Career Shifts

Are you a user experience designer?
Skirball Center, Los Angeles
User Experience
Design
Ambidextrous
Empatheti
c
Curiou
s
Optimisti
c
Recognize
Patterns
Business




User

        Technolo
        gy
Business




User

        Technolo
        gy
6 Facets of
USER EXERIENCE


                                        Content
                                        Strategy


                          Business                 Information
                          Strategy                 Architecture




                          Interactive
                                                    Usability
                            Design


                                          User
                                        Research
    7.08.12 BELL SPORTS
USER RESEARCH
    METHODS

                                                                                Behavioral        Technological
                                                                                 Trends
   USER DELIGHT results from a successful marriage between
   research and testing

   Our ability to understand the user fuel our innovative designs that
   delight customers.  At the heart of our approach is the belief that
   user understanding requires a holistic view.  This user-centric       Economics &                        Ergonomics &
   approach encompasses 6 areas, please see diagram.                     Marketplace                         Mechanics
   USER RESEARCH METHODS
   for the purpose of user understanding and insight
   ·      Day in the Life contextual inquiry
   ·      Interviews                                                                               Social
   ·      Focus groups
   ·      Heuristic reviews
   ·      User landscape audits
   ·      Analogous interface and design audits
   ·      Secondary and Tertiary research
   ·      Card sorting and image associations
                                                                         Building user understanding, 6 areas of study
   USER TESTING METHODS
   for the purpose of usability, validation of idea and design
   effectiveness
   ·      Surveys, Qualitative and Quantitative studies
   ·      Focus groups
   ·      Proof of Concepts, task based testing




7.08.12 BELL SPORTS

User Experience Design, the gateway job to a whole new you

  • 1.
    Career Shifts Are youa user experience designer? Skirball Center, Los Angeles
  • 2.
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13.
  • 14.
  • 16.
    Business User Technolo gy
  • 17.
    Business User Technolo gy
  • 18.
    6 Facets of USEREXERIENCE Content Strategy Business Information Strategy Architecture Interactive Usability Design User Research 7.08.12 BELL SPORTS
  • 19.
    USER RESEARCH METHODS Behavioral Technological Trends USER DELIGHT results from a successful marriage between research and testing Our ability to understand the user fuel our innovative designs that delight customers.  At the heart of our approach is the belief that user understanding requires a holistic view.  This user-centric Economics & Ergonomics & approach encompasses 6 areas, please see diagram. Marketplace Mechanics USER RESEARCH METHODS for the purpose of user understanding and insight ·      Day in the Life contextual inquiry ·      Interviews Social ·      Focus groups ·      Heuristic reviews ·      User landscape audits ·      Analogous interface and design audits ·      Secondary and Tertiary research ·      Card sorting and image associations Building user understanding, 6 areas of study USER TESTING METHODS for the purpose of usability, validation of idea and design effectiveness ·      Surveys, Qualitative and Quantitative studies ·      Focus groups ·      Proof of Concepts, task based testing 7.08.12 BELL SPORTS

Editor's Notes

  • #2 \n
  • #3 \n
  • #4 surprise not all\n
  • #5 \n
  • #6 metropolis article\nHall asks: "Which model should new programs follow?" Industrial design education needs to keep up with a fast changing market, but as well the needs to encourage a long term, sustainable critical thinking towards society and culture. The search for the "right" design education, which is on one hand market orientated and up-to-date, and on the other hand able to transmit beyond these needs a permanent knowledge and critical approach towards the world we live in and work for. At one of Hall's visits to American design schools, he saw students working in a very classic way on a car design. For Hall, this approach reflects a major anachronism and contradiction to current market conditions where object-orientated thinking is dominated by a system-orientated thinking directed to create objects. \n
  • #7 metropolis article\nHall asks: "Which model should new programs follow?" Industrial design education needs to keep up with a fast changing market, but as well the needs to encourage a long term, sustainable critical thinking towards society and culture. The search for the "right" design education, which is on one hand market orientated and up-to-date, and on the other hand able to transmit beyond these needs a permanent knowledge and critical approach towards the world we live in and work for. At one of Hall's visits to American design schools, he saw students working in a very classic way on a car design. For Hall, this approach reflects a major anachronism and contradiction to current market conditions where object-orientated thinking is dominated by a system-orientated thinking directed to create objects. \n
  • #8 metropolis article\nHall asks: "Which model should new programs follow?" Industrial design education needs to keep up with a fast changing market, but as well the needs to encourage a long term, sustainable critical thinking towards society and culture. The search for the "right" design education, which is on one hand market orientated and up-to-date, and on the other hand able to transmit beyond these needs a permanent knowledge and critical approach towards the world we live in and work for. At one of Hall's visits to American design schools, he saw students working in a very classic way on a car design. For Hall, this approach reflects a major anachronism and contradiction to current market conditions where object-orientated thinking is dominated by a system-orientated thinking directed to create objects. \n
  • #9 metropolis article\nHall asks: "Which model should new programs follow?" Industrial design education needs to keep up with a fast changing market, but as well the needs to encourage a long term, sustainable critical thinking towards society and culture. The search for the "right" design education, which is on one hand market orientated and up-to-date, and on the other hand able to transmit beyond these needs a permanent knowledge and critical approach towards the world we live in and work for. At one of Hall's visits to American design schools, he saw students working in a very classic way on a car design. For Hall, this approach reflects a major anachronism and contradiction to current market conditions where object-orientated thinking is dominated by a system-orientated thinking directed to create objects. \n
  • #10 \n
  • #11  By DreamRealitySyndrome\nLeft Brain vs Right Brain\n
  • #12 \n
  • #13 \n
  • #14 \n
  • #15 \n
  • #16 Insatiable appetite of business\nFreight train of technology\nFickle and sub segmenting users\nCrosshairs of competing demands\n
  • #17 Insatiable appetite of business\nFreight train of technology\nFickle and sub segmenting users\nCrosshairs of competing demands\n
  • #18 Insatiable appetite of business\nFreight train of technology\nFickle and sub segmenting users\nCrosshairs of competing demands\n
  • #19 Insatiable appetite of business\nFreight train of technology\nFickle and sub segmenting users\nCrosshairs of competing demands\n
  • #20 Insatiable appetite of business\nFreight train of technology\nFickle and sub segmenting users\nCrosshairs of competing demands\n
  • #21 Insatiable appetite of business\nFreight train of technology\nFickle and sub segmenting users\nCrosshairs of competing demands\n
  • #22 Insatiable appetite of business\nFreight train of technology\nFickle and sub segmenting users\nCrosshairs of competing demands\n
  • #23 Behavioral trends... things we’re seeing trending- styles, uses\nTechnological influences, new tech breakthrus, anticipate imagine and create\nEconomics & Marketplace, often times the whitespace and outstanding needs, predictors\nErgonomics- people’s needs, hearts, drivers cognitive mechanics. \nCultural Influencers- regional\nSocial influencer\n\n
  • #24 Behavioral trends... things we’re seeing trending- styles, uses\nTechnological influences, new tech breakthrus, anticipate imagine and create\nEconomics & Marketplace, often times the whitespace and outstanding needs, predictors\nErgonomics- people’s needs, hearts, drivers cognitive mechanics. \nCultural Influencers- regional\nSocial influencer\n\n