UX design

UX design

What is User Experience (UX) Design?

User experience (UX) design is the process design teams use to create products that provide meaningful and relevant experiences to users. UX design involves the design of the entire process of acquiring and integrating the product, including aspects of branding, design, usability and function.


Play


Showvideo transcript


Designing an experience includes not only making the software easy to use but also designing the other experiences related to the product, for example, the marketing campaign, the packaging and after-sales support. Most importantly, UX design is concerned with delivering solutions that address pain points and needs. After all, no one will use a product that serves no purpose.

Table of contents

  1. What is User Experience (UX) Design?
  2. UX vs UI: What’s the Difference?
  3. UX Design—A Formal Definition
  4. UX Designers Consider the Who, Why, What, and How of Product Use
  5. UX Design is User-Centered
  6. Learn More about UX Design
  7. Questions related to User Experience (UX) Design

UX vs UI: What’s the Difference?

You might see the “UX/UI designer” job title and think UX and UI are interchangeable. But while there is overlap, they are separate disciplines.


Play


Showvideo transcript


“User Experience Design” is often used interchangeably with terms such as “User Interface Design” and “Usability.” However, while usability and user interface (UI) design are important aspects of UX design, they are subsets.

A UX designer is concerned with the entire process of acquiring and integrating a product, including aspects of branding, design, usability and function. The story begins before the device is even in the user’s hands.

“No product is an island. A product is more than the product. It is a cohesive, integrated set of experiences. Think through all of the stages of a product or service – from initial intentions through final reflections, from the first usage to help, service, and maintenance. Make them all work together seamlessly.”

Products that provide a great user experience (e.g., the iPhone) are thus designed with the product’s consumption or use in mind and the entire process of acquiring, owning and even troubleshooting it. Similarly, UX designers don’t just focus on creating usable products but on other aspects of the user experience, such as pleasure, efficiency and fun. Consequently, there is no single definition of a good user experience. Instead, a good user experience meets a particular user’s needs in the specific context where they use the product.

A UX designer attempts to answer the question: "How can we make the experience of interacting with a computer, a smartphone, a product, or a service as intuitive, smooth and pleasant as possible?"

UX Design—A Formal Definition

The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) defines user experience as:

“A person's perceptions and responses that result from the use or anticipated use of a product, system or service.”

We can break this definition into two parts:

  1. A person’s perceptions and responses.
  2. The use of a product, system or service.

In user experience, designers do not have much control over a person’s perceptions and responses—the first part of the definition. For example, they cannot control how someone feels, moves their fingers or controls their eyes as they use a product. However, designers can control how the product, system or service behaves and looks—the second part of the definition.

“One cannot design a user experience, only design for a user experience. In particular, one cannot design a sensual experience, but only create the design features that can evoke it.”

The simplest way to think about user experience design is as a verb and a noun. A UX designer designs (verb)—ideates, plans, changes—the things that affect the user experience (noun)—perceptions and responses to a system or service.

For example, when using a physical device, such as a computer mouse, we can control some aspects of the product that influence whether the user enjoys looking at, feeling and holding it:

  • The way it fits in their hand. Is it snug? Is it too big and cumbersome?
  • The weight. Does it affect their ability to move it as they wish?
  • Its ease of use. Can they use it automatically, or do they have to think hard about it to achieve a goal??

When a person uses a digital product, such as a computer application, a few aspects that we can influence include:

  • How intuitively they can navigate through the system.
  • The cues that help guide them to their goal.
  • The visibility of the essential aspects of a task at the appropriate time.

UX Designers Consider the Who, Why, What, and How of Product Use


Play


Showvideo transcript


As a UX designer, you should consider the Who, Why, What and How of product use. The Why involves the users’ motivations for adopting a product, whether they relate to a task they wish to perform with it or to values and views that users associate with the ownership and use of the product. The What addresses the things people can do with a product—its functionality. Finally, the How relates to the design of functionality in an accessible and aesthetically pleasant way.

UX designers start with the Why before determining the What and then, finally, How to create products with which users can form meaningful experiences. In software designs, you must ensure the product’s “substance” comes through an existing device and offers a seamless, fluid experience.

UX Design is User-Centered

Since UX design encompasses the entire user journey, it’s a multidisciplinary field–UX designers come from various backgrounds, such as visual design, programming, psychology and interaction design. To design for human users also means working with a heightened scope regarding accessibility and accommodating many potential users’ physical limitations, such as reading small text.

A UX designer’s typical tasks vary but often include user research, creating personas, designing wireframes and interactive prototypes, and testing designs. These tasks can vary significantly from one organization to the next. Still, they always demand designers to be the users’ advocates and keep their needs at the center of all design and development efforts. That’s also why most UX designers work in some form of user-centered work process and keep channeling their best-informed efforts until they optimally address all of the relevant issues and user needs.

? Interaction Design Foundation, CC BY-SA 4.0

User-centered design is an iterative process where you take an understanding of the users and their context as a starting point for all design and development.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Darshika Srivastava的更多文章

  • LGD Model

    LGD Model

    Loss Given Default (LGD) models play a crucial role in credit risk measurement. These models estimate the potential…

  • CCAR ROLE

    CCAR ROLE

    What is the Opportunity? The CCAR and Capital Adequacy role will be responsible for supporting the company’s capital…

  • End User

    End User

    What Is End User? In product development, an end user (sometimes end-user)[a] is a person who ultimately uses or is…

  • METADATA

    METADATA

    WHAT IS METADATA? Often referred to as data that describes other data, metadata is structured reference data that helps…

  • SSL

    SSL

    What is SSL? SSL, or Secure Sockets Layer, is an encryption-based Internet security protocol. It was first developed by…

  • BLOATWARE

    BLOATWARE

    What is bloatware? How to identify and remove it Unwanted pre-installed software -- also known as bloatware -- has long…

  • Data Democratization

    Data Democratization

    What is Data Democratization? Unlocking the Power of Data Cultures For Businesses Data is a vital asset in today's…

  • Rooting

    Rooting

    What is Rooting? Rooting is the process by which users of Android devices can attain privileged control (known as root…

  • Data Strategy

    Data Strategy

    What is a Data Strategy? A data strategy is a long-term plan that defines the technology, processes, people, and rules…

  • Product

    Product

    What is the Definition of Product? Ask a few people that question, and their specific answers will vary, but they’ll…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了