Have you ever received feedback on new website mockups or prototypes starting with “Which language is that? I don’t understand “lorem ipsum!!”?
Well, yes? Then you’ve been there. And it isn’t really a great feeling. Not because of the question itself.
In this post we are going to show you 5 tips on how to prevent yourself from receiving such feedback and how to make your website mockups even better.
4. BEFORE WE GET STARTED…
You can find all resources here!
5. 5 TIPS TO IMPROVE YOUR
HERE ARE
MOCK UPS & PROTOTYPES
6. 1. Understand Prototype Fidelity
Use time wisely as your transition from sketch
to low-fi, to hi-fi prototypes.
7. Starting too early or too late with high fidelity mockups will
waste resources (both time and material) and you’ll risk to
end up with a mediocre prototype.
9. When you receive a
change request
always ask ‘why’.
For example: “Can
you tell me what the
challenge is that
you’re trying to solve
with this?”.
ALWAYS
ASK
WHY?
10. 3. Use realistic assets
Images and copy probably
won’t be on your priority
list while working on a
new mockup. Though they
should be. Really.
The right asset in your
mockup can not only ruin
your whole wireframe, but
it can also bring it to the
next design level, the high
fidelity design.
11. 4. Fail fast and fix things faster
When concluding on the first sketches and wireframes you
can iterate more quickly by little baby steps and a close
feedback process.
Keep your prototyping
workflow transparent &
provide updates to
your team.
Communicate clearly
and address issues
right when they
happen.
Make sure to involve
every project
stakeholder.
12. 5. Use different tools for different prototyping
stages
Switching tools for different tasks during prototyping can
increase creativity. This is our recommended set up:
• Sketches: using real paper and whiteboards for collecting first ideas. Evernote
can be a great assistant for collecting those ideas.
• Wireframes and mockups: While working on Wireframes and mockups,
balsamiq or moqups comes in super handy.
• Prototypes: bringing your mockups to real life, tools like InVision, Usersnap or
CodePen help you to collaborate on your drafts and prototypes while making
sure that no feedback and idea is left behind.
13.
14. OVER TO
YOU
Your colleagues or clients know a lot about their
audience and strategic goals.
So let’s create a win-win situation for both parties.
And let them guide when time’s appropriate and
guide them how to make the most of the
prototyping phase.