Tag Archives: UX

Wireframes and Personas

Image: Gayatri S

Image: Gayatri S

These past few months I have had the opportunity to do freelance work with a few different agencies and have had wildly different experiences. One thing that becomes clear is that, while UX is a buzzword and many clients seem to want it, many agency heads (account executives) don’t really understand what it is. And now the buzzword has changed again: “Lean UX.” This makes it more complicated, because UX itself is so poorly understood that adding a modification complicates communication all the more. I’ll attempt here to clarify a bit.

“You do wireframes, right? Because our clients expect wireframes.”

One of the main obstacles facing many agencies incorporating UX into their process is the idea that design deliverables are the only evidence of billable time. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been on a team of designers who worked hard to making an initial iteration of a comp pixel perfect; it’s the industry standard and clients rightfully expect it, especially with deliverables destined for print. When we apply this expectation to web work it makes less sense (browser and device differences being among the chief factors), and when applied to UX tools such as wireframes it makes none whatsoever. Since UX has popped onto the client radar, the expectation is that wireframes comply to the same exacting strictures as design deliverables.

This somewhat defeats the point of using wireframes at all, since if one is going to wireframe in Illustrator or Fireworks then one may as well be designing instead. Clients see these documents and focus on visual specifics rather than functionality. This also holds true to a lesser degree for personas and taskmaps, other crucial tools for a user experience designer. This is not to say that aesthetics are not a very important part of UX; they are, but they don’t apply to wireframes.

Wireframes function as a point of reference that will allow quick collaboration between the business strategist, the interaction designer, the developer and the graphic designer. they can come in different flavors from napkin sketches to fully interactive simulated sites. The idea is that you can test the way the interaction actually functions.

 

The great thing about using a tool such as Axure is that you can do a pretty good of showing how the site will actually function and be able to demonstrate and test it… all without needing to involve your development team. A wireframe interface  is easily modifiable, too. If something doesn’t work, it is easy to change it.

So what exactly ARE we delivering?

My experience has shown me that user experience design benefits from using a programmer’s mentality of asking first what it is we’re trying to do. As a UX designer, my questions are simple:

1. Who is the user and what are her priorities?
2. What does the user want when she uses this tool, website, or app?
3. What does the business want her to do?
4. What is the best way to address of these needs simultaneously?

 

Where do personas fit into this?

Right at the beginning, because personas are the tool that we use to keep us on track. But what are they?

First, what they’re not:

Personas are not a demographic. They aren’t  a segment or a group, though that’s where they start.  Really, a  persona is a fictional, yet accurate, depiction of an actual user. The goal of a persona is to humanize the target audience so we can better understand their motivations and behaviors and how they will interact with the interface. We need to know who these people are and what they want.

In reality, personas should be the locus of the entire development process because they ensure that we are designing for the user, not themselves. Personas will create alignment on this key point.

That’s all well and good, but how do we know? Often, businesses think they know their customer through and through. Often, they are wrong. They forget the all-important fact that they are not their customer.

Ideally, the process of creating personas typically begins with baseline demographic information that provides known demographic data with quantitative insights to identify core similarities and differences. This will divide the audience into segments.

Then, that information is sifted further by using third-party research tools to start identifying individual characteristics based on demographic and other factors.

Once the differentiating factors between the various individuals are fully identified, we are in the position to form some hypotheses about  our users. We might find that certain of them only interact with the site at night and draw some conclusions from that. These conclusions need to be confirmed of dis-proven by actually talking to real users. This can be done with surveys, emails or face-to-face interviews.

The final validation is achieved by conducting more extensive interviews with subjects who closely match the personas. Such individuals can also be used for user tests on existing interfaces for the purposes of auditing websites and competitor analysis as it affects the core of the target market.

The end result is typically three to five individual personas that I humanize. Each persona contains a name and picture along with an extensive background (including city, job title & salary, marital status, age, race, family, etc.), prime motivators, expectations, buying patterns, technology patterns, pain points, favorite brands…in short, a well- rounded look into the specific factors that may come into play when the user engages the product.

Realistically, this can’t always happen. In fact, I’d go so far as to say that only a tiny portion of personas are grounded in the kind of research that’s really required. It’s expensive and time-consuming and usually the client doesn’t want to spend for it because they believe that the research is enough.

It’s not, for one key reason:

Research is not a design tool. Personas are, and by using them in every case we ensure that we are not designing for ourselves. 

So what’s usually done are proto-personas.  These start with some quantitative research by marketing firms such as Forrester and are essentially fleshed-out versions of the demographic. In-house subject matter experts and business owners can help confirm hypotheses and help personalize the personas. I have found LinkedIn and my own personal network to be a great use in confirming a hypothesis that is shown in the big-picture research. Quick emails to people I know who match the target can help, as can a phone or face-to-face conversation. Most recently I was working on personas for a pool table manufacturer and talked about the tables with my barber, a pool enthusiast. There are ways to do that don’t involve the sticker shock of full-on process.

