When companies adopt an agile development environment, UX teams often feel like they just lost their seat at the table. It’s never easy to change, but by adapting your UX practices to accommodate agile, you can have the impact on design you always wanted.
The JoomlaChicago Loop sponsored "Joomla & Responsive Design", a presentation focused on the key ingredients and dynamics of making a Joomla website flow and react to the different viewing devices and browser viewport sizes.
Dennis Kmetz (Director of Interactive Media, Taylor Bruce Design Partnership) presented Joomla & Responsive Design on Thursday, March 1, 2012.
The experience your customers have with your products is a critical component of success. Valuable products can solve real human needs, fulfill desires, and improve the quality the of life. This goes beyond just building more features, or making things look pretty. It involves understanding and empathizing with your customers, and involving them in the design process.
How do we do this? And how do we do this in a way that fits into the operational rhythms of Agile development? These perspectives are shared by a long-time UX designer who has recently moved into Agile.
The JoomlaChicago Loop sponsored "Joomla & Responsive Design", a presentation focused on the key ingredients and dynamics of making a Joomla website flow and react to the different viewing devices and browser viewport sizes.
Dennis Kmetz (Director of Interactive Media, Taylor Bruce Design Partnership) presented Joomla & Responsive Design on Thursday, March 1, 2012.
The experience your customers have with your products is a critical component of success. Valuable products can solve real human needs, fulfill desires, and improve the quality the of life. This goes beyond just building more features, or making things look pretty. It involves understanding and empathizing with your customers, and involving them in the design process.
How do we do this? And how do we do this in a way that fits into the operational rhythms of Agile development? These perspectives are shared by a long-time UX designer who has recently moved into Agile.
Tell Me What You Do: How Storytelling Makes You a Better DesignerMary Wharmby
As design asks for a larger seat at the table and works to foster a culture of customer-centered design-thinking, we must better communicate our process and value to others who don't understand this mysterious power of UX. Storytelling is a great way to do that.
Despite the fact that we talk a lot about story in UX, we have trouble putting it into practice, especially our own stories.
This talk recasts our design process as story, making it more impactful and relatable to others. We discuss the uses of story in UX, provide a visual map of the UX story framework (UXStoryWheel), and demonstrate a few simple story patterns.
Building Buy-In: Internally Positioning UX for Executive Impact. BigDesign...John Whalen
Presented at: BigDesign2016
Why can’t other people in your organization see what you see? That UX insights you uncovered will revolutionize your company and delight your customers like never before! Doesn’t everyone “get” UX nowadays?
The truth is more complicated than just recognizing UX value: Your professional goals and focus are different than those of others in your organization (e.g., C-Suite, Product Managers, Marketers, Developers) by design. What to do? Learn how to position and present your work for maximum uptake to ensure UX has a sizeable and valuable impact on your products and customer experience.
We reveal what we have learned – often the hard way – about linking UX research and design with organizational goals and strategic directives.
With a little planning, you can to ensure your creative UX work has an influence and actually sees the light of day when the product is launched.
Lean UX: Building a shared understanding to get out of the deliverables businessJeff Gothelf
This is the latest iteration of the Lean UX conversation as given at UX LX (Lisbon) in May of 2012. Many thanks to Jeff Patton for the opening imagery.
User experience doesn't happen on a screen: It happens in the mind.John Whalen
User experience is a vital component of mission-critical projects. The vast majority of experience is digital. We spend insane amounts of time and money designing UX for websites, apps and products to impress users. But the truth is UX isn’t a singular experience we can define. And it doesn’t happen on a screen – it happens in the mind. More specifically, the six minds.
Discover how UX is truly a collection of experiences occurring across six brain concentrations, each with their own processing styles and ideal states. And how, using psychological principles, you can uncover the conscious and subconscious needs of these six minds to appeal to users on cognitive and emotional levels.
UX Workshop introducing what UX is and why it is important. The audience may or may not be familiar with UX so the presentation focuses more on principles than a step-by-step how-to.
An introduction to Lean UX, grounded in Lean Startup and Agile principles. A starting point for shifting today's organizations towards a safer sustainable approach to product design and development.
