Microsoft's redesigned Office icons signal big changes for the tech giant

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Microsoft’s (MSFT) Office is getting a makeover. Well, sort of: The Redmond, Washington-based tech giant on Thursday announced that it’s revamping the icons for the 10 programs that make up its Office productivity suite. Those icons will get a new styling more closely aligned to the design aesthetic of Microsoft’s Windows 10 operating system.

More importantly, though, the change signifies an evolution for Office. In the next few years, that could mean fundamental changes for the way we work — including an increased used of artificial intelligence and the company’s Cortana virtual assistant.

A new look for Office

It’s no small task to redesign a series of icons for a suite of apps, especially when more than a billion people use them each day. It took Microsoft’s team of designers a full year from the time they started sketching ideas until the group finally landed on a look they liked.

“There was a lengthy process of research and talking to people once we felt like we had a set that was starting to work,” explained Becky Brown, principal designer for the project.

“Then we would go talk to users and come back and refine that set, and then talk to users again. So it was quite a long process just to make sure we were making something that was going to be able to scale in the future, and going to be able to be applied to all different kinds of displays and in all different kinds of ways.”

Microsoft tends to update the look of its Office icons every three to five years. And since the company last changed its design way back in 2013, it was time for something new. The visual enhancements, which have a flatter look similar to Windows 10’s Fluent design, aim to draw attention to the changes Microsoft has made to the suite since it announced a redesign of some of Office’s most important elements such as the control bar or “ribbon” of tools at the top of the screen back in June.

The evolution of Microsoft’s Office icons throughout the years.
The evolution of Microsoft’s Office icons throughout the years.

“We want people to notice and to be able to have access to the changes and to learn about them so they can take advantage of all of the things we are doing,” Brown explained. “So an app icon change is a really big signal that there are new things happening in the app.”

But as with any kind of software change, there are sure to be detractors.

“We’re fully expecting to get a broad range of feedback,” Microsoft Office’s design head, Jon Friedman, told Yahoo Finance. “You know, there are people who love change and there are people who don’t want change at all, and change like this is very polarizing. So we expect to get positive and negative feedback. What matters is we listen closely, and we listen over time.”