User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Tristan Kromer (@trikro), Master Coach and Co-Founder at LUXr, to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, July 18, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr User Experience in Lean Startups : 2-day workshop for Startup Hawaii, Ju...LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 2-day workshop for Startup Hawaii, held in June 2012. The workshop is called Crushing the Boulder: User Experience in Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, May 14, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, Fri September 28, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter (@intelleto), Master Coach and Co-Founder at LUXr, to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
Rally Roundtable : Lean Startup + User Experience = Awesome, July 11, 2012 [S...LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from a RallyPad Roundtable talk (http://rallypad.org) and introduces key concepts in Lean Startup, Customer Development, UX and how they play well together.
LUXr 1-day workshop, June 13, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, April 27, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join the the LUXr team to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, July 18, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr User Experience in Lean Startups : 2-day workshop for Startup Hawaii, Ju...LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 2-day workshop for Startup Hawaii, held in June 2012. The workshop is called Crushing the Boulder: User Experience in Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, May 14, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, Fri September 28, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter (@intelleto), Master Coach and Co-Founder at LUXr, to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
Rally Roundtable : Lean Startup + User Experience = Awesome, July 11, 2012 [S...LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from a RallyPad Roundtable talk (http://rallypad.org) and introduces key concepts in Lean Startup, Customer Development, UX and how they play well together.
LUXr 1-day workshop, June 13, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Kate Rutter of LUXr to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
LUXr 1-day workshop, April 27, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join the the LUXr team to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
Visual design is more than styling. It is function. And not only because it communicates, but also because it makes us feel. And between feeling and communication, people find things easier to use.
User Experience for Lean Startups
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Atomic Object, Grand Rapids MI
Instructor: Lane Halley
This workshop contains four topics:
- Lean UX Basics
- Customer Development Interviews &
Generative Research
- Developing product and interface ideas
- Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation
http://luxr.co/programs/workshops/
http://ux4leanstartupmay19.eventbrite.com/
User Experience for Lean Startups
Saturday, May 23, 2012
Coport, Newport Beach CA
Instructor: Lane Halley
This workshop contains four topics:
- Lean UX Basics
- Customer Development Interviews &
Generative Research
- Developing product and interface ideas
- Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation
http://luxr.co/programs/workshops/
http://ux4leanstartupsmay23.eventbrite.com/
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join the the LUXr team to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
Ladies that UX - CPH
We had our #2 meetup Wednesday, January 11th where we dived into the question "What the F*** is UX" and the different roles of the UX Designer.
The entire thing is always in a state of flux because the field of technology and people is always changing.
So look at this more as guidelines than something that's set in stone!
We want to thank Momondo for hosting us and their wonderful UX ladies to share insights into their work!
#LTUXCPH #CPHFTW
Building Design Knowledge: Creating and Disseminating Design Precedentcolin gray
An invited lecture at Iowa State University on October 9, 2014. This talk focused on the role of design precedent and knowledge-building within the instructional design community, with specific guidance on preparing design cases for publication in the International Journal of Designs for Learning.
LUXr 1-day workshop, August 15, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Tristan Kromer (@TriKro), Master Coach with LUXr, to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
Know Thy User: The Role of Research in Great Interactive Designfrog
In this talk, David Sherwin from frog demystifies the role and use of research in the day-to-day work of an interactive designer. He draws on the collective knowledge of frog's design research practice and his own experience as a design research lead helping to coordinate teams in conducting U.S.-based and global research programs.
SxSW 2013: Behavior Change as Value PropositionChris Risdon
Design to support behavior change is getting increased exposure as technology has allowed products and services to have a more pervasive role in people's lives. But where does persuasion live? What's caused the tipping point for the growth of this new wave of services? The primary characteristic of our new, connected world is the increasing ubiquity of sensors providing the ability to collect data passively and present it back—via feedback loops and visualizations—in a meaningful way to the user. New "smart products" with personalized intelligence about our behavior help us track how many time we brush our teeth or walk the dog with the hope we'll be better at maintaining these habits. Where do these new offerings map on our landscape of products and services? While more products have an explicit influence on our daily lives, they require you to increasingly relinquish self-determination as a prerequisite for use. How do we design to support behavior change as a value proposition?
