O slideshow foi denunciado.
Seu SlideShare está sendo baixado. ×

Evangelizing User Experience Design

Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio

Confira estes a seguir

1 de 43 Anúncio

Evangelizing User Experience Design

Baixar para ler offline

Whether you are an indie practitioner, agency design lead or internal designer at a large company, you have no doubt experienced difficulites selling UX activities or Experience Design as a whole to clients, partners or bosses. Beyond touting the wonderful and magical ROI UX brings to the table, there are concrete strategies you can use to get your point accross and they aren't what you think. Learn how to identify and overcome common barriers to achieving a unified approach to user centered design.

Whether you are an indie practitioner, agency design lead or internal designer at a large company, you have no doubt experienced difficulites selling UX activities or Experience Design as a whole to clients, partners or bosses. Beyond touting the wonderful and magical ROI UX brings to the table, there are concrete strategies you can use to get your point accross and they aren't what you think. Learn how to identify and overcome common barriers to achieving a unified approach to user centered design.

Anúncio
Anúncio

Mais Conteúdo rRelacionado

Diapositivos para si (20)

Quem viu também gostou (20)

Anúncio

Semelhante a Evangelizing User Experience Design (20)

Mais de Dustin DiTommaso (8)

Anúncio

Mais recentes (20)

Evangelizing User Experience Design

  1. 1. Evangelizing User Experience Design UX Dustin DiTommaso Dustin@BostonDesignCouncil.com
  2. 2. “Good Design is Good Business. ” - Thomas Watson, IBM 1950 (around)
  3. 3. “The Customer Experience is the Next Competitive Battleground. ” -  erry Gregoire, Dell J
  4. 4. “The Customer Experience is the Next Competitive Battleground. ” -  erry Gregoire, Dell J 1999
  5. 5. What the F UX?
  6. 6. Why are we still defending Experience Design?
  7. 7. What is User Experience Design?
  8. 8. A DEFINITION: User Experience is the Perceived Sum of All interactions, both positive and negative, that a customer / user has with a product or service (brand).
  9. 9. UX Happens with or without User Experience Design.
  10. 10. UX Happens with or without User Experience Design. To ensure a (mostly) positive outcome, the experience must be crafted strategically and with intent.
  11. 11. Who is Responsible for the User Experience?
  12. 12. EVERYONE User Experience Architect / Interaction Designer / Developer / Visual Designer / Program Manager / CEO / Usability Analyst / Information Architect / Technical Support / Copywriter / Animator / Web Producer / Human Factors Engineer / User Experience Specialist / Customer Support Personnel / Design Research / Cognitive Psychologist / User Centered Designer / Executive Management / Help Desk / Marketing / Chief Internet Officer / UX Designer / Director of Technology / Regional Manager / Interface Usability Specialist / Chief Creative Officer / User Experience Planner / Digital Art Director / Interaction Specialist / Web Designer / UI Designer / Interactive Services / Human Factors Analyst / Interactive Developer / HCI Engineer / Marketing Manager / UCD Engineer / HR Manager / Usability Researcher / VP Marketing / Accessibility Professional / Marketing Director / Web UI Designer / Digital Producer / HCI Analyst / Director of Account Services / Usability Engineer / Interactive Producer / User Experience Researcher / Project Manager / GUI Designer / Director of Account Services / User Experience Strategist / Product Innovation Specialist / Interactive Marketer / CXO / Information Designer / Creative Director / Software Engineer / Business Analyst / Testing Coordinator / UX Practitioner/
  13. 13. Titles Donʼt Matter
  14. 14. Titles Donʼt Matter The UX Vision must be shared across the Entire Organization.
  15. 15. What if weʼre not there?
  16. 16. Strategies to Elevate and Integrate User Experience Design within your Organization
  17. 17. Strategies to Elevate and Integrate User Experience Design within your Organization (& your clientsʼ)
  18. 18. 01 Know Your Culture Culture Matters …
  19. 19. “ … Until I came to IBM, I probably would have told you that culture was just one among several important elements in any organizationʼs makeup and success, along with vision, strategy, financials,… I came to see that culture isnʼt just one aspect of the game – it is the game. ” -  ou Gerstner in “Who says Elephants Can’t Dance?” L (2oo2, p. 182)
  20. 20. ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE DEFINED: + System of shared meaning held by 
 members + The way they do things -  ow they make decisions & who makes them H -  ow and with whom they interact H -  hat they measure, reward and punish W -  here they allocate resources W -  ow they work; their pace, standards, etc. H
  21. 21. LEVELS OF CULTURE Observables -  hat is seen, heard, done, etc… W Values, Assumptions, Beliefs -  hat we believe is important and true W -  hat we take for granted W
  22. 22. VALUES / ASSUMPTIONS / BELIEFS Espoused Values / Beliefs -  alues / Beliefs that the organization claims to follow V -  ontained in Annual Reports, Landing Pages, etc. C Enacted Values / Beliefs (Values in Use) -  he Values/Beliefs that can be inferred from behavior T i.e., the values that explain the organizationʼs actions + ESPOUSED VALUES ARE EXPLICIT (STATED) + ENACTED VALUES ARE IMPLICIT (INTERPRETED)
