Posts Tagged ‘design process’

Recent reads

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Short notes on articles I’ve read recently:

Audience Segmentation Models by Steve Baty

Outlines methods (other than personas) such as market segmentation, mental models, and capability levels, to segment audiences for understanding user requirements and defining the user experience. “The use of a variety of different audience segmentation models can inform the design of products and services in different ways.”

One particularly interesting off-shoot is an Experience Lifecycle diagram for when Lego’s senior execs travel.

Designing Tables 101 by Mike Hughes

When to use tables and how to present data. There are suggestions for what information should be in columns and rows based on readability. Unfortunately no general insights about accessibility*, but these suggestions can be applied not only to reading tabular data on web pages, but also when writing documents for clients, etc.

* it wouldn’t have been appropriate for the aims of the article, I’m just personally interested in exploring that topic more.

Testing Your Own Designs: Bad Idea? by Paul J. Sherman

Tries to answer the questions: “Is it possible to do both design and usability testing effectively? If so, how can we test our own designs well?” Includes thoughts from others on the topic that focus on the idea of avoiding bias, or being aware of it. If you have to test your own designs, focus on the negatives (things that don’t work) and remember the requirements you’re aiming to fulfill.

A shorthand for designing UI flows by Ryan Singer

Demonstrates a simple approach to sketching a user path for completing goals by jotting down what they see and what they do at each step. The idea is summed up well by his response in the comments: “Sketching a flow isn’t about meticulously documenting everything that’s possible on a given screen. It’s about taking a single goal and asking how does the user get started, what happens when they execute the action, what are the main forks in the road, and what happens when they are finished. If you scope the flow by a specific goal instead of by screens, then there should be fewer complexities.”

Integrating Prototyping Into Your Design Process by Fred Beecher

Explains how combinations of low/high visual/functional fidelity in prototypes can achieve particular goals. Consideration is given from sketches through to “production ready” prototypes. The article also provides tips on how to encourage the use of prototyping to different types of project stakeholders. At the heart of it all, “‘Appropriate fidelity’ refers to a level of prototype fidelity that allows you to achieve the goals you’ve set for doing a prototype in the first place.”

Multi-lingual user experience design process

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

I’ve just read the article Creating a great user experience for the whole world by Tammy Gur (which I found via the UX Australia Conference blog) and took a few notes:

This article provides an overview of focus areas of the design process that were used during the BBC World Service’s recent re-designs of the BBC Persian and BBC Brasil web sites. The design process also considered the upcoming 2009 re-launches for their other sites across 33 languages. The key considerations were:

  • The script - understanding the user requirements and expectations in the presentation of text in their language such as flow, spacing, and size.
  • Editorial design - understanding the user expectations on content layout and construction while providing flexibility to handle the variety of content.
  • Navigation - ensuring that the navigation mechanism is ordered and easy to use for the language content.
  • Interaction design - user, survey, statistical and competitor research to understand the target markets acceptance of certain interaction methods.

The solution involved finding common elements and creating a “repository of building blocks” allowing them to be arranged in specific ways for each language service.

An interesting part of the article for me is the “Competitor analysis” diagram that displays a way of breaking down content from competitor sites in to the most simple blocks for comparison, learning and decision making.