Episode 245: How Customer Experience Starts with AccessibilityWorkology
Sometimes the business case might get in the way of just doing the right thing. This happens a lot in my opinion when we are looking at accessibility and diversity and inclusion efforts. We often get caught up in the ROI of doing something instead of doing it because it’s the right thing. It’s not so much about the ROI as it is with being a good citizen of the universe and making your business and workplace accessible.
This episode of the Workology Podcast is part of our Future of Work series powered by PEAT, the Partnership on Employment & Accessible Technology. In honor of the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act this year, we’re investigating what the next 30 years will look like for people with disabilities at work, and the potential of emerging technologies to make workplaces more inclusive and accessible. Today, I’m joined by Ted Drake.
3 Rapid Design Activities to a Customer-Centered Product RoadmapBennett King
When developing new product concepts, customer input is often overlooked or brought in later in the process. This leads to early concept generation based on assumption rather than real customer need and can lengthen the overall product development process. In this presentation we discuss three design activities, Formative Design Research, concept development using Design Studio, and Concept Value Testing. These activities can be used to bring the customer voice into the process from the beginning, rapidly create and iterate concepts based on customer-centered requirements, and validate concepts at the earliest point possible, mitigating risks and decreasing development costs.
Using a recent project with Optimal Workshop as an example, this presentation discusses how these tools can be used in conjunction to rapidly create new products. It discusses the goals and techniques of Formative Design Research to understand user behaviors and needs. It talks about bringing Design Studio exercises to your entire team, allowing for cross-functional expertise and rapid iteration to shape the best possible concepts. Then wraps up with an overview of Concept Value Testing, using the Kano Model, that lets you validate or iterate your concept as fast as possible.
This presentation was given February 5th, 2016 in San Francisco
Archetypes in Branding - by Natalia StoryNatalia Story
Archetypes have recently come up as a great approach to creating brands with personality that command long-term loyalty. But how do you approach archetypes? How many are out there? How do you choose the right one and apply it? Natalia Klishina explains in her presentation.
Visual design is more than styling. It is function. And not only because it communicates, but also because it makes us feel. And between feeling and communication, people find things easier to use.
User Experience for Lean Startups
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Atomic Object, Grand Rapids MI
Instructor: Lane Halley
This workshop contains four topics:
- Lean UX Basics
- Customer Development Interviews &
Generative Research
- Developing product and interface ideas
- Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation
http://luxr.co/programs/workshops/
http://ux4leanstartupmay19.eventbrite.com/
User Experience for Lean Startups
Saturday, May 23, 2012
Coport, Newport Beach CA
Instructor: Lane Halley
This workshop contains four topics:
- Lean UX Basics
- Customer Development Interviews &
Generative Research
- Developing product and interface ideas
- Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation
http://luxr.co/programs/workshops/
http://ux4leanstartupsmay23.eventbrite.com/
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join the the LUXr team to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
Ladies that UX - CPH
We had our #2 meetup Wednesday, January 11th where we dived into the question "What the F*** is UX" and the different roles of the UX Designer.
The entire thing is always in a state of flux because the field of technology and people is always changing.
So look at this more as guidelines than something that's set in stone!
We want to thank Momondo for hosting us and their wonderful UX ladies to share insights into their work!
#LTUXCPH #CPHFTW
Building Design Knowledge: Creating and Disseminating Design Precedentcolin gray
An invited lecture at Iowa State University on October 9, 2014. This talk focused on the role of design precedent and knowledge-building within the instructional design community, with specific guidance on preparing design cases for publication in the International Journal of Designs for Learning.
LUXr 1-day workshop, August 15, 2012 [San Francisco]LUXr
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop, UX for Lean Startups.
Join Tristan Kromer (@TriKro), Master Coach with LUXr, to learn Lean Startup methods that help you both make the right product, and make your product right.
Know Thy User: The Role of Research in Great Interactive Designfrog
In this talk, David Sherwin from frog demystifies the role and use of research in the day-to-day work of an interactive designer. He draws on the collective knowledge of frog's design research practice and his own experience as a design research lead helping to coordinate teams in conducting U.S.-based and global research programs.