And getting 80% of the way there is a lot better than having nothing, or worse: a bunch of wholly fabricated stuff.

 

 

Whither WordPress?

I have been using websites as diaries for a very long time… far longer, in fact, than has been practical. I used to hand-code my journal entries in html and then upload them onto the uberhaus.com site almost every night. It was a laborious process, but I got a lot of satisfaction from it. Bear in mind that this was in 1997, the real “olden days” when we thought the world was going to change and everything would be free and open and computer monitors looked more like console TVs than what we have today. (Grapnel’s Bryan White actually was far ahead of the curve, coding a pioneer blogging CMS 1n 1998 for his site Disturbance–but that’s another story).

1997 was the year in which Evan Williams coined the term “blog” and came out with his content management system, Blogger. Anyone could post an online journal, and no coding was required. No HTML. No FTP. It was free, too, so suddenly, everybody with an opinion was willing (if not able) to write their every thought and feeling that would (hopefully) be read by countless millions. Or at least a few dozen, for Blogger had a very loyal community in its early days, and the golden rule was pretty universal. Blog unto others and they will blog unto you. Most of the early bogs were pretty forgettable, and the writers abandoned them after a while. The graveyard of dead websites is well-populated with orphaned blogs.

Still, the standouts developed huge followings, and what we now know as social media was born. Movable Type and TypePad followed in Blogger’s stead, and a real industry began taking off. Blogs became a legitimate (if not accurate) news source, and the advent of the more immediate platforms of Facebook, Twitter and their ilk only spread the influence.

So where did WordPress come in?

One of the more successful early entries was B2, an open source content management system that utilized PHP and mySQL in a slick combination that allowed users to customize the look and feel of their sites without sacrificing functionality. However, you had to know what you were doing, so much of the non-technical bloggers were stuck with limited customization.

Then, in 2003, a “fork” of B2/Cafelog was released by a couple of guys named Matt Mullenweg and Mike Little. They called it WordPress. WordPress was different because it included not only a user-friendly content management system but also a plug-in architecture and template system. Now non-technical users could not only choose how their site looked; they could decide how it WORKED.

And that’s not all. Remember, WordPress was (and is) open source. That means anyone could develop for it. Designers. Programmers. Marketers. Yep. I said marketers.

You see, WordPress is much more than a blogging system. It is a rethinking of the way in which websites are constructed. It is truly modular, allowing specific selection of elements based on whatever criteria you set up. Mobile site? Done. SEO heavy? No problem. Landing pages? Yes indeed.

You see, WordPress doesn’t just separate the content of a website from the presentation (a standard website best practice for many years). WordPress is completely modular: every element of the site can be separately controlled and modified without affecting the site as a whole. You can have one set of content with multiple creators and editors that is automatically delivered to users in the format they need at the moment, be it an iPad or a 72″ flat screen monitor. It can be used for commerce, for presentation, for data display, as a gallery, as a projector… pretty much anything you can think of.

And because it’s open source, there are literally hundreds of new plug-ins every week, not to mention a huge array of themes and designs. Many are free, but some of the more advanced components can get expensive (but still a fraction of the cost of custom development). Bryan and I have been involved in all kinds of installation of WordPress from huge multi-pronged sites to simple blog/portfolios.

If you’re interested in weighing the pros and cons of a WordPress installation, feel free to drop us a line. We’re happy to answer any of your questions.

Synergy with Analytics and Marketing

As I have said in an earlier post, analytics should be a powerful component of your overall marketing strategy from the start. Properly used, they can show you how your customers are reacting to your efforts to attract them. This is great information for a whole host of reasons, not the least of which is to know when you’re barking up the wrong tree.

Nothing feels quite as bad as having to justify a loss incurred by an unsuccessful campaign, particularly if you had tools at your disposal that could have warned you of its ineffectiveness before you were completely committed.

Analytics, therefore, should be factored into online and offline marketing efforts from the very start. To properly set up analytics, though, you need to know the places where they can be of most use. Initially, there are three main areas where they can help:

1.      Keywords

For the uninitiated, keywords are the search words with which users find your site. The right keywords will drive the right traffic to your site  ultimately help both your customers and you by giving site visitors what they want and need.

Analytics provide you with insight into which keywords are effective and which keywords are not. A word or phrase that you believe accurately describes your product may not be  the one used by your customers.  Searches can also be affected by context in which the keyword is used. This is especially true now that Google has implemented Penguin, an artificial intelligence-based system that goes a long way toward assessing websites’ value in the same way as real life customers. (I will address Penguin and its impact for SEO in a later column.)