  23. 23. CULTURES VARY “ At GM, if you see a snake, the first thing you do is hire a consultant on snakes. Then you get a committee on snakes, and discuss it for a couple years… At EDS, the first guy who sees the snake kills it. R ” -  oss Perot on how the culture of General Motors differed from EDS, which he founded.
  24. 24. SOME DIFFERENCES IN VALUES / BELIEFS -  ur success depends on the customer OR customers are to be tolerated. O -  mployees deserve respect OR employees are disposable. E -  ll employees can make major contributions OR ideas come from the top. A -  esults matter most OR the process matters most. R -  est work comes from individuals OR from teams. B - t is better to take risks and have some fail OR always play it safe. I -  o stay alive, we need to keep changing OR maintain the status quo. T -  nly excellence is OK OR OK is OK O -  etʼs do today what could be done tomorrow OR letʼs do tomorrow what L could be done today.
  25. 25. CULTURE: SUMMARY + It Matters + It Controls + It Varies + Itʼs Stable + Itʼs the Enacted Beliefs and Values
  26. 26. 02 Create a Unified UX Vision & Take Over the World …
  27. 27. There are many methodologies for User Experience Design yet they all have one thing in common… Usersʼ interests are at the center of all Activities.
  28. 28. PIANO, PIANO + Change is Slow -  rganizations are slow to change and O methodologies are slow to get adopted / implemented. + Start Slow -  ry to fit your methodology in and around T existing methods. -  onʼt be afraid to scale down your approach at D first. UCD is not “One size fits All.”
  29. 29. ENLIGHTEN WITHOUT LOSING YOUR FRIENDS 01 Know your sh!t craft and be credible. Continually improve. Read books / blogs. Join professional groups, Go to conferences, etc. 02 Make your (already) read books available for colleagues to skim or borrow. Print out valuable articles & white papers as well. 03 Make your work visible (pen / pencil sketches, whiteboards) 04 Make allies at any level in any department. Champion UX together. 05 Educate and Explain. Donʼt dictate. 06 When giving feedback complement things done well, in addition to making suggestions for improvement. …
  30. 30. ENLIGHTEN WITHOUT LOSING YOUR FRIENDS 07 Set-up monthly multidisciplinary workshops (UX, proj. mgmt., communication) Invite all departments to host. 08 Get everyone involved in testing, brainstorming, evaluating (IDEO) 09 Strive to get involved in projects as soon as possible. 10 Pick projects you can have the most impact on (if possible). 11 Just do it! Fix UX problems (at least on paper). Offer up the the “discovery” as a “looking for feedback” request. 12 Seize Every Opportunity AND Know when to Quit.
  31. 31. Focus on the User and All Else Will Follow.
  32. 32. Focus on the User and All Else Will Follow. If this is true, then whatʼs the Problem?
  33. 33. 03 Barriers to a Unified UX Vision & How to Break them Down …
  34. 34. COMMON BARRIERS & RESISTANCE 01 No Support with Top Level Management 02 Developers See UX as an obstacle that eats into development time 03 Visual Designers see it as a creative restraint (& eat into “design time”) 04 Marketing feels threatened by research overlap 05 No understanding of what User Experience Design is & why it matters
  35. 35. SHOWING VALUE TO SENIOR MANAGEMENT - mprove In-House Tools & Processes. I +intranets, budget tools, forms, daily workflows, tasks, etc. = increase worker productivity & satisfaction -  ngage executive level in UX activities. Ask for opinions.
 E (even if you throw them away). -  nderstand companiesʼ strategic logic and link UX activities to U Business Objectives
  36. 36. However, trying to focus on $ alone is a risky endeavor.
  37. 37. SHOWING VALUE TO SENIOR MANAGEMENT - Instead, show how UX fits into the overall Corporate value chain -  isk Management: Avoids costly errors R - mprove Stock Value: Better products lead to greater market I share -  educed support, training and maintenance costs. R -  X contributes to longer product shelf life U -  eeting user goals helps differentiate product M -  X reduces testing and quality assurance costs U
  38. 38. SHOWING VALUE TO DEVELOPMENT TEAM -  elp to Define Interaction Frameworks and Patterns H + Allows for Reuse of Code + Shorter Development Cycle -  X activities and web analytic data can work together U to tell the whole story (WA = “what” // UX = “why”) -Increased product quality reduces maintenance and post launch bug fix work
  39. 39. SHOWING VALUE TO DESIGN TEAM -  X Research allows for Informed Decisions & Less Revisions U + It Rhymes!
  40. 40. SHOWING VALUE TO MARKETING TEAM -  hare your Research Work S + Deliverables like Personas & Use Cases can be shared and refined to benefit both marketing and UX practitioners. -  arketing and UX can work together to develop a firmʼs Product M Offer so that the *Net Delivered Customer Value is maximized for the firmʼs targeted market segments. *Net Delivered Customer Value (NDCV) = Perceived Benefits – Perceived Costs = (Value of Product Use + Service + Image + Personal Interaction) - (Financial + Time + Energy + Psychic COSTS)
  41. 41. WRAP UP 01 Understand Company Business Concept and Culture 02 Develop an Experience Strategy to support it 03 Collaborate with all departments in your organization 04 Share knowledge & resources as a means to communicate the UX vision 05 Deliver amazing user experiences to your customers
  42. 42. // fin Dustin DiTommaso Interaction Design | Design Management Dustin@BostonDesignCouncil.com Twitter: @DU5TB1N

×