UX is everywhere that's why the UX process is more Important!
Without a solid UX design process, you have a lower chance of creating a product with good UX. A well-defined and well-executed UX process, on the other hand, makes it possible to craft amazing experiences for users.
2. UX is everywhere that's why the UX process is
more Important!
Without a solid UX design process, you have a lower chance of
creating a product with good UX. A well-defined and well-
executed UX process, on the other hand, makes it possible to
craft amazing experiences for users.
3. Lean UX Process - My Favorite
Lean UX focuses on outcomes rather than deliverables. It positions UX designers as highly collaborative members of
the product or service team, aiming to test their assumptions and hypotheses through the delivery of guerrilla-style
user testing and experiments on minimum viable products (MVP) concepts.
4. Agile UX Process
Agile UX tries to integrate UX practice with Agile software development teams. Since agile was conceived as an engineering practice, it
did not originally integrate UX and design. There is much debate in the UX community about how compatible the practices are. Agile
UX aims to bring an iterative approach to the design and improvement of features that are being built through team collaboration and
the stewardship of customer feedback.
5. “User Experience
Design (UXD or UED)
is the process of
enhancing user
satisfaction with a
product by improving
the usability,
accessibility, and
pleasure provided in
the interaction with the
product.” — Wikipedia
6. Research - Meet the user & Define
Stakeholders
● Design Team
● Business Manager
● Product Manager
INTERVIEW + OBSERVATION = Qualitative - Talk to real users or potential users, clarify your
assumption and understand them more.
SURVEY- The survey may be useful if we need more quantitative research and large amount of
users, or have to the interview remotely.
7. Empathy Mapping - “To be a great designer, you need to look a little
deeper into how people think and act.” — Paul Boag
8. UX Competitive Analysis *(Important)
“(i) Understand market competition
(ii) Learn about your domain
(iii) Get inspirations and ideas from your competitors”
Keep an eye on the latest UI trends, design principles and your existing user experience
guidelines.
While doing research, start thinking about possible layouts and options to provide the desired
9. Examples of UX analysis
Outcomes - A bunch of ideas and material on which you can build your actual design work
10. Example of UX analysis By Prince Pal Singh
- Teledentix - A Telemedicine Product Research - https://get.teledentix.com/
- https://www.dropbox.com/s/npv07mqmf187sin/Telemedicine-Research-USA-
Market.pdf?dl=0
- Mortgage Industry Research - https://www.dropbox.com/s/4wjzpnnr3xkcppd/mortgage-
research-USA-Market.pdf?dl=0
- YouBotics Moodboard - Schedule, Conduct, Evaluate Technical Interviews With AI
- https://www.dropbox.com/s/th90ejlsjtjti2f/robotics-moodboard.pdf?dl=0
- Sound Signature Mantra App Research - https://princepal.in/projects/sound-based-
meditation-app-branding-and-ui-ux-design
11. Write a Loveable MVP Document on Google Docs
“Design thinking can be described as a discipline that uses the
designer’s sensibility and methods to match people’s needs with
what is technologically feasible and what a viable business strategy
can convert into customer value and market opportunity.”
UX documentation is a crucial part of the UX design process. It serves as a reference, giving context to the product's
lifespan from the initial concept to the current iteration. Good UX documentation is detailed yet lean. It should be highly
focused, actionable, and purposeful.
17. Iconography
Digital icons replace descriptive words and sentences and optimize visual space, usability,
and aesthetic. Learn to create 10 custom icons in less than 10 seconds each (we
promise). https://m3.material.io/styles/icons/overview
18. Typography
In web and mobile UI design, typography is the art of organizing typefaces on the interface
to make all copy readable, legible and scalable to the audience. Visually appealing
typography sometimes even catches the users' attention and increases the interface
conversation rate effectively.
22. Accessibility - For everyone
What are the benefits of accessibility?
It is safe to say that accessibility benefits all members of society including people with disabilities.
Improving accessibility brings about increased quality of life; creates more independence and better
social integration. It also leads to better health and can result in cost saving in a number of areas.
In the world, at least 1 in 5 people have a long term illness, impairment or disability.
In addition, most of us will at some time have a temporary or situational disability:
● broken wrist
● glue ear
● bright sunlight
● working in a quiet place with no headphones handy…
● Color Blindness
23. Usability Testing - At Least on 5 Users
The purpose of usability testing is to ensure the plan for a product’s functions, features and
overall purpose are in line with what users want by observing how real-life people use the
product. Usability testing allows you to learn things about user behavior, needs, and expectations
upfront.
4 Big Advantages of Usability Testing
1. Save Thousands of Hours
2. Save Thousands of Dollars
3. Validate and Adjust Features Based on Hard Data
4. Ensure Your Product Will Succeed Before Going to Market
24. Why is A/B Testing Important in UX?
A/B testing can help you learn how small changes influence user behavior, decide which approach towards design
to implement, and confirms that a new design is going in the right direction. Using A/B testing for different elements
of your digital product will also improve the overall user experience over time, as well as increase your conversion.