SxSW 2013: Behavior Change as Value PropositionChris Risdon
Design to support behavior change is getting increased exposure as technology has allowed products and services to have a more pervasive role in people's lives. But where does persuasion live? What's caused the tipping point for the growth of this new wave of services? The primary characteristic of our new, connected world is the increasing ubiquity of sensors providing the ability to collect data passively and present it back—via feedback loops and visualizations—in a meaningful way to the user. New "smart products" with personalized intelligence about our behavior help us track how many time we brush our teeth or walk the dog with the hope we'll be better at maintaining these habits. Where do these new offerings map on our landscape of products and services? While more products have an explicit influence on our daily lives, they require you to increasingly relinquish self-determination as a prerequisite for use. How do we design to support behavior change as a value proposition?
Episode 245: How Customer Experience Starts with AccessibilityWorkology
Sometimes the business case might get in the way of just doing the right thing. This happens a lot in my opinion when we are looking at accessibility and diversity and inclusion efforts. We often get caught up in the ROI of doing something instead of doing it because it’s the right thing. It’s not so much about the ROI as it is with being a good citizen of the universe and making your business and workplace accessible.
This episode of the Workology Podcast is part of our Future of Work series powered by PEAT, the Partnership on Employment & Accessible Technology. In honor of the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act this year, we’re investigating what the next 30 years will look like for people with disabilities at work, and the potential of emerging technologies to make workplaces more inclusive and accessible. Today, I’m joined by Ted Drake.
3 Rapid Design Activities to a Customer-Centered Product RoadmapBennett King
When developing new product concepts, customer input is often overlooked or brought in later in the process. This leads to early concept generation based on assumption rather than real customer need and can lengthen the overall product development process. In this presentation we discuss three design activities, Formative Design Research, concept development using Design Studio, and Concept Value Testing. These activities can be used to bring the customer voice into the process from the beginning, rapidly create and iterate concepts based on customer-centered requirements, and validate concepts at the earliest point possible, mitigating risks and decreasing development costs.
Using a recent project with Optimal Workshop as an example, this presentation discusses how these tools can be used in conjunction to rapidly create new products. It discusses the goals and techniques of Formative Design Research to understand user behaviors and needs. It talks about bringing Design Studio exercises to your entire team, allowing for cross-functional expertise and rapid iteration to shape the best possible concepts. Then wraps up with an overview of Concept Value Testing, using the Kano Model, that lets you validate or iterate your concept as fast as possible.
This presentation was given February 5th, 2016 in San Francisco
Archetypes in Branding - by Natalia StoryNatalia Story
Archetypes have recently come up as a great approach to creating brands with personality that command long-term loyalty. But how do you approach archetypes? How many are out there? How do you choose the right one and apply it? Natalia Klishina explains in her presentation.
Design Sprints for Awesome Teams: Running Design Sprints for Rapid Digital Pr...Dana Mitroff Silvers
Pre-conference workshop at the 2016 Museums and the Web Conference in Los Angeles, CA, on April 6, 2016.
Design Thinking is a set of methods and a mindset that combines empathy, creativity, and rationality to solve human-centered problems, and is the foundation upon which Design Sprints are built. We have run numerous Design Sprints with museums and cultural heritage organizations, and have refined its application to the unique constraints and opportunities of the museum sector.
Come join us for this fun and high-energy workshop in which we’ll walk you through a hands-on Design Sprint and give you tools and resources to bring sprints back to your own organization—and make your team more awesome!
A talk I gave at ProductTank in London in November 2014 for a Lean UX evening. The talk is a case study about designing a product concept using Lean UX methods such as rapid prototyping, in 3 days at a software conference. There is a short video that accompanies the talk here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BA_HZW66jcQ
Lean + UX + Agile: Putting It All TogetherOrthogonal
Lean Startup, Pragmatic Marketing, User Experience Design and Agile Development are all approaches to improve your odds of creating successful products.
Are they mutually exclusive, or can you assemble them together to make a lean, mean product success machine?
Pathfinder Software's Amy Willis (UX) Bernhard Kappe (Products Strategy) and Reid MacTavish (Agile Development) share their lessons learned in making lean+ux+agile work.
How to build a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) - Consider Elevator ManagementAxel Marrocco
What exactly is a KPI. This lesson was developed to help consider how to evaluate the effectiveness of a problem / solution proposal. Elevator Management is used, since it provides a topic almost all can relate with. The focus is not to development an understanding of Critical Success Factors, but to concentrate on elements necessary in constructing a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) of a proposal's effectiveness.
