Friday, August 19, 2005

Designing From the User’s Experience

In Design Management Institute's August eBulletin:

Designing from the User's Experience

Analyzing customer needs and market trends are essential competencies for managing complex design projects. However, after confirming user needs through market research, design teams often focus on the product, neglecting users until completing the product, or at best, usability testing. From consumer goods to websites, many design-driven projects limit front-end analysis to market research, focus groups, or concept demonstrations. While these approaches are necessary, they overlook the opportunity for designing from understanding the user’s authentic experience.
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Closing with:

While user experience interpretations may not guide every product decision, they lead to deeper recognition of a product’s meaning to people, and show the drivers behind observed behavior and trends. In managing design research, we want valid user feedback to evaluate products. UX is highly pragmatic, and design managers may appreciate the actionable results from a UX research and design approach.

In summary, several guidelines are suggested from these points:

It takes time to introduce new approaches and absorb new methods and design languages such as those developed from UX. Learn what elicits the best results from your user constituency, Allow your teams time to integrate user experience approaches into processes and projects. A repeatable UX process specifically designed for your business needs becomes a powerful competitive advantage.


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