The 5 Types of Design frameworks

  1. User-centered design
  2. The five elements of UX design
  3. Design thinking
  4. Lean UX
  5. Double Diamond?

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User-centered design process

The key steps in the user-centered design process:

  • Understand how the user experiences the product or similar products.?You want to know how users will engage with your design, as well as the environment or context in which they’ll experience the product.?

Understanding this requires a lot of research, like observing users in action and conducting interviews, which we’ll explore more later.

  • Specify the user’s needs.?Based on your research, figure out which user problems are the most important to solve.?
  • Design solutions to those user problems.?Come up with lots of ideas for designs that can address the user problems you’ve identified. Then, start to actually design those ideas!?
  • Evaluate the solutions you designed against the user’s needs.?Ask yourself, “Does the design I created solve the user’s problem?” To answer this question, you should test the product you designed with real people and collect feedback.

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The five elements of UX design

The five elements are, from bottom to top: strategy, scope, structure, skeleton, and surface. Think of these as a set of five layers, where each layer is dependent on the one below it.

  1. Strategy:?The bottom layer is strategy, where you lay a foundation of your design goals. These goals are based on user needs and the business objectives for the product.
  2. Scope:?The next layer is scope, where you determine the type of product you’re building. At this point, you will consider the kind of features and content you want to include in the product.
  3. Structure:?The middle layer is structure. Here, you’ll figure out how to organize your design and how you want users to interact with the product.
  4. Skeleton:?The skeleton is the layout of the product. the skeleton layer details how your design works – and like a skeleton, users won’t directly see its inner-workings.?
  5. Surface:?The top layer, surface, represents how the product looks to the user. The surface represents the interface that users view and interact with. Think of the surface like the clothes or makeup you wear that are visible to the outside world.

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Design thinking

Design thinking is a user-centered approach to problem-solving. It helps designers create solutions that address a real user problem and are functional and affordable. There are five phases in the design process: empathize, define, ideate, prototype, and test.

  1. During the?empathize?phase, the goal is to understand users’ needs and how users think and feel. This involves a lot of user research, such as conducting surveys, interviews, and observation sessions, so you can get a clear picture of who your users are and the challenges they are facing.
  2. In the?define?phase, you’ll create a clear problem statement a description of the user’s need that your designs will address, based on your research findings.?This will drive your team toward a clear goal for the design of the product.
  3. Once you land on a user problem and establish why it’s an important one to solve, it’s time for the?ideate?phase. The goal of ideation is to come up with as many design solutions as possible.?
  4. Once you have an idea of how to solve the problem, you’re ready to enter the?prototype?phase.?A prototype is an early model of a product that demonstrates its functionality.?
  5. During the?test?phase, users provide feedback about your designs, before the product is built by engineers and launched to the public. You can use this feedback to make changes and improvements to your designs, as many times as you need.

Depending on the feedback from your testing phase, you might need to go back to the beginning of the design process, come up with new ideas for solutions, or develop new prototypes. Eventually, the goal of the design thinking process, like any design framework, is to implement your design, which means building it and sharing it with the world.
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Lean UX?

The Lean UX process focuses on reducing wasted time and resources, and producing a workable product as soon as possible. The process is iterative, meaning the team continues to update and make revisions to the product as they gather user research and stakeholder feedback.

The Lean UX process is broken into three steps:

  1. Think. Explore the problems that users are experiencing and consider how you could solve them with your design. This step is all about gathering research, so you can form a clear idea of who the product is for and how it will help them.?
  2. Make. Start designing the product by creating sketches, wireframes, and prototypes. You’ll also create a minimum viable product, or MVP for short, which is a simple prototype of your designs that you can test with the target audience. Be prepared to go back and update your prototype as you gather feedback!
  3. Check. Find out how users respond to your design and gather feedback from project stakeholders. Make adjustments to your designs accordingly, and repeat the three steps again, if necessary.

There are six principles you should keep in mind when using the Lean UX process:?

  1. Move forward.
  2. Stay curious.
  3. Test ideas in the real world.
  4. Externalize your ideas.
  5. Reframe deliverables as outcomes.
  6. Embrace radical transparency.

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Double Diamond?

Double Diamond is a more traditional UX process, which breaks down UX design into two main phases (or “diamonds”): research and design.?

Each phase has two steps. When combined, these are the four steps:

Discover the problem.?Gather information about potential issues users are facing.?

Define the problem.?Filter through the data, and focus on the main issue your product aims to solve.

Develop?solutions for the problem. Begin designing your product as a work in progress. This is where wireframes and prototypes come into play.

Deliver?the product. Review and test your product to prepare it for release.


Thanks,

linkedin.com/in/imohab


Ryda A.

Principle Product Designer at TIME dotCom Berhad | User Interface Design | User Experience Design | Design system | IT Security | CSSLP | CEH

1 周

This is great Mohab A. This is what im searching for. I've been researching the best framework for my team. Do you have any insights on when to use those frameworks, which ones are the most common these days and whatnot?

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Benjamin Eghan

Student at De Montfort University

4 个月

This is a good one Mohab A. I have been thinking about how many design frameworks exist, and here you present a solid 5, briefly and clearly explained. This will facilitate understanding in adapting any for my project at the design development phase.

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Anna K.

Product Designer

1 年

??

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Nagasaranya G.

UI / UX designer| Product Designer | Web designer | wix developer | Partial coder | Designer | Crafts director| immediate joiner

1 年

this post saved my time

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