Rapid Product Design Using Lean UX Methods [Tradecraft : May 2014]Kate Rutter
Product design starts with framing an idea that will be valuable for real people in the real world. In this 120 minute workshop, Tradecraft members practiced rapid techniques to envision a product concept that is driven by user needs. Using Lean Startup principles and these fun and rapid methods, they created a coherent, lo-fi product concept, including identifying the problem it solves for people and understanding the role it plays in customers’ lives. By identifying a key metric to indicate traction, they explored the idea in full. They wrapped up with practical, actionable (and simple!) next steps to propel the ideas forward. * This deck includes downloadable templates.
These methods were developed at Luxr. Learn more about Tradecraft at http://tradecrafted.com. Learn more about Luxr at http://luxr.co/.
A presentation I gave at the UK UXPA (@ukuxpa) #LeanUX event in October 2014 in London.
This talk was a variation of my Rapid Product Design talk. I've added a few reflections on my experiences of trying to implement Lean UX principles in a new organisation. I took inspiration from Bill Scott's Lean UX Anti-Patterns to explain some of the problems we encountered.
The other speakers were:
Adrian Howard (@adrianh) from Quietstars who spoke about Lean Persona: http://www.slideshare.net/adrianh/lean-persona
Andrew Godfrey (@tweet_godfrey) from Foolproof who spoke about adapting a Lean UX process and using Lean UX principles in an agency environment, with clients.
Inside you there is a secret product idea...some problem you are just itching to solve. Yet it falls prey to that deadly statement: “Someday, when I have more time...”
In this action-packed 180 minutes, UX Lisbon participants got their ideas out and into the world. Using Lean Startup principles and these fun and rapid methods, they created a coherent, lo-fi product concept and got peer feedback on it. From identifying the problem it solves for people and understanding the role it plays in customers’ lives to identifying a key metric to indicate traction, they explored the idea in full. They wrapped up with practical, actionable (and simple!) next steps to propel the ideas forward.
Developing Metrics and KPI (Key Performance IndicatorsVictor Holman
Get a FREE performance management kit and access to all of Victor's full videos at:
www.lifecycle-performance-pros.com
This presentation covers the basics of developing successful performance metrics, from developing winning KPIs, learning how to develop the right metrics, the rules of developing KPIs and metrics and common performance metrics for managing a successful organization.
This deck was part of the FailChat in San Francisco, Wed May 9, 6:30-9pm at Startup HQ.
“User Experience. We’ll worry about that once we have a product.” ~ Entrepreneur
NO, DON’T DO IT! Don’t wait! Your user experience work starts day one and helps make your product great through every stage of your company’s development. UX answers: Who is your user? What do they struggle with? How do you know if you're making a solution that works?
User Experience designer and entrepreneur Kate Rutter of LUXr shares her mistakes as well as how experimentation, failure, learning, trying again and learning more, helped her improve and won. You’ll get the whole inside scoop on lessons learned along the way.
LUXr Downtown Las Vegas Small Business 1-day workshop, July 11, 2013 [Las Vegas]LUXr
Lean Startup has caught fire, but what does it mean for UX? User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from the LUXr 1-day workshop for Small Business, held as part of the Downtown Project in Las Vegas.
Luxr coaches Kate Rutter & Kim Knoll facilitated a day-long Lean Startup immersive experience that helps people both make the right product, and make the product right.
Lean & UX are great bedfellows. In this talk, given at GROWtalks Montreal & Toronto in Feb 2013, Kate talks about why, and also, why you should NEVER use the term UX/UI again.
Metrics for Online Retail (Shopify/.CO/Luxr webinar)LUXr
We discuss the three key metrics that online retailers should be watching and pushing and why they're important. We also cover a simple framework for making experiments to help drive those numbers.
Rally Roundtable : Lean Startup + User Experience = Awesome, July 11, 2012 [S...Kate Rutter
User Experience is one of the most challenging and least understood aspects of creating a product...and yet it will make or break your product. This deck is from a RallyPad Roundtable talk (http://rallypad.org) and introduces key concepts in Lean Startup, Customer Development, UX and how they play well together.
