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Andrea Nelson

Cooper Journal: Lean UX, Product Stewardship, and Integrated Teams - 0 views

  • Product stewardship relieves pressure on the product owner bottleneck. A UX strategist assumes the role of Product Steward, pairing with a Product Manager to share the mantle of product ownership. The product manager has a bias towards representing the business, the product steward towards satisfying the user, with a recognition that an interplay of these forces drives prioritization of the team's activities.
  • Most of all, trust In the power of user-centered design to inspire, delight, and guide your teams forward.
Laura Paajanen

cupcakes: the secret to product planning - Adaptive Path - 3 views

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    The cake model of product strategy is actually two different models for how to evolve and improve the scope of a product over time. I've found it's a very helpful tool for helping teams think through what's going to be a successful customer experience in the short term and the long term.
Beth Lingard

How to Choose the Right UX Metric For Your Product - 3 views

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    Tools for measuring UX: * The quality of user experience (the HEART framework) * The goals of your product or project (the Goals-Signals-Metrics process)
Andrea Nelson

Lean UX: Getting Out Of The Deliverables Business - Smashing UX Design - 1 views

  • UX designers have traditionally worn many hats. You now have another to add to the hall tree: keeper of the vision. In this new role, your responsibility is to keep an eye on the big picture. Lean UX forces you to think of the experience in prioritized chunks. Ultimately, those chunks all have to roll up into one cohesive product. That cohesive product is your vision.
  • UX designers have traditionally worn many hats. You now have another to add to the hall tree: keeper of the vision. In this new role, your responsibility is to keep an eye on the big picture. Lean UX forces you to think of the experience in prioritized chunks. Ultimately, those chunks all have to roll up into one cohesive product. That cohesive product is your vision.
  • UX designers have traditionally worn many hats. You now have another to add to the hall tree: keeper of the vision. In this new role, your responsibility is to keep an eye on the big picture. Lean UX forces you to think of the experience in prioritized chunks.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • UX designers have traditionally worn many hats. You now have another to add to the hall tree: keeper of the vision. In this new role, your responsibility is to keep an eye on the big picture. Lean UX forces you to think of the experience in prioritized chunks.
  • UX designe
  • UX designers have traditionally worn many hats. You now have another to add to the hall tree: keeper of the vision. In this new role, your responsibility is to keep an eye on the big picture. Lean UX forces you to think of the experience in prioritized chunks.
  • UX designers have traditionally worn many hats. You now have another to add to the hall tree: keeper of the vision. In this new role, your responsibility is to keep an eye on the big picture. Lean UX forces you to think of the experience in prioritized chunks.
  • Successful lean prototypes have been created with code, with design software such as Adobe Fireworks and even with PowerPoint.
  • Successful lean prototypes have been created with code, with design software such as Adobe Fireworks and even with PowerPoint.
osujqgp

Svpply - 2 views

shared by osujqgp on 26 Oct 10 - Cached
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    Love it Button 2.0 -- discover new products, new users, and new shopping sites
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    Social Product Sharing
Denise Hardman

Service Design - 2 views

Hello fellow UX gurus, I wanted to share some tidbits of my service design research. Brief summary UX Magazine | Service Design: Service design is also referred to as 'holistic design,' 'multi...

service design

started by Denise Hardman on 04 Jun 13 no follow-up yet
osujqgp

Mulu - 2 views

shared by osujqgp on 11 Feb 12 - No Cached
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    Pinterest for products only
osujqgp

Quirky projects - 1 views

shared by osujqgp on 13 Sep 12 - No Cached
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    Vote for which product idea you want made
Andrea Nelson

Design Better And Faster With Rapid Prototyping - Smashing Magazine - 3 views

  • What Needs to Be Prototyped? Good candidates for prototyping include complex interactions, new functionality and changes in workflow, technology or design. For example, prototyping search results is useful when you want to depart significantly from the standard search experience; say, to introduce faceted search or the ability to preview a document without leaving the search results.
  • How Much Should Be Prototyped? A good rule of thumb is to focus on the 20% of the functionality that will be used 80% of the time; i.e. key functionality that will be used most often. Remember, the point of rapid prototyping is to showcase how something will work or, in later stages, what the design will look like, without prototyping the entire product.
  • In choosing the prototype fidelity, there is no one correct approach. Most designs of new products are best started with sketches, then moving to either medium- or high-fidelity prototypes, depending on the complexity of the system and the requirements of the dimensions of fidelity.
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  • Avoid “prototype creep” by setting expectations for the process, including ones affecting the purpose, fidelity, scope and duration. Remind everyone, including yourself, that rapid prototyping is a means to an end, not an end in itself.
  • Don’t begin prototype review sessions without clear guidelines for feedback. Be very specific about the type of feedback you are looking for. (Are the steps logically arranged? Is the navigation clear and intuitive?) If not, be prepared for, “I don’t like the blue in the header,” or “Can’t we use this font instead?” or “Can you make this bigger, bolder, in red and flashing?” Don’t be a perfectionist. In most cases, rapid prototyping does not have to be 100% perfect, just good enough to give everyone a common understanding.
osujqgp

Beautylish - 3 views

shared by osujqgp on 11 Jan 12 - No Cached
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    Products + Reviews, community, tutorials, etc
Andrea Nelson

The Two-Week Rule - 1 views

  • So for those people that believe in principle that they need to validate their product ideas with real customers, but are unsure of how “baked” the idea needs to be, I offer this very specific rule: Never go more than two weeks without putting your product ideas in front of real users and customers.
Beth Lingard

A New Way to Create Urgency and Social Proof on Product Pages - 2 views

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    Ruby Lane alerts shoppers when an item they are viewing is sitting in someone else's cart or wishlist - suggesting they may miss out if they don't act soon.
Janet Hanseth

Beyond Usability - 5 views

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    I like this quote: "But the most difficult question is not really whether or not the user can figure out how to use the product, it is whether they even want to use the product. Usability is usually the easier part."
Janet Hanseth

Product Discovery with Live-Data Prototypes - 3 views

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    Marty Cagan again, this time making a case for live-data prototypes in order to facilitate user testing and A/B tests.
Megan Pearlman

Little Black Bag - 2 views

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    Japanese department stores promote an annual New Year's event called fukubukuro, in which they put various items into bags, seal them and sell them to consumers-who open the bags and trade with each other to get the products they want. Now an online start-up called Little Black Bag is bringing that concept to U.S. web shoppers.
Kari Waldrep

Mine - Share purchases with friends. - 3 views

shared by Kari Waldrep on 13 Aug 12 - No Cached
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    product bookmarking
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