This deck covers:
What is user experience design?
How lean concepts changed our approach to UXD
How to begin a successful UX project
How to implement user research to get actionable insight
Going from Here to There: Transitioning into a UX Careerdpanarelli
A lot of people are curious about transitioning into the field of User Experience Design (UX). In this talk, I talk about a few different ways that you can transition into a UX career, be it grad school, night classes, or the ol' school of hard knocks, backed up by case studies. This talk was given at NoVA UX Meetup in the offices of AddThis, hosted by organizer Jim Lane.
This is the story of how we doubled the conversion rate on HubSpot.com, by leveraging a lean design process that's focused on rapid iteration and objectivity. Get an in-depth look at our distinctive UX process and how we've applied it at a public company with over 1,600 employees across 7 global offices. See exactly how it works and walk through every step of a real project, where we redesigned HubSpot.com in a period of less than 3 months. See the results, both quantitatively and qualitatively, and how we achieved them. Walk away with all of the information that you need to apply a similar process at your company. This isn’t another abstract process talk; it’s a hands-on session with actionable learnings and take-aways, backed up by data and a well-documented case study.
This is the short talk I gave at the beginning of the June 2nd, 2011 meeting of the NYC Agile Experience Design meetup. It is meant to give context to the panel discussion which followed. That consisted of 4 non-designers (dev, product, qa) giving their POV on Lean UX. The full video of that talk is here: http://www.vimeo.com/24638334
A virtual guest lecture for a Digital Content Management class at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, introducing the students to UX in general, talking about my career/experience/projects, and suggesting tie-ins with library science and content.
You'll learn:
- How to run the right research on tight timelines
- How to plan research while still designing
- How object-oriented UX can improve the Agile process
Make User Experience Part of The KPI Conversation With Universal MeasuresUserZoom
Join Dr. Andrea Peer and learn:
-How Universal Measures makes tangible the abstract concept of experience for your organization
-How practitioners can make experience a critical KPI for their organization
-Ways to establish experience score goals for all lines of business
-The benefits Universal Measures brings to executives and stakeholders
Lean UX: Getting out of the deliverables businessJeff Gothelf
This is an expanded presentation detailing how to focus on leaner user experience design methods and reducing the amount of deliverables in your work. It advocates focusing on the actual experience being created and not the deliverable itself as the end state of a project by reducing waste and choosing the right tool at the right time at the right depth. See also bit.ly/LeanUX
Running engaging Market Research Online Communities. Social media has gained considerable human relevance. User-created content, citizen journalism and online social interactions (e.g. conversation, collaboration, participation, sharing, connecting) are embedded into the daily lives of consumers. With the different semantic waves of the web, the entire market research process and industry has undergone clear changes. Market research has changed from asking questions to having conversations with consumers. Online Research Communities have proven to be a viable environment to engage with consumers as well as marketing executives in a connected and participatory way. What makes research communities unique is that they assemble consumers to interact in an asynchronous longitudinal setting by applying social media techniques. Companies outsource tasks to a crowd (e.g. product and service creation and testing) in an open call in order to bring consumers inside organizations all the way up to the boardroom. Research communities bring true consumer connect between marketers and their target groups as they use interactive tools to tap into social interactions between people, and allow a more equal relationship between researchers, brands and participants.
Tell Me What You Do: How Storytelling Makes You a Better DesignerMary Wharmby
As design asks for a larger seat at the table and works to foster a culture of customer-centered design-thinking, we must better communicate our process and value to others who don't understand this mysterious power of UX. Storytelling is a great way to do that.
Despite the fact that we talk a lot about story in UX, we have trouble putting it into practice, especially our own stories.
This talk recasts our design process as story, making it more impactful and relatable to others. We discuss the uses of story in UX, provide a visual map of the UX story framework (UXStoryWheel), and demonstrate a few simple story patterns.
Building Buy-In: Internally Positioning UX for Executive Impact. BigDesign...John Whalen
Presented at: BigDesign2016
Why can’t other people in your organization see what you see? That UX insights you uncovered will revolutionize your company and delight your customers like never before! Doesn’t everyone “get” UX nowadays?
