User experience design lessons
Everyone needs user experience design lessons. Until a few years design was the big player when it came to being able to seek a product, especially online. Nowadays, beautiful design is a given and the most of the attention shifted to user experience design. The following is not a full guide about user experience design but rather some crucial, simple and actionable user experience design lessons that will give you a primer on the subject. To make things easier to dig deeper, they are based on Steve Kruger's bestseller "Don't Make Me Think".
User experience design lessons
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Usability Means…
Usability means making sure something works well, and that a person of average ability or experience can use it for its intended purpose without getting hopelessly frustrated. -
Web applications should explain themselves.
As far as humanly possible, when I look at a web page it should be self-evident. Obvious. Self-explanatory. -
Don't Make Me Think
As a rule, people don't like to puzzle over how to do things. If people who build a site don't care enough to make things obvious it can erode confidence in the site and its publishers. -
Don't waste my time
Much of our web use is motivated by the desire to save time. As a result, web users tend to act like sharks. They have to keep moving or they'll die. -
Users still cling to their back buttons
There's not much of a penalty for guessing wrong. Unlike firefighting, the penalty for guessing wrong on a website is just a click or two of the back button. The back button is the most-used feature of web browsers. -
We're creatures of habit
If we find something that works, we stick to it. Once we find something that works — no matter how badly — we tend not to look for a better way. We'll use a better way if we stumble across one, but we seldom look for one. -
No Time for Small Talk
Happy talk is like small talk – content free, basically just a way to be sociable. But most Web users don't have time for small talk; they want to get right to the beef. You can – and should – eliminate as much happy talk as possible. -
Don't lose search
Some people (search-dominant users), will almost always look for a search box as they enter a site. These may be the same people who look for the nearest clerk as soon as they enter a store. -
We form mental site-maps
When we return to something on a Web site, instead of replying on a physical sense of where it is, we have to remember where it is in the conceptual hierarchy and retrace our steps. -
Make it easy to go home
Having a home button in sight at all times offers reassurance that no matter how lost I may get, I can always start over, like pressing a Reset button or using a “Get out of Jail free” card.
Published: Fri, Jan 17 2014 @ 10:36:28
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