Some bookmarks added by Alex Horstmann on February 1st
I bookmark a lot of pages and sites which I find interesting, inspirational and informative every day! I’d like to share some of them with you here. In general they are about user experience, usability, UCD, accessbility and design. In general, but not always!!
- LukeW | User Experience Diagrams
- Card Games for Information Architects
This article reviews 6 simple but powerful research techniques you can use to improve the information architecture of your product or web site. None of these activities require a computer. You simply need a bunch of cards, a participant and a desk. - 10 ways you can use photos to influence the user experience | cxpartners
As a photographer I understand how to take photos that will result in a certain reaction from the viewer. We have all seen photos that have influenced our thoughts, our feelings and ultimately our own behaviour.The classic image placeholder
So why as UX designers do we ignore photos when they can be so powerful? The classic wireframes image placeholder represents nothing but a missed opportunity.
In this article I will identify just how important choosing the right photographs can be, as well as proposing a new method for denoting photos in our wireframes.
- Better User Experience With Storytelling
Stories have defined our world. They have been with us since the dawn of communication, from cave walls to the tall tales recounted around fires. They have continued to evolve with their purpose remaining the same; To entertain, to share common experiences, to teach, and to pass on traditions. - Forum Nokia – User Experience Programme
- Bringing User Centered Design to the Agile Environment
In of itself, Agile does a good job of flexing to the winds of change. But one has to ask whether it was devised to treat a symptom of the larger cause: the business doesn’t know what it wants. While Agile enables the development team to better cope with this, it doesn’t solve the problem and in most cases creates new problems. - A/B Test Case Study: Single Page vs. Multi-Step Checkoutc
o when we started re-working the Official Vancouver 2010 Olympic Store, we challenged ourselves to take it to the next level — and we cut the checkout process down to just single page.Structurally, the new single-page checkout looks very much like the two-page checkout, with shipping information first, followed by billing and confirmation.
With A/B split testing, 50% of traffic was redirected to the original checkout, while the other 50% was served the new single-page checkout. After only 300 transactions, the winner was clear and we stopped the experiment after 606 transactions. Google Website Optimizer concluded that the single-page checkout outperformed the out-of-the-box checkout by a whopping 21.8%. But what does that 21.8% really mean?
Please do feel free to suggest other related (and unrelated ones)!
Tags: Agile, Design, eCommerce, IA, interactionDesign, links, photo, Process, processtools, testing, UCD, Usability, ux
This entry was posted on Monday, February 1st, 2010 at 14:01 and is filed under links, social. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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