The truth is more complicated than just recognizing UX value: Your professional goals and focus are different than those of others in your organization (e.g., C-Suite, Product Managers, Marketers, Developers) by design. What to do? Learn how to position and present your work for maximum uptake to ensure UX has a sizeable and valuable impact on your products and customer experience.
We reveal what we have learned – often the hard way – about linking UX research and design with organizational goals and strategic directives.
With a little planning, you can to ensure your creative UX work has an influence and actually sees the light of day when the product is launched.
Lean UX: Building a shared understanding to get out of the deliverables businessJeff Gothelf
This is the latest iteration of the Lean UX conversation as given at UX LX (Lisbon) in May of 2012. Many thanks to Jeff Patton for the opening imagery.
User experience doesn't happen on a screen: It happens in the mind.John Whalen
User experience is a vital component of mission-critical projects. The vast majority of experience is digital. We spend insane amounts of time and money designing UX for websites, apps and products to impress users. But the truth is UX isn’t a singular experience we can define. And it doesn’t happen on a screen – it happens in the mind. More specifically, the six minds.
Discover how UX is truly a collection of experiences occurring across six brain concentrations, each with their own processing styles and ideal states. And how, using psychological principles, you can uncover the conscious and subconscious needs of these six minds to appeal to users on cognitive and emotional levels.
UX Workshop introducing what UX is and why it is important. The audience may or may not be familiar with UX so the presentation focuses more on principles than a step-by-step how-to.
An introduction to Lean UX, grounded in Lean Startup and Agile principles. A starting point for shifting today's organizations towards a safer sustainable approach to product design and development.
This deck covers:
What is user experience design?
How lean concepts changed our approach to UXD
How to begin a successful UX project
How to implement user research to get actionable insight
Going from Here to There: Transitioning into a UX Careerdpanarelli
A lot of people are curious about transitioning into the field of User Experience Design (UX). In this talk, I talk about a few different ways that you can transition into a UX career, be it grad school, night classes, or the ol' school of hard knocks, backed up by case studies. This talk was given at NoVA UX Meetup in the offices of AddThis, hosted by organizer Jim Lane.
This is the story of how we doubled the conversion rate on HubSpot.com, by leveraging a lean design process that's focused on rapid iteration and objectivity. Get an in-depth look at our distinctive UX process and how we've applied it at a public company with over 1,600 employees across 7 global offices. See exactly how it works and walk through every step of a real project, where we redesigned HubSpot.com in a period of less than 3 months. See the results, both quantitatively and qualitatively, and how we achieved them. Walk away with all of the information that you need to apply a similar process at your company. This isn’t another abstract process talk; it’s a hands-on session with actionable learnings and take-aways, backed up by data and a well-documented case study.
This is the short talk I gave at the beginning of the June 2nd, 2011 meeting of the NYC Agile Experience Design meetup. It is meant to give context to the panel discussion which followed. That consisted of 4 non-designers (dev, product, qa) giving their POV on Lean UX. The full video of that talk is here: http://www.vimeo.com/24638334
A virtual guest lecture for a Digital Content Management class at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, introducing the students to UX in general, talking about my career/experience/projects, and suggesting tie-ins with library science and content.
