Difference between revisions of "Category:User Research"

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* [https://uxdesign.cc/essential-ingredients-for-every-competitive-analysis-ce08906a4079 Essential Ingredients for Every Competitive Analysis] by [[Chandan Mishra]] on [[UX Collective]]
* [https://uxdesign.cc/essential-ingredients-for-every-competitive-analysis-ce08906a4079 Essential Ingredients for Every Competitive Analysis] by [[Chandan Mishra]] on [[UX Collective]]
* [https://uxplanet.org/top-things-to-know-about-ux-competitive-analysis-d91689fd8b36 Top Things to Know About UX Competitive Analysis] by [[Kim Purcell]] on [[UX Planet]]
* [https://uxplanet.org/top-things-to-know-about-ux-competitive-analysis-d91689fd8b36 Top Things to Know About UX Competitive Analysis] by [[Kim Purcell]] on [[UX Planet]]
* [https://www.webdesignmuseum.org Web Design Museum] shows screenshots of sites from the 1990s through mid-2000s so that you can go back and see what things were like in the early web. Useful for explaining "no really we've always done it this way" -- or finding out you were wrong about that...
==Contextual Inquiry==
==Contextual Inquiry==
* [https://methods.18f.gov/discover/contextual-inquiry/ Contextual Inquiry] by [[18F]]
* [https://methods.18f.gov/discover/contextual-inquiry/ Contextual Inquiry] by [[18F]]

Latest revision as of 10:10, 25 August 2024

Card Sorts

Competitive Analysis

Contextual Inquiry

Empathy Mapping

Interviewing

Journey Maps

Legal things to keep in mind

General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and User Research by Steph Troeth and Erica Kucharczyk for Design Research Matters.

Personas

User Personas

User personas are a way to describe the users of a system. Personas and the role of design documentation by Andrew Hinton goes into detail about the intent of personas as a method and deliverable, and some of the pitfalls that can result when we treat the persona documentation as more important than the persona creation.

Design Personas

Design Personas are similar to User Personas in that they describe attitudes, beliefs, and personality. They're different because the persona being described is not a person, but rather the product being designed. In Designing for Emotion Aaron Walter describes the following fields for Design Personas:

  • Brand name - the company or service
  • Overview - what makes it unique?
  • Personality Image - an image of a person who embodies the traits you wish to include in your grand
  • Brand Traits - 5-7 traits you want your product to have, and at least one you want to avoid
  • Personality Map - a map on an X/Y axis of your brand - friendly to unfriendly, and submissive to dominant
  • Voice - if your brand could talk, what would it say? how would it speak?
  • Copy Examples - pretty much what it says on the tin
  • Visual Lexicon - overview of the colors, typography, and visual style that conveys your brand's personality
  • Engagement Methods - the emotional engagement methods used to support the design persona and create a memorable experience

Additional Resources

Surveys

Usability Testing

User Scenarios

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