User Experience for Lean Startups
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Carbon Five, Santa Monica CA
Instructor: Lane Halley
This workshop contains four topics:
- Lean UX Basics
- Customer Development Interviews &
Generative Research
- Developing product and interface ideas
- Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation
http://luxr.co/programs/workshops/
http://lux4leanstartups4-eorg.eventbrite.com/
Kate is a User Experience strategist and designer with a talent for bringing companies and customers closer together through lean strategies, inventive design and participatory practices. Kate’s background spans technology, marketing, interactive media, business management and organizational development.
Design a passion project in three hours using Lean Start-up methodsKate Rutter
Inside you there is a secret product idea...some problem you are just itching to solve. Yet it falls prey to that deadly statement: “Someday, when I have more time...”
In this action-packed 180 minutes, UX London participants got their ideas out and into the world. Using Lean Startup principles and these fun and rapid methods, they created a coherent, lo-fi product concept and got peer feedback on it. From identifying the problem it solves for people and understanding the role it plays in customers’ lives to identifying a key metric to indicate traction, they explored the idea in full. They wrapped up with practical, actionable (and simple!) next steps to propel the ideas forward.
Realify your Secret Idea with Lean Startup MethodsKate Rutter
Admit it. Inside you there is a secret product idea. Yet it falls prey to that deadly statement: “Someday, when I have more time…”
In an action-packed 180 minutes, you’ll “realify” it: get that idea out and into the world. This session is about skill-building through personal expression; a structured and engaging way to get hands-on with design methods from the Lean UX / Lean Startup world and explore an idea that is personally meaningful.
These techniques are directly and immediately applicable to UX design in the enterprise, startups and mid-sized companies.
Setting Course: Design Research to Experience RoadmapJason Ulaszek
Presented by Jason Ulaszek and Brian Winters at Interactions '13 on January 28th, 2013.
Have you ever been enlisted by your company or client to create a consumer “vision” for the evolution of their product or service? As design-thinking principles and activities continue to become centerstage in transforming business models, creating new products and services to meet consumer and market demand, we'll be counted on to leverage our skill to help inform business direction.
So, how do you do it?
Design research is critical. Creating foundational, living documentation about the needs, beliefs and behaviors of your customer is of the utmost importance. And, being able to identify needs, opportunities and the future direction for the business, based on both sound process and analytical thought, will be your keys to short and long-term success.
In this session you'll learn how to turn design research activities into a mental model, identify potential new business opportunities and derive business and experience direction from your newly found consumer insight. And, you'll look like a freakin' rockstar in your company doing it.
These are slides from a talk I gave on November 17, 2012 to students from NYU's Wagner School for Public Service, the School of Visual Arts and Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs as part of the 2012 Social Enterprise Boot Camp. Most slides require some notes.
Designers Vs Developers—Can't we all just get alongHollie Lubbock
Teams working across disciplines often suffer from misunderstandings, which creates tension. Let’s look at ways we can better understand each other to create products that users love <3
From Openfest 2015, Sofia https://www.openfest.org/2015/en/schedule/
Similar to LUXr 1-day workshop, Wed November 07, 2012 [San Francisco] (20)
Talk given by Kate Rutter, Co-Founder of LUXr at the Silicon Valley Agile Leadership Network Meetup on May 14, 2013 (http://www.meetup.com/Silicon-Valley-Agile-Leadership-Network/events/102190522/). 20-minute activity included!
Bringing the Lean Startup message to Korea. There are a couple of fantastic slides in here, like "10 steps to making a startup" -- the old way and the new way.
Become a Stickynote Ninja, workshop [UX Week 2008]LUXr
An old workshop, but evergreen content. The power of the stickynote just keeps growing. This workshop was originally presented at Adaptive Path's 2008 UX Week.
