While working on my latest UX Research and Design project Heed, a web responsive digital wallet and payment system application, after designing wireframes and setting up a prototype, as usual I had to come up with a plan to test its features and flows on real users.
As it happens when reaching this stage of design (or re-design) of a product, you need to put back the UX Researcher’s clothes on and find the best strategy to get the most out of your upcoming usability testing, namely issues you and the product team will need to address and solve in…
From identifying problems and possible solutions to defining market opportunities and how to structure your overall strategy, competitive analysis is one of the first tools user experience researchers need to master. It is widely suggested to perform competitive analysis after having defined a rough problem statement, in order to identify more clearly things like problem space and ideal competitors. There are pretty extensive guides online focusing on how to write an effective problem statement and why it’s important for your design process. If you’re unfamiliar with the topic, this blog article offers comprehensive explanation and guidelines:
User experience research implies an interdisciplinary synergy between psychological and neuroscientific competences and mathematical and statistical mindsets. This holistic approach represents the ideal toolkit that every UX researcher should have and master in order not to fall into unconscious biases as much as he or she can. In other words, interdisciplinarity is a prerequisite to save researchers from themselves.
I like to picture user experience research as a swing that is only pushed once when the research starts, and it never stops oscillating during the entire product…
In the following post I’m showing you the results of a mixed methods research that allowed me to collect and analyse both quantitative and qualitative data for a hypothetical new feature to integrate in the app Ada Health. This experiment is part of my professional journey to develop product and UX research competences, focusing in particular on companies that strive to make an impact on people’s lives through technology and innovation. I chose Ada Health because it is a company whose vision and mission I particularly resonate with.
“Ada Health provides a personal health companion app that uses AI and…
In the era of performance-based advertising, the biggest concern when it comes to start a brand campaign, as well as the branding or re-branding of a company, is how to measure their success. The reason behind this concern is to be traced in the seemingly intangible nature of brands. The consequence — understandably — is that no one is willing to invest time and money in an effort that won’t show clear results in terms of Return on Investment (ROI).
That said, there are dozens of ways to plan and execute a brand campaign for different channels and through the…
In 2013, the German duo behind the name CHUNDERKSEN — film-makers and communication designers based in Hamburg and Essen — launched an interesting project called Conserve the Sound: an online collection of “vanishing and endangered sounds” from the 20th Century.
Aiming to preserve every possible clicking noise and imperceptible rustle from 1910s postal scales, going through typewriters, hand-held cameras, electric shavers, and so on—name it and I’m sure you’ll find it there — Conserve the Sound is for all intents and purposes a museum.
Browsing this wunderkammer of pictures and sounds, my sensory memory got easily triggered and I couldn’t…
It was the late Seventies, when the word resilience started making its first steps in the psychological debate to understand and explain people’s adaptation abilities and processes to cope with adversities.
Over the decades, the concept of resilience became popular in other fields, such as ecology — especially when it comes to Anthropocene and climate change — and it managed to carve out a special place for itself in the technology debate, thus becoming of interest for business development.
Everyone — probably right now, in your workplace too — is talking about building resilience, and organisations started investing more and…
In the previous post, I mentioned the idea of how shifting the attention from transactions to relationships would help marketing teams in delivering value both to the customers and the company. I’m sure it is nothing new for many of you, but I understand that others may find this transition pointless, complicated, and ultimately discouraging. That’s why I suggested to start small by making the hierarchy of roles and responsibilities in Marketing more flat and open, and by replacing a certain waterfall approach with a more collaborative flow of work, the planning of which could involve the entire team.
Changing…
There’s no point in denying it any longer. The way Marketing has been intended and designed so far is flawed, and the cause can be traced, for the most part, to one fundamental problem: transaction anxiety.
It all started with an honest mistake.
Since increasing transactions, aka making money, is every companies’ goal, marketing departments have begun to think that this objective should be theirs as well. But are things really like that? Let’s go back to basics.
Recently, while loitering around LinkedIn in search for new job opportunities — things you do on an ordinary Tuesday night — I came across a post written by the Founder and CEO of a well-known company who shall remain nameless.
The topic of it revolved around the importance of unplugging from technology, in order to foster the relationship with the inner self. When I stumble on to it, the post had received 3,657 likes and hundreds of comments in agreement — which, for a social media platform like LinkedIn is a big deal.
In no more than 100 words, it…
UX and Marketing. If you can’t find me here, I’m probably somewhere out there hiking, or at the bookstore.