The User Experience of Enterprise Software Matters: Part 1
There’s one area that I believe user experience has lagged behind: the enterprise software space. I can’t tell you how many frustratingly unusable enterprise Web applications I’ve encountered during my 12 plus years in corporate America. As important as the user experience of enterprise software is to a business’s success, why isn’t its assessment usually a factor in technology selection?
Sherman, Paul J. UXmatters (2008). Articles>Web Design>Content Management>User Experience
The User Experience of Enterprise Software Matters, Part 2: Strategic User Experience
In this column, I’ll provide a technology selection framework that can help enterprises better assess the usability and appropriateness of enterprise applications they’re considering purchasing, with the goal of ensuring their IT (Information Technology) investments deliver fully on their value propositions.
Sherman, Paul J. UXmatters (2009). Articles>Web Design>Content Management>User Experience
Are URL Shorteners A Necessary Evil, Or Just Evil?
What started out as something people did via e-mail and bookmark-sharing services like Delicious, is now moving to Facebook, Twitter, and other social broadcasting services. It is just so much more efficient to share a link once with all your friends and followers than to send it to each one individually.
Schonfeld, Erick. TechCrunch (2009). Articles>Web Design>User Experience>Social Networking
Great Designs Should Be Experienced and Not Seen
When things are going well in a design, we don't pay attention to them. We only pay attention to things that bother us. The same is true with online designs. We attend to things that aren't working far more than we attend to things that are. When the online experience frustrates us, we pay attention to its details, often because we're trying to figure out some way to outsmart it.
Spool, Jared M. User Interface Engineering (2009). Articles>Web Design>User Experience>User Interface
User interface experts are often suspicious of the role of visual aesthetics in user interfaces—and of designers who insist that graphic emotive impact and careful attention to a site’s visual framework really contribute to measurable success. Underneath the arguments, I see a fundamental culture clash.
Lynch, Patrick. List Apart, A (2009). Articles>Web Design>Visual Rhetoric>User Experience
Understanding the Persuasive Flow
Wiggly, distracting, or poorly placed ads irritate users. Worse, they teach site visitors to ignore whole sections of layout. Yet some online ads work. They capture visitors visually, and present an engaging hook. They get visitors to click. Even, at times, from the home page. So what's the difference?
Michaels, Mary M. UI Design Newsletter (2007). Articles>Web Design>Marketing>User Experience
Usability Matters: Software Development and the Balancing Act Between Design and Usability
Marketing departments – especially in IT – like to speak in the modern lingo about a product’s innovative “Look and Feel”. While “Look“ refers to the design of the solution, “Feel” means usability, the quality of use. Developers of Content Management Systems and other enterprise IT solutions have to walk a fine line to meet the exacting demands of users in both areas. But in recent years a clear trend has become apparent: There is a drive towards the modern, “cool” product design where at a minimum usability takes a back seat, often to its detriment.
Bodemann, Jörn. Content Wrangler, The (2009). Articles>Web Design>User Experience>Usability
Defining Social Media Settings
As we explore what social technologies can offer and the boundaries they can cross—boundaries that had confined the traditional Web—UX professionals must now take up a new design challenge. We must address the changing needs for social media and facilitate users’ taking better advantage of everything social media has to offer.
Asad, Junaid. UXmatters (2009). Articles>Web Design>Social Networking>User Experience
Online Advertising: Factors That Influence Customer Experience
In this article, I’ll discuss the cognitive elements at the intersection of advertising and human behavior. By taking an approach to advertising that looks at the impact psychological factors have on customer behavior, I’ve learned that customers respond directly to online advertisements, as we can see from their emotions, behavior, and interactions on the Web.
Kirmani, Shazeeye and Shamugam Rajasekaran. UXmatters (2009). Articles>Web Design>Marketing>User Experience
Understanding the Experience of Social Network Sites
Although social networking sites have become the commonplace over the past eight years since the introduction of Friendster in 2002, designers have not yet explored two important notions: 1) What kind of social experience do social networking sites foster?; and 2) Do social networking sites encourage community?
Zollers, Alla. Johnny Holland (2009). Articles>Web Design>Social Networking>User Experience
When a screenwriter can summarize a story in one sentence, he has a compass that can guide him throughout the writing process. Cindy Chastain chronicles how we can translate this approach to help us remember the quality and value of the experience we intend to deliver.
Chastain, Cindy. Boxes and Arrows (2009). Articles>Web Design>User Experience>Collaboration
Non-UX Designers Can Pay Attention to User Experience Too!
Concepts, principals, and parts of User Experience Design can often times be difficult to approach—and this tends to create barriers with new bloggers. This begs the question: Do ordinary bloggers have to worry about UX Design?
Leggett, David. Fuel Your Blogging (2009). Articles>Web Design>User Experience>Blogging
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