Post by account_disabled on Nov 29, 2023 5:10:59 GMT -5
For anyone who missed the UX Talk Part 1 article, you can read it here: UX Talk Part 1: What do you need to know to do UX in a large organization? Note: All content from this UX Talk event has been compiled from the author's understanding. and compiled for reading in the author's own language. Therefore, the content may not exactly correspond to what the lecturer said. There has been research and additional information included. If there are any errors I apologize. And you can inform the writer about errors.
What does this article have? Show OVERVIEW of ENTERPRISE UX work Contents of the ENTERPRISE UX Phone Number List event discussed today related to both UX considerations for enterprise users or UX of users who work in the organization Not general consumers (Part 1) Working guidelines for UX people or what the UX team in the organization should do in developing any product (Part 2) UX Design tips for measuring results 1. Understand 'your' great metrics Metric refers to the measurement that we use to evaluate our product. For example, how many people have signed up on our website? How many users are from Facebook? How many downloads does the app have? etc. The properties of a good metric include: Clear & specific, to the point Comparative Rate/Ratio is a proportion, which is the relative value of something.
Change 'your' behavior which is very important And what everyone tends to overlook is number 4. What we measure must help us know what steps we should take to improve. We may have heard the marketing department in the team say these sentences... “The app has more than 10,000 downloads!!” “Our website already has 5,000 members signed up. Wow!” Oh... yes.. so what next? I would like to introduce you to Metrics Checklist. Let's see which Metrics are good and which are not. UX metrics checklist UX metrics checklist – differences between good and bad metrics Between the total number of users we have and the % growth in the number of users each week. Of course, the latter is a more insightful metric.
What does this article have? Show OVERVIEW of ENTERPRISE UX work Contents of the ENTERPRISE UX Phone Number List event discussed today related to both UX considerations for enterprise users or UX of users who work in the organization Not general consumers (Part 1) Working guidelines for UX people or what the UX team in the organization should do in developing any product (Part 2) UX Design tips for measuring results 1. Understand 'your' great metrics Metric refers to the measurement that we use to evaluate our product. For example, how many people have signed up on our website? How many users are from Facebook? How many downloads does the app have? etc. The properties of a good metric include: Clear & specific, to the point Comparative Rate/Ratio is a proportion, which is the relative value of something.
Change 'your' behavior which is very important And what everyone tends to overlook is number 4. What we measure must help us know what steps we should take to improve. We may have heard the marketing department in the team say these sentences... “The app has more than 10,000 downloads!!” “Our website already has 5,000 members signed up. Wow!” Oh... yes.. so what next? I would like to introduce you to Metrics Checklist. Let's see which Metrics are good and which are not. UX metrics checklist UX metrics checklist – differences between good and bad metrics Between the total number of users we have and the % growth in the number of users each week. Of course, the latter is a more insightful metric.