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Safalta Digital marketing institute in Noida, provide complete applications that encompass a huge range of virtual advertising and marketing additives, which includes search engine optimization, virtual communication advertising, pay-per-click on marketing, content material advertising, internet analytics, and greater. These university courses are designed for students who possess a comprehensive understanding of virtual marketing strategies and attributes.Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida is a first choice for young individuals or students who are looking to start their careers in the field of digital advertising. The institute gives specialized courses designed and certification.
for beginners, providing thorough training in areas such as SEO, digital communication marketing, and PPC training in Noida. After finishing the program, students receive the certifications recognised by top different universitie, setting a strong foundation for a successful career in digital marketing.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Honest Reviews of Tim Han LMA Course Program.pptxtimhan337
Personal development courses are widely available today, with each one promising life-changing outcomes. Tim Han’s Life Mastery Achievers (LMA) Course has drawn a lot of interest. In addition to offering my frank assessment of Success Insider’s LMA Course, this piece examines the course’s effects via a variety of Tim Han LMA course reviews and Success Insider comments.
2. Ask yourself:
What 3 assumptions about your customers
do you have that, if you are wrong, your
business will fail.
Write down 3.
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
3. Who’s in the room?
• Name
• Company
• Context (startup, enterprise, consultancy)
• Role (biz/product, developer, design)
• 1 of your assumptions
• 1 weirdness / awesomeness
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
7. This is not...
A class on how to
(how do you know itʼs awesome?)
produce an awesome UI
A session on making (how do you know these arenʼt
production wireframes or a waste of valuable time?)
photoshop comps
A “perfect approach” or (100s of entrepreneurs have
used these techniques to define
a rigid point of view on their own unique Great UX.)
Great UX.
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
13. Disclaimer
I am not an expert in your business.
Only you can be the expert
in your business.
My job is:
• to ask the unasked questions;
• to challenge assumptions;
• and give you tools to succeed.
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
14. Today we’ll cover...
I. Lean + UX Fundamentals
II. Three Lean UX experiments:
1. Get to Know your Customer
2. Act on Customer Needs
3. Measure What Matters
III. Bring it all together
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
15. What is this stuff?!?!
I : Lean UX Fundamentals
What is Lean Startup?
What is UX?
What is UX for Lean Startups?
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
21. Don’t go to market,!
maximize learning"
Steve Blank introduced
Don’t go to market,!
“Customer Development”
maximize learning"
in ~2006.
The big idea...
Learn" Execute"
P/MF"
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
Learn" Execute"
23. Eric Ries wrote
a blog post on
Sept 8, 2008
titled “The Lean
Startup.”
The big idea...
+ +
make products reduce
incremental
customers
want releases waste
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
25. The Influence of Agile
“The courage to speak truths,
pleasant or unpleasant, fosters
communication and trust.
“The courage to discard failing
solutions and seek new ones
encourages simplicity.
“The courage to seek real,
concrete answers creates
feedback.”
—Kent Beck
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
31. User Experience is...
A personʼs perceptions and responses that
result from the use or anticipated use of a
product, service or system.
product UI UX
via Ed Lea: http://design.org/blog/difference-between-ux-and-ui-subtleties-explained-cereal
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
32. User Experience is...
A personʼs perceptions and responses that
result from the use or anticipated use of a
product, service or system.
product UI UX
via Ed Lea: http://design.org/blog/difference-between-ux-and-ui-subtleties-explained-cereal
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
33. UX brings 10* years
of experience, methods, and
patterns of work.
*20, 30, 50 years
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
34. UX people are EXPERTS at “getting out of the building”
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
35. UX == Customer Discovery
People, their
goals & needs
Sketches and
prototypes
Interactions and
flows
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
36. Design > UI THINK
MAKE
CHECK
Users
1. I need...
why
what Needs 2. I want...
3. My goal is...
how
Business thinking goes here
Mary can...
BUILD
Uses MEASURE
LEARN
Features
Sketches, wireframes, pixels
This Week
Prototypes
User Stories
Themed Releases
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
37. UX cycles == Lean Startup learning loops
THINK
MAKE
Reduc
cycle e
time,
not
build
time
CHECK
Generative Research • Ideation • Mental models • Participatory Design • Contextual Inquiry • Concept Maps •
THINK Behavior Models • Test Results • Competitive Analysis
Personas • Sketches • Prototypes • Wireframes • Value Prop • Landing View • Hypotheses • Comps • Deployed Code
MAKE
Evaluative Research • A/B Testing • Site Analytics • Usability Testing • Funnel Analysis • Interruptive Surveys
CHECK
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
38. II : Three Lean Team Activies
1. Get to Know your Customers
2. Act on Customer Needs
3. Measure What Matters
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
39. Today’s Challenge
Hypothesis
We believe that modern families would benefit
from having better ways to keep up with tasks,
and are willing to pay for a better way to
coordinate tasks with other family members,
friends and neighbors.
