| name | Wellbeing Design with Desmet's 13 Needs |
| description | Design interfaces and products that foster human wellbeing using Pieter Desmet's 13 fundamental human needs framework. Use when evaluating design decisions, creating user experiences, or ensuring products support psychological and emotional flourishing. Covers autonomy, competence, relatedness, hedonic needs, and more. |
Wellbeing Design Using Desmet's 13 Fundamental Human Needs
This skill guides design decisions through the lens of Pieter Desmet's comprehensive framework of human needs that, when satisfied, lead to wellbeing and flourishing.
The 13 Fundamental Human Needs
Core Psychological Needs (3)
- Autonomy - Freedom to make choices and self-direction
- Competence - Mastery, capability, and effective action
- Relatedness - Connection, belonging, and meaningful relationships
Hedonic Needs (3)
- Pleasure - Positive sensory and emotional experiences
- Comfort - Physical and mental ease; reduction of discomfort
- Stimulation - Novelty, challenge, and cognitive engagement
Eudaimonic Needs (3)
- Self-expression - Authentic representation of identity and values
- Self-development - Growth, learning, and skill advancement
- Purpose - Meaningful contribution and alignment with values
Social & Transcendent Needs (4)
- Benevolence - Helping others and contributing to wellbeing
- Justice - Fairness, equity, and moral rectitude
- Fairness to oneself - Self-respect and healthy self-care
- Spiritual connection - Connection to something larger than self
Design Application Framework
Step 1: Map Needs to Context
When designing, identify which needs are most relevant to your user context:
- Who are the primary users?
- What life domains matter most (work, home, health, learning)?
- Which needs are at risk of being frustrated?
Step 2: Evaluate Current Designs
For existing products/interfaces, assess:
- Which needs does this design support well?
- Which needs are being frustrated or ignored?
- Are there unintended negative consequences on need satisfaction?
Step 3: Design with Intention
When creating new features or products:
- Prioritize satisfying core psychological needs (autonomy, competence, relatedness)
- Balance hedonic needs without creating false dependencies
- Embed eudaimonic elements (purpose, growth, self-expression)
- Consider social impact (justice, benevolence)
Step 4: Validate with Users
- Use qualitative research to understand lived experiences
- Measure wellbeing outcomes, not just task completion
- Identify unintended needs frustration
Design Patterns by Need
Autonomy
- User control over workflows, defaults, and preferences
- Transparency about data use and decision-making
- Ability to opt-out or choose alternatives
- Meaningful consent processes
Competence
- Progressive disclosure and appropriate scaffolding
- Clear feedback on progress and capability
- Achievable challenges matched to skill level
- Learning support built into interface
Relatedness
- Community features and social connection opportunities
- Recognition of others' contributions
- Collaborative features that foster interdependence
- Safe spaces for authentic connection
Pleasure
- Delightful micro-interactions and animations
- Sensory design (color, typography, soundscapes)
- Positive emotional triggers
- Moments of joy and surprise
Comfort
- Reduced cognitive load and decision fatigue
- Intuitive, friction-free experiences
- Safety and security assurances
- Accessibility and adaptability
Stimulation
- Appropriate challenge and complexity
- Gamification elements (when authentic)
- Novel content and features
- Varied interaction patterns
Self-expression
- Customization and personalization
- Authentic representation in design
- Creative tools and flexibility
- Cultural representation
Self-development
- Learning opportunities embedded in workflow
- Skill progression and mastery paths
- Feedback for improvement
- Growth narratives
Purpose
- Clear connection to meaningful outcomes
- Mission-driven messaging
- Impact visualization
- Values alignment
Benevolence
- Opportunities to help others
- Impact metrics on social good
- Sharing and contribution features
- Gratitude recognition
Justice
- Transparent algorithms and decision-making
- Equitable access and representation
- Fair pricing and resource distribution
- Democratic participation in governance
Fairness to Oneself
- Boundary-setting features (time limits, Do Not Disturb)
- Self-care reminders and encouragement
- Mindful design practices (no dark patterns)
- Mental health safeguards
Spiritual Connection
- Connection to nature or values
- Contemplative spaces
- Meaningful rituals or traditions
- Transcendent moments
Integration with Psychometrics
Combine this framework with validated measurement instruments:
- PERMA-Profiler (flourishing, engagement, relationships, meaning, accomplishment)
- PWI (Personal Wellbeing Index) - 8 domains of life satisfaction
- Scale of Positive and Negative Experience (SPANE)
- Affect and Symptom Focus On Wellbeing (ASFOW)
Research Integration
This framework is grounded in:
- Self-Determination Theory (Ryan & Deci)
- Broaden-and-Build Theory of Positive Emotions (Fredrickson)
- Flow Theory (Csikszentmihalyi)
- Hedonic vs. Eudaimonic wellbeing literature
- Cross-cultural wellbeing research
Design Methods Alignment
- TU Delft: Design for values, participatory design, user empathy mapping
- Tongji University: Emotional design, experiential mapping, co-creation
- Qualitative Research-Through-Design: Iterative user validation, lived experience documentation
- Value Sensitive Design: Embedding values into technical systems
Practical Checklist
When reviewing a design: