Certain strategies and structures can help create the perfect vision and execute a solid UX scheme. In this article we will talk about some of the strategies and templates that help consolidate a good UX strategy and how to best use them to your advantage.
Vital role of user research in getting your product to MVP
User research is helpful as it proves or disproves our assumptions that we hold and helps us to recognize their needs, goals, and mental models. In this article we will cover different types of user research and user research methodologies.
5 more usability lessons from user quotes
Usability testing almost always uncovers some problems you knew about, and some problems you didn’t. The more you test, the better your instincts become for predicting how users behave and what they will understand or be confused by.
3 user testing examples from desktop and mobile
Watching just a few user testing example videos is proof to anyone that design isn’t about making things pretty – it’s about making things work for users and for the business.
8 usability lessons from our favorite user quotes
Usability testing isn’t just a useful research exercise – it can be entertaining, funny, engrossing, satisfying, and more. Read one user’s epic takedown of the Yelp home page, and the user that really took the test scenario to heart.
New horizons: Bringing UX to the survey design field
Surveys are everywhere. Millions go out every day, to people responding as customers, employees, citizens, members, attendees, and every other capacity. Seismic decisions rest on survey data; million-dollar sums hang in the balance. So much effort is put towards driving up response rates, and yet so little attention is paid to getting higher-quality data.
What are the obstacles to improving the quality of survey data? And how can UX help to solve these problems?
Qualitative, Quantitative: Going deeper and wider with UX research
What’s the relationship between qualitative and quantitative in UX research?
Recall is dead: Are you peeking into your customers’ heads?
Relying on what people remember after the fact when doing UX research can generate inaccurate and misleading data. How can we know what people are thinking in the moment?