So which keywords are the best for your site? You can use analytics to easily determine this by checking

  1. Which keywords drive traffic to your site
  2. Which keywords drive conversions
  3. Which keywords drive traffic but no conversions

Determining the difference between numbers one and three will give you the answers you need and will  help you adjust your course.  Check the following:

  1. Does the keyword describe your product?
  2. Is the keyword too broad?
  3. Does your site offer quality content around the keyword?

Keywords can drive traffic but not conversions for a myriad of reasons. For example, say you offer websites and a company doing initial competitive research for a new business searches for “startup business websites”  and comes to your site. If your those are your keywords, the user will come to your site more or less by accident and leave without doing anything. The proper content in the description would allow the user to determine a more appropriate site for their needs,

 

Landing Page Content

One of the greatest assets of any analytics software is the ability to break down your website page by page.  You can see how many people landed on a page, how many people exited a page, where they came from, what keyword they searched to get there, how long they spent on a page and most importantly, you can see if they converted.

By breaking down the top landing pages, you can determine just how customers interact with your website and how with the right design and content, you can give them a great experience.

When thinking about your landing pages, consider the following:

  • What are the top landing pages?
  • Which pages have the highest bounce rate?
  • What pages do people spend the most time on?
  • Which pages lead to the most conversions?

Your home page (index.html)  is usually the top landing page; it typically will also have the highest bounce rate because a bigger net catches more fish, but not all of them are the right kind. The home page is also the most indexed by search engines, literally the front door of your website through which every guest passes. If your home page does not have direct calls to action or clear paths to valuable information, users will go elsewhere.

This is where specific landing pages come in. It is very common to create landing pages that contain less general information and more specific direct calls to action. They can also be linked directly to PPC ads and specific search strings.

Using analytics for your landing pages you can easily determine why they are successful.  What keywords did visitors use to get there?  What type of content is on that page?  What calls to action are you using?  Can this be replicated on other pages?

Remember, determining customer behavior on your site  is just as important as knowing what search terms brought them there.

Buying Cycle

How long is the buying cycle for your product or service?  How many times does a customer visit your site before buying?  What are they looking at during that time?  With an online business and website analytics, this information is not just available, it’s invaluable.

To begin, answer the following questions:

  • How many days after the first visit do people convert?
  • Which pages do they visit during that time?
  • What content do the pages contain?
  • What calls to action are you using?

By knowing where your customers are in the buying cycle, you can really refine your online marketing efforts (this is especially true when it comes to paid search). If you know a typical customer comes to your site and reads 5-7 information-based pages before they convert, you can gear your initial messaging and calls to action around that. Instead of saying “Buy now” you can say “Get more information.”

For paid search campaigns, determine which keywords correspond to which point on the buying cycle and drive users to landing pages with the content they need at that point in the process.  Using the same example we used in the “Keywords” section, drive the person searching “business websites” to a page that provides ideas on creating a business website.

As always, a usable, informative website that has the customer needs will be revisited when they do decide to buy.

So a guy walks into an office and offers UX services…

Doing a first-time UX consultation, I sometimes feel like an auto mechanic walking into a buggy shop circa 1905 and trying to tell the carriage maker that the horses will soon be outclassed. It’s hard to consult from a defensive position, even when the writing is on the wall that things are changing. The main issue is that the service I offer is often seen as either redundant to current efforts or entirely unnecessary… or even nonexistent.

Even with the prevalence of social media in our culture and the fact that customers are becoming extraordinarily sophisticated in their methods and ability to access online media, there still remains a level of disconnect. The old methodologies of dealing with customers is amazingly stuck in the past. It is often driven by the marketing department and utilizes communications techniques used in traditional advertising. The message is broadcast, the results are monitored and changes are made to correct any missed opportunities. Analytics suites and lead tracking software have added useful tools to find and collate information,  but the the overall method itself hasn’t changed in its basic philosophy. One thing that has changed is the speed with which a customer or user can change direction: one click and they are gone, usually for good.

This isn’t because businesses don’t want to change. The technology is everywhere… most people carry a computer in their pocket that is much  more powerful than the most expensive desktop machines of ten years ago. The relationship businesses hope to have with customers through these new devices is clear, but the method being used is, at its root, one-sided.

Brian Solis of Fast Company Magazine wrote in a recent article :

“Rather than examine the role new technologies and platforms can play in improving customer relationships and experiences, many businesses invest in “attendance” strategies where a brand is present in both trendy and established channels, but not defining meaningful experiences or outcomes. Simply stated, businesses are underestimating the significance of customer experiences.

