Title: Simo SdeNETikos Finland Oy:
1(No Transcript)
2Simo Säde/NETikos Finland Oy Designing with the
users (in mind)
3NETikos
- NETikos Finland Oy is an expert company focused
on utilizing wireless technologies, developing
wireless services and providing wide-scale
usability consulting. - The main customers for NETikos Finland have been
mobile network operators and companies that
utilize wireless technologies in their
businesses. - NETikos, incorporated by Telecom Italia Group in
2001, currently employs over 200 experts.
Turnover of the NETikos Group in 2002 was
approximately 20M EUR. The venture capital firm
myQube has acquired NETikos in July 2003. - Dr. Simo Säde is a usability specialist, formerly
a designer in an industrial design consultancy,
and a university researcher in a user-centered
design research group.
4Usability clients of NETikos Finland
- Nokia, TeliaSonera, Radiolinja, Elisa,
SanomaWSOY, Fortum - Several projects of many kinds
- Usability evaluations, usability testing, concept
and UI design, planning usability processes, etc.
5What is usability?
- The extent to which a product can be used by
specified users to achieve specified goals with
effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction in a
specified context of use ISO 9421 - There are no ready-made answers to design problems
6A well-designed, usable product
- is based on users actual needs and desires
- is easy to start using, easy to learn
- is easy to use, everything can be done without
problems - is fun to use and attractive
- lets the user be fast and efficient
- is easy to remember next time
7Usability and desirability
- Not only about ease-of-use, cognition, and
performance - Pleasant user experience is part of high quality
- A usable product links the company to feelings of
reliability, pleasure, effectiveness, modernity,
service orientation, etc....
8Whats special about the usabilityof mobile
products and services?
- HW / SW overlap, dense user interface,
technical limitations - Impact of physical social context of use,
- and mobile infrastructure
- Heterogeneous user groups, consumers
- Different media than in wired communication
- Inconsistency, product specific Uis
- Many UI layers
9Reasons for usability problems
- Technology-centered design approach
- technology drives, not the product or the user
- lack of user input
- featurism
- Lack of total view to user experience
- not an acknowledged part of the organization of
product development
10Consequences of usability problems
- Decreased
- product quality and appeal
- user acceptance and loyalty
- Increased
- need for user support and training
- number of unfinished transactions (in online
services) - number of costly late changes in design projects
11Usability Professionals Association Designing
the user experience
1. Analysis phase --Meet with key stakeholders
to set vision --Include usability tasks in the
project plan --Assemble a multidisciplinary team
to ensure complete expertise --Develop
usability goals and objectives --Conduct field
studies --Look at competitive products --Create
user profiles --Develop a task analysis --Document
user scenarios and use cases --Document user
performance requirements
12Usability Professionals Association Designing
the user experience
2. Design phase --Begin to brainstorm design
concepts and metaphors --Develop screen flow and
navigation model --Do walkthroughs of design
concepts --Begin design with paper and
pencil --Create low-fidelity prototypes --Remember
validate early and often with users --Conduct
usability testing on low-fidelity
prototypes --Create high-fidelity detailed
design --Do usability testing again --Document
standards and guidelines --Create a design
specification
13Usability Professionals Association Designing
the user experience
3. Implementation phase --Do ongoing heuristic
evaluations --Work closely with delivery team as
design is implemented --Conduct usability testing
as soon as possible
14Usability Professionals Association Designing
the user experience
4. Deployment phase --Use surveys to get user
feedback --Conduct field studies to get info on
actual use --Check objectives using usablity
testing --Remember creating a great user
experience is an ongoing process
15User requirements
- Contextual inquiry
- observing and interviewing users in their own
environment - sets the ground for design
- a.k.a. field methods or design ethnography
- rich data, first hand data, tacit knowledge
- must be interpreted
16User requirements
- Benchmarking evaluations of competitors products
- Usability goal setting
- measures or priorities
- makes designing more structured
17Solution generation
- Group work techniques
- moving from analysis to ideation
- affinity diagrams, participatory design...
18Solution generation
- Visualizations scenarios
- written stories and visual sketches of use
19Solution generation
- Paper prototyping
- a user uses illustrations of the UI
- a designer plays the part of the product
20Solution generation
- Software simulations
- can be both low and high fidelity
21Evaluation
- Heuristic evaluation
- experienced usability specialist inspects the UI
using heuristic rules - simple natural dialogue
- speak the users language
- minimize memory load
- consistency, feedback
- clearly marked exits
- shortcuts, good error messages
- prevent errors
- help and documentation...
22Evaluation
- Usability testing
- users perform tasks using a prototype
- empirical data
- think aloud, and videotaping for analysis
- may use software or paper prototypes, mock-ups,
or real product - for lo-fi or hi-fi protos
- horizontal (a bit of everything) or vertical
(focused,deeper)
23Conclusions
- Plan UCD into the project plan
- Define and analyse the users
- Sketch, prototype and discuss your ideas
- Test with users
- Iterate
24Conclusions
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