the mold-breaking black-box Sony Trinitron TV. Gradually, the young design firm became known for its innovation, risk-taking, and vision.


Coming to America: frog Goes Global

It was precisely this mix that appealed to top executive Steve Jobs back in 1981, when he began searching for the elusive magic that would give Apple a market edge. Back then, computing was a sea of anonymous beige boxes. Jobs combed the world for a strategy-focused design company—and found it in Esslinger’s team. A multimillion-dollar deal was struck, enticing Esslinger Design to establish a California office. A few years later, the Apple IIc was launched with great fanfare. The design was named “Design of the Year” by Time Magazine and inducted into the permanent collection at the Whitney Museum of Art. Apple’s revenue soared from $700 million in 1982 to $4 billion in 1986.

With the move to Northern California, the company changed its name to frog design, not for its ability to metamorphose—though this would certainly prove the case—but for its international roots: (f)ederal (r)epublic (o)f (g)ermany. The lowercase letters offered a nod to the Bauhaus notion of a non-hierarchical society, reinforcing the company’s ethos of democratic partnership, both within the design teams and with its clients.


From ID to UI to Convergence

Since then, frog has expanded far beyond its industrial design roots, evolving to better address the technological and cultural developments of the marketplace. In the 1980s, the company took on corporate branding, recognizing the value of a consistent user experience across platforms—product design, engineering, graphics, logos, packaging, and production. Its redesign of the Logitech products and brand identity led the computing giant to grow its revenue from $43 million in 1988 to more than $200 million in 1995, securing the number-one market position. A few years later, frog reexamined the entire Lufthansa operation, from airport signage and plane interiors, to the flatware used for in-flight dining. By exploring the interactions among various consumer touchpoints, frog continues to help brands create more meaningful product and service experiences.

In the 1990s, frog launched a digital media group and began growing its expertise in user interface design for websites, computer software, and mobile devices. Its 1999 redesign of SAP’s enterprise software fostered new levels of efficiency in business management worldwide. Its 2000 design of Dell.com set the standard for e-commerce. And its 2001 collaboration with Microsoft helped create the look and feel for Windows XP, touching the lives of millions of consumers across the globe. More recent collaborations in Web design, software, mobile devices, and consumer electronics are still helping to shape the digital experience as we move into an era of ubiquitous computing.

In more recent years, frog has expanded its offerings once more to include strategic advising on high-level business challenges and long-term planning, including developing social-innovation services and products in emerging economies. In 2008, the company launched Project Masiluleke, which The Economist called “the world’s largest field trial in mobile health technology.” The project is the first attempt to tackle the HIV epidemic in South Africa with a mobile solution—one that started with a single text message to 1 million phones.

In 2011, frog design became frog, a company of the Aricent Group. The firm works with the world’s leading companies, helping them to design, engineer, and bring to market meaningful products and services. With an interdisciplinary team of more than 1,600 designers, strategists, and software engineers, frog delivers connected experiences that span multiple technologies, platforms, and media. frog works across a broad spectrum of industries, including consumer electronics, telecommunications, healthcare, energy, automotive, media, entertainment, education, finance, retail, and fashion. Clients include Disney, GE, HP, Intel, Microsoft, MTV, Qualcomm, Siemens, and other Fortune 500 brands.


 frog works

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Via frogdesign.com

Did you like this? Share it:

Related posts:

Leica M9 "Titanium" from Walter de Silva
OMNI omni-directional speakers
iWatch Wristwatch Concept
Simple Slits for Phones
Frii Recycled Plastic Bike
Philco PC by Schultzeworks
Death Pack | Reynolds and Reyner
Custom Badass Chuck Taylors | Jon Defreest
State of The Obvious | A Collection by MashCreative
PE stripe meltdown chair | Tom Price
Fossil Lamp | Neil Conley
S Mahal house, Yangpyeong-gun, South Korea | Moon Hoon
Barcode Office Interior Design | Ministry of Design
Porsche 918 Spyder Prototype in Vintage Martini Racing
Nooka Zex Watch

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Facebook

Likebox Slider Pro for WordPress