…As smart and connected technology matures beyond a luxury into everyday commodities, consumer expectations only inflate. As a result, functionality, connectedness, and experiences emerge as the lures for attention. For brands to compete for attention now takes something greater than mere presences in the right channels or support for the most popular devices. User experience (UX) is now becoming a critical point in customer engagement in order to compete for attention now and in the future. For without thoughtful UX, consumers meander without direction, reward, or utility. And their attention, and ultimately loyalty, follows. “

It comes back to the simple questions that businesses need to be asking:

  • Who are your customers?
  • Why do they like you?
  • How do they buy from you?

One problem is that marketing departments often believe they know the answers to these questions, but when pressed will admit that there is little empirical evidence to support their beliefs. Creative campaigns are often based on clever concepts, but don’t incorporate engaging experience design. Sometimes this can pay off and a campaign will be incredibly successful, but sometimes it can bomb. It need not be random because a clever idea can be paired with an engaging experience every time…  but only if  it is designed that way from the start.


Analytics methodology

This is an analytics methodology and task list I have found to be successful for a wide variety of applications.

  1. Have a clear understanding of the client’s business, website objectives, and organization structure

  2. Evaluate, recommend, install and configure  the web analytics tools

  3. Collect pertinent data

  4. Analyze data to make continuing recommendations for adjustment

Some clients have assigned staff and management to handle Web analytics, so this methodology must be flexible enough to accommodate the existing workflow. Everyone needs to row in the same direction.

The first is to understand the client and how the client would measure the success of  the website. Communicating with key stakeholders in the organization is crucial to both get an overall understanding and make sure they understand what is being done… and why. The also helps determine the types and frequency of reports that will be most useful for the client. For example, there may need to be granular daily reports that go to the account contact, while less-frequent high level reports are prepared for the executives. This makes sure proper communication and accountability are established.

Choosing the proper tool can have profound impact on the entire project. In certain cases, the client may have  already invested in a specific tool,  so we would need to get up to speed on the tool and make sure that the ball was kept rolling. Fortunately, most of the successful tools work pretty much the same; it is largely a matter of learning the interface. Often, the tool determination is left to us, so we can make a recommendation based on a review of requirements, budget and desired results.

Data collection  and data auditing work in tandem to weed out irrelevant traffic and make sure the ROI is maintained. Since some traffic to websites is irrelevant, frequent audits can help maintain the integrity of the data. When necessary, filters can be employed and adjusted to further increase efficiency.

As the data is acquired, we begin the reporting, analysis and recommendations process. Reports can be generated as needed and in varying degrees of detail. The reporting process is accompanied by recommendations and plans of action to maintain ROI.

Ad Words Best Practices

Best Practices for AdWords

(Reprinted from Launch Marketing)

Google processed 11.8 billion search queries in January 2012 and is projected to receive nearly 80% of all online search advertising revenue in 2012. Paid clicks on Google increased over 30% from Q4 2010 to Q4 2011. Certainly advertising on Google is a smart choice for many companies, and while it is easy to set up a campaign, maintaining a successful campaign requires a great deal of time and patience (and a bit of trial and error). Here are a few tips we have for a successful AdWords campaign:

Think like a customer. Ask yourself, “If I was looking for this product, what terms would I search for?” After you’ve created an ad, think “Would I click on this ad if I was searching for this term?” Remember that those searching on Google may not know anything else about your brand besides what they see in your ad and that most ads are only looked at for about a quarter of a second.

Be specific, but not too specific. Especially when beginning an AdWords campaign, be sure to select keywords that are specific enough so that you aren’t spending a large amount of money competing with several other companies. However, don’t be so specific that only a few people will ever search for that term. Using the various match types in AdWords can help.

Google provides several tools that help make this process easier. The Traffic Estimator Tool shows the amount of traffic you can expect to receive with a specific keyword. The Keyword Tool is also very useful. Simply type in a few of your keywords and it will produce ideas for related terms as well as the approximate cost per click you would pay. Export this list to Excel for an easy way to select terms that you want to add to your campaign.

Don’t create it and leave it. AdWords accounts require continuous monitoring in order to be successful as things can change daily. While you can set up custom alerts that can email you if that action occurs, you should still log in to your account at least once each day (even if it’s for a few minutes) to make sure your campaign is performing correctly. Be on the lookout for anything that seems out of the ordinary and fix it as soon as possible.

If it’s not working, change it. Don’t get so attached to your work that you refuse to change it if it isn’t working. Also, don’t wait for an ad to suddenly start getting a higher click through rate. If people aren’t clicking on it, find out why and change it. Possible solutions could include changing the copy or finding a better keyword.

Be sure that you are testing several variations of your ads. This way you aren’t spending all of your money on an ad that may not be very successful. Track the metrics and stop any ads that aren’t performing up to par in order to concentrate your resources on those that are performing well.