You'll learn:
- How to run the right research on tight timelines
- How to plan research while still designing
- How object-oriented UX can improve the Agile process
Make User Experience Part of The KPI Conversation With Universal MeasuresUserZoom
Join Dr. Andrea Peer and learn:
-How Universal Measures makes tangible the abstract concept of experience for your organization
-How practitioners can make experience a critical KPI for their organization
-Ways to establish experience score goals for all lines of business
-The benefits Universal Measures brings to executives and stakeholders
Lean UX: Getting out of the deliverables businessJeff Gothelf
This is an expanded presentation detailing how to focus on leaner user experience design methods and reducing the amount of deliverables in your work. It advocates focusing on the actual experience being created and not the deliverable itself as the end state of a project by reducing waste and choosing the right tool at the right time at the right depth. See also bit.ly/LeanUX
Running engaging Market Research Online Communities. Social media has gained considerable human relevance. User-created content, citizen journalism and online social interactions (e.g. conversation, collaboration, participation, sharing, connecting) are embedded into the daily lives of consumers. With the different semantic waves of the web, the entire market research process and industry has undergone clear changes. Market research has changed from asking questions to having conversations with consumers. Online Research Communities have proven to be a viable environment to engage with consumers as well as marketing executives in a connected and participatory way. What makes research communities unique is that they assemble consumers to interact in an asynchronous longitudinal setting by applying social media techniques. Companies outsource tasks to a crowd (e.g. product and service creation and testing) in an open call in order to bring consumers inside organizations all the way up to the boardroom. Research communities bring true consumer connect between marketers and their target groups as they use interactive tools to tap into social interactions between people, and allow a more equal relationship between researchers, brands and participants.
For IKEA, the yearly Catalogue is the main communication channel with existing and potential customers globally. This case study shows how the 2013 edition of the Catalogue and possible covers for the 2014 edition were evaluated qualitatively around the world, through Market Research Online Communities (or Consumer Consulting Boards) in five different countries.
Design thinking innovation training course outline - building a co-design app...DesignThinkers
This course outline presents an approach to developing cross-functional teams that learn how to co-create and innovate in an action learning experience.
Exploring the world of water - The conversation revolution: brands & people d...InSites Consulting
Danone wanted to understand the use of water in daily life and highlight consumer expectations for water consumption in general, in order to determine the main consumer perceived benefits. It was important to focus on the scientific objectives (also afterwards in clinical testing) to prove and understand 4 certain effects of water. The final output Danone was looking for needed to confirm that water can bring real benefits for consumers and to show which benefits would be most impactful in the market when proven. In order to investigate water consumption from different angles, we implemented a ‘fusion research’ design. Fusion research is a research design where multiple (contemporary) research methodologies are combined in order to study a certain research question from different angles. By applying triangulation, a holistic view is achieved around the same solution or marketing problem. Each of the selected methods adds one piece to the final puzzle and serves as input for the subsequent phase.
It was 1876 and Alexander Graham Bell was pitching his start-up. He offered Western Union his telephone technology for a rumored $100,000. The company dismissed it as 'an electrical toy'. The quote, although recently challenged for its authenticity, is an accurate reflection of the factors that drive product adoption. What is recognizable speech if not product readiness, telephone devices in every city, a means of distribution and the question of why anyone would use it - that of shifting consumer habits? Fast forward 130 years and the questions are the same about video communications. Video communications are nothing new. The goal of making it easier to see the person you’re talking to is a consistent theme in telephony. And yet by far the fastest growing communication method in the last 50 years has been short, asynchronous text messaging, with WhatsApp alone generating 18.3 trillion messages annually and an aggregated SMS volume at 8.16 trillion. So why is video communication not mainstream yet and what can we do to accelerate its adoption?
This Lecture will look at the theories of Johan Huizinga and the Magic Circle and interogate it through the practice of Augmented and Alternative Reality Gaming as a form of New Media Storytelling
An ever-increasing number of organizations is chasing the benefits of social collaboration. Unfortunately many of these initiatives leave participants behind with a hangover. Gartner estimates that throughout 2015 about 80% of social business efforts are not expected to achieve the intended benefits. Here are 10 tips to avoid a collaboration hangover. Enjoy the read!
Making things is part of who we are. With the possibilities provided by digital media, we’re shifting from random acts of creativity by everyday people to organized initiatives like crowd funding. As innovation challenges are evolving from product attributes to holistic brand design, service design and the experience environment, there’s a need to collaborate with users beyond co-creation. By involving them earlier in the process through observational research and also in the back end of innovation by testing beta products, users can become your partner in innovation.