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
40. 1
Get to Know Your
Customers
(Customer Development Interviews)
Types of Research
Personas
How to Interview
Practice Interview
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
41. User Research
quant qual
• Contextual Inquiry
(Byer & Holzblatt)
• Mental Models (Indi Young)
Generative surveys
•Interviews
•Starbucks
Optimizely• •Hallway usability
Analytics• •remote
Evaluative A/B Testing•
Usability
Key Metrics•
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
42. User Research
quant qual
Generative Interviews
Evaluative
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
43. Customer Interviews
* Identify who you want to talk to.
* Articulate your hypotheses.
* Craft a topic map for the session.
* Jot down conversation prompts.
* Have the conversation
* Debrief!
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
47. {Activity}
Make a persona
Portrait
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
48. {Activity}
Make a persona
Demographics
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
49. {Activity}
Make a persona
Behaviors
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
50. {Activity}
Make a persona
Needs & Goals
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
51. {Activity}
Bring it together
Discuss & create
a unified persona
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
52. {check}
3 checks
* Does this sound like a person who could exist?
If no, make adjustments.
* Is this an actual person you know?
If yes, make adjustments.
* Is the persona respectful?
If no, make adjustments or re-do. Contempt is not helpful.
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
53. Customer Interviews
! Identify who you want to talk to.
! Articulate your hypotheses.
* Craft a topic map for the session.
* Jot down conversation prompts.
* Have the conversation
* Debrief!
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
55. Topic Map
mobile/
feeling
internet
overwhelmed
habits?
keeping
everything
working
last time
they got help
(house
cleaner) personal commute
time
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
56. {Activity}
Add a topic
mobile/
internet
habits?
keeping
everything
working
last time
they got help
(house
cleaner) personal commute
time
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
57. Customer Interviews
! Identify who you want to talk to.
! Articulate your hypotheses.
! Craft a topic map for the session.
* Jot down conversation prompts.
* Have the conversation
* Debrief!
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
58. Conversation Prompts
“Have you ever had ________ experience?”
“Can you tell me the story about that?”
“And then what happened?”
“Why [or how] did you do that?”
“What did you love [or hate] about that?”
“If you could wave a magic wand, what would
it be like?”
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
59. {Activity}
Brainstorm a question
“Have you ever had
__________________________
experience?”
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
60. Customer Interviews
! Identify who you want to talk to.
! Articulate your hypotheses.
! Craft a topic map for the session.
! Jot down conversation prompts.
* Have the conversation
* Debrief!
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
61. During the Interview
DO
• Take notes
• Smile
• Ask open-ended questions
• Get their story
• Shut up and listen
DONʼT
• Talk about your product
• Ask about future behavior
• Sell
• Ask leading questions
• Talk much
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
62. {Activity}
Practice an interview
1 interviewer + 1 interviewee
note-takers
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
63. After the Interview: Debrief
DUMP (5min, solo)
1 idea per sticky
“What I heard”
“What I saw”
“What stood out”
SORT (10min, team)
Collect similar items
Label groups
Stack duplicates
Note trends and exceptions
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
66. 2
Act on
Customer Needs
(Developing product and interface ideas)
Sketching
6-Up Uses
Dot Voting
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
67. Remember this?
Users
1. BLAH
why
what Needs 2. BLAH
3. BLAH
how
(INSERT BUSINESS THINKING HERE)
Mary can...
Uses
Features
(CREATE SKETCHES,
WIREFRAMES & PIXELS)
This Week
User Stories
Themed Releases
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
68. BLAH BLAH BLAH
BLAH BLAH BLAH
BLAH BLAH BLAH
BLAH BLAH BLAH
A person BLAH BLAH
and their
needs
Your
business
vision
why
USES:
what
What can
how Mary do with
your product?
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
69. 6 Uses
An illustration that shows “What will they DO with this product?” It
intersects user needs with business vision to show the consumer value
proposition. This informs what features are most important.
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
76. {Organize!}
Post your persona, 2 uses
and 3-4 features on the
wall. (off to the side)
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
77. What you have now
Who is our user What can a user How will they
and what are their do with our do that?
needs & goals? product?
