An Epic Design Fail

We’ve all experienced design fails. Sadly, they happen so often as to be unmemorable, not worth mentioning. Design fail examples include things like form controls not working, or confusing user interfaces, or problems with folding phones, or myriad other mobile phone design fails. But every now and then you encounter a design that fails so badly, that you just have to share it. For the past 5 years Motorola phones ordered the volume and power buttons like: Three different Moto […]


This content originally appeared on Perishable Press and was authored by Jeff Starr

We’ve all experienced design fails. Sadly, they happen so often as to be unmemorable, not worth mentioning. Design fail examples include things like form controls not working, or confusing user interfaces, or problems with folding phones, or myriad other mobile phone design fails. But every now and then you encounter a design that fails so badly, that you just have to share it.

For the past 5 years Motorola phones ordered the volume and power buttons like:

Stack of three different Moto phonesThree different Moto models with volume bar on the left, power button on the right

That photo shows three different models:

  • Moto G — 2015
  • Moto X — 2017
  • Moto e5 — 2019

So from 2015 to 2021, the volume bar was located beneath the power button. I never had to think about it. I knew the button locations intuitively. Change volume on the fly, without even looking. Power down no problem. How it should be.

Then in 2021, after six years of solid UI/UX design consistency, Motorola decided to change the order of the buttons. So now the volume bar is located above the power button. Not even joking:

Moto phone with buttons reversedAfter six years of design consistency, they change the order of the buttons

Now that beautiful automatic intuitive experience is a confusing frustrating waste of time. Whenever I go to power down my phone, the volume cranks up. And when I go to lower the volume, the phone powers down. Fumbling with buttons thanks to Motorola’s epic design fail.



This content originally appeared on Perishable Press and was authored by Jeff Starr


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