DIY UX: Give Your Users an Upgrade (Without Calling In a Pro)Whitney Hess
Have you fallen in love with your solution and forgotten the original problem? Are you certain that your product actually makes people’s lives better? Not every company can hire someone like me to help you listen to your users, so you’re gonna have to learn how to do some of this stuff yourself. I’ll show you techniques to find out who your users are, what they really need and how to go about giving it to them in an easy to use and pleasurable way. And it doesn’t have to bankrupt you or kill your release date.
Finding your edge at the edges by Kristof De Wulf at TEDxGhent. The future ain’t what it used to be. In today’s world of acceleration, automation and accessibility, we are expected to be ’relieved’ from working, learning and owning. But if we take away the very things that provide us with a sense of accomplishment and purpose in life, what is left for us humans? The more human-like machines take over our functions, the more we are left with a feeling of emptiness, says Kristof De Wulf. In his talk, he shares his thoughts on how we can overcome this feeling by going to the edges of our normal brain functioning. Kristof is co-founder and CEO of InSites Consulting, currently the world’s 3rd most innovative marketing research agency. He has won several awards and is a proud member of Switch & Shift’s League of Extraordinary Thinkers.
The Art of Research: Using the power of images to increase the value of the D...InSites Consulting
DIESEL recognizes the need for social currency among today's increasingly digitalized Generation Y and is focusing its efforts on Pinterest as the ideal location to inspire and connect with females within their desired target demographic. DIESEL is known for tapping into subcultures with self-aware marketing, which is also the case on Pinterest. The platform allows DIESEL to build a unique look and feel by making it easy for them to bring the personality and DNA of the brand in an accessible magazine-like online display.
As a fashion company, DIESEL can use Pinterest as a brand-building exercise where they can tell the brand story, showcase DIESEL’s many facets, display individual collections and campaigns and where anyone can learn what the brand stands for. DIESEL launched its Pinterest page in the early days of the platform. Over the last year, they maintained their boards merely as a mirror of their Facebook content. The strategy was to showcase their collection as a lifestyle brand.
Early 2013, the growing popularity of the platform brought Pinterest into strategic focus in its own right. Additionally, considering DIESEL’s strategic decision to augment its focus on communicating with women and the fact that Pinterest is more used by women, DIESEL wanted to focus its efforts on Pinterest to use it as a valuable communication channel to connect with this female target group online. In order to optimize the platform for brand activation, instead of a repository of Facebook content, there was a strong need for insights on the best digital strategy for the DIESEL Pinterest page.
Lean + UX = Awesome (and UX is not UI) [Growtalks, Aug 22 2012, Vancouver]Kate Rutter
Lean Startup and UX work together like gangbusters. To get the most out of this lovefest, it's important that you realize UX and UI are not the same. This talk walks through why.
Game on qualitative researchers: Using gamification to increase partipant eng...InSites Consulting
We believe gamification can be applied in 3 different phases of the research process; (1) during data collection, (2) during analysis and interpretation and (3) during reporting and presentation of the results. In this paper, we present an approach to gamification in online qualitative research. There is already ample research with respect to using gamification in quantitative research; however, a comprehensive approach for online qualitative research is lacking so far.
In this paper we will focus on using gamification during data collection and will briefly demonstrate how we apply gamification in the last 2 phases. At InSites Consulting, we identified 4 levels in an online community at which gamification can be applied to increase data quality, participant engagement and impact on the client side. From a question level to a community level, gamification helps, not only to increase participant engagement, but also to increase data quality.
From validating to understanding: Why measuring insights strenght is not suff...InSites Consulting
In today’s business reality, decisions cannot be based on random, uncontrollable factors such as luck. The same goes for the assessment of which insights to take on in the innovation funnel. In this fast-moving environment the risk of failure is greater than ever. Figures reported by the Doblin Group show that 96% of all new product introductions and innovations fail to return their cost of capital. The current market space requires brands to validate each step of the entire innovation process, starting with the validation of insights.
Considering the importance of validating these insights for the innovation process, the need for accuracy is more present than ever. Can insight validation through surveys reclaim its position to provide consistent and rich data for decision-making by capturing the complex consumer reality, while at the same time increasing the engagement level?
Idean works very closely with startups through carefully selected incubators and accelerators.