Persona 6-up uses Limited features to
support the uses
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
81. Top questions
Will people use it?
Why wonʼt people use it?
Whatʼs wrong with this?
How could I make this better?
How can I improve conversion?
Are we making progress?
Do people like this?
Are these results good?
Why do people do that?
Did we do the right thing?
Why is there dropoff?
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
82. User Research
quantitative qualitative
generate surveys user interviews
ideas
a/b testing
evaluate analytics usability testing
product KPIs
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
85. {Activity}
Brainstorm measures
(from features)
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
86. {Activity}
Divide into 2 piles:
less more
important important
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
87. {Activity}
As a team, get to 5
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
88. {Activity}
Check your metrics
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
89. Metrics checklist
• “number of...” [ # ]
1. Does the metric • “average number of...” [avg ]
begin with a number? • “percent of...” [ % ]
• “per week” [ ___/wk ]
2. Is there a time basis? • “per month” [ ___/mo]
• “per user” [ ___/user]
3. Is there an object • “per user per week” (fancy!)
basis? • Examples: per user, per session,
or by interaction or item
* not required, but super-helpful
(messages per file, emails
per thread)
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
90. Metrics checklist
a good metric... a great metric...
...measures the usage of your ...makes you look at all the
product by a person. The usage other metrics and say “none of
should be specific to features that those other numbers matter if
deliver value to your user. we donʼt get this right first.”
unhelpful vanity good better awesome
% of users % of users
% of new
total number who sign in who share a
users per
sign-ups of registered 3+ times a task 3+
week
users day, times a day,
per week per week
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
95. Advanced topics
Conversion metrics Pirate Metrics - AARRR!
Cohort metrics
Instrumentation Acquisition
Activation
Retention
What should I be measuring?
(a few search terms) Referral
“Vanity Metrics” Revenue
“KPI”
“A/B Tests”
“Metrics for Pirates”
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
96. Tools Landscape
ANALYTICS CONVERSION TESTING UNMODERATED
Google Analytics Unbounce TESTS WITH VIDEO
KISS Metrics Optimizely Usertesting.com
Mixpanel TryMyUI
Flurry Userlytics
LocalLytics WhatUsersDo
Stats Mix (just an api) Loop11
HEAT MAPPING MESSAGE RECALL MICRO USABILITY
Crazy Egg ClueApp Navflow
Click Tale FiveSecondTest Usabilia
Clicktest
Verify
Intuition HQ
UserZoom
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
100. {Activity}
Make a narrative
We are _______________
Meet...
M V P with __________, ________ can...
using these features
we will measure
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
101. A direct through-line
Users
1. BLAH
why
what Needs 2. BLAH
3. BLAH
how
(INSERT BUSINESS THINKING HERE)
Mary can...
Uses
Features
(CREATE SKETCHES,
WIREFRAMES & PIXELS)
This Week
User Stories
Themed Releases
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
103. Patterns of work
1. Generate independently, discuss as a team
(3 people ideal)
2. Dump & Sort
(one item per Post-It, use Sharpie)
3. Sketch
(especially of people)
4. Work at the wall
5. Timebox!
(speed kills the censor and keeps you moving)
6. 2x2 organizing framework
(help decision-making when lots of items)
7. Quick decision-making techniques
(dot-vote, roman vote, stack rank)
LUXR.CO Nov 2012
106. About LUXr
LUXr provides practical, hands-on tools for entrepreneurs
around the world. LUXr helps startups deliver products that
customers want, need and love to buy.
Bento Core
Boxes Curriculum Residency Workshops
Practical, Learning 8 weeks to Core concepts
hands-on products for awesome for and hands-on
learning for accelerators & early-stage activities for
entrepreneurs education teams. everyone.
worldwide. programs.
LUXr • 3435 Cesar Chavez
San Francisco, CA • 94110
info@luxr.co • http://luxr.co • twitter: @luxrco
Janice Fraser, Founder & CEO [janice@luxr.co • @clevergirl ]
Jason Fraser, Co-Founder & Operations Lead [jason@luxr.co ]
Kate Rutter, Co-Founder & Designer [kate@luxr.co • @katerutter ]
LUXR.CO Nov 2012