This experience led Idean's head of design to conduct a presentation and a large group workshop on October 17, 2013 for 8 startups at the Blackbox incubator.
Kindly find the presentation attached. It has some screens of different research methodologies. Enjoy!
Get Agile - Scrum for UX, Design and DevelopmentPieter Jongerius
This is a book preview, it will be published fall 2012. The book is aimed at everyone who works on interactive products in a design and development environment. It contains all of the basic information required for getting started with Scrum, but also offers a number of in-depth chapters looking at topics which even the most experienced Scrummers have trouble with on a daily basis.
The book is a manual. It goes though all of the phases of setting up and executing a Scrum project step by step, and looks at the various roles and disciplines hereby required. If you are experienced, you will find the advanced tips and tricks useful. If you are just considering Scrum, this book will most certainly get you enthusiastic!
There's a lot of content available about design sprints; what they are, how to run them, why they are useful. Key to them being successful is having a diverse team, including engineers. Very little of the content available covers the important role engineers play at this stage of product creation.
The Guide to Agile UX Design Sprint PlaybookKaren Ho
Alex Gamble is a product designer at Price Waterhouse Coopers New Zealand. He has helped a variety of businesses, from small start-ups to big corporates, develop user-centred products. Alex’s goal is to bring forward a lean product revolution.
What makes websites a strong channel for the company? Is it the visuals or what it does for its customers? As success is increasingly fought at the experience level, can design help you build websites that people truly value? And if so, how?
This presentation is about good design discovery by way of effective User Experience research. It's a set of methods you can mix and match to truly understand who you're designing for, according to what the medium is and what your business needs.
If you've ever wondered how to conduct good UX research or what's going on in that designer's mind (again), look no further.
Presented at DrupalNorth Regional Summit (August 2018)
How to Plan for Hyper Growth Success by Slack Software EngineerProduct School
Every company is different. Every team is different. Every Product Manager is different. In Carly's two years working at Slack as a Software Engineer building features for Enterprise Grid, she's had the opportunity to work with several Product Managers with distinct styles and varying levels of experience. Her talk explored challenges her team encountered working on high impact, cross functional projects in a hyper growth startup environment.
Is Lean UX Agile’s Brain? How Lean UX Fixes Common Agile ChallengesFITC
Agile development methods are sweeping the software industry, but reconciling UX, Agile and stakeholder demands for certainty are a struggle for many companies.
Expanding on a (in)famous “Agile doesn’t have brain” quote, Nick Van Weerdenburg, founder of Rangleio, shares his insights from 60+ modern front-end JavaScript projects on how Lean UX can drive the conversations that drive the creation of the right solution for the right audience.
Objective
Show the audience how Lean UX practices can drive the conversations that drive the effective adoption of Agile in companies small and large.
Target Audience
Managers, designers, developers and anyone who has a vested interest in build the right software for the right audience in the most effective manner.
Assumed Audience Knowledge
A basic knowledge User experience and Agile development.
Five Things Audience Members Will Learn
How to connect the user to the Agile development process
How to use Lean UX to drive Agile prioritization
How Lean UX creates the right conversations and eliminates the wrong ones
How to avoid UX design become a defacto waterfall process
How to use Lean UX to help drive effective enterprise transformation to Agile practices
How do you know you're ready for a Design Sprint?Highland
For leaders who want their teams to embrace human-centered approaches and collaborate in new ways, Sprints are a fantastic way to start.
Join Highland’s CX Practice Director David Whited and Lead Experience Designer Amrita Kulkarni as they share how Research Sprints and Design Sprints make Design Thinking—a reliable methodology to address complex, ambiguous problems—accessible in a way they have never been before. David and Amrita will introduce the purpose and philosophy of Sprints, talk through the differences between Research and Design Sprints, and what kind of issues, problems, or opportunities are the right fit for each.
We’ll be joined by Jennifer Severns, CXO, and Jennifer O’Brien, Innovation and Insights Manager, from the American Marketing Association, who will share how their organization has used Sprints to catalyze a culture of Design Thinking at the AMA. They will reflect on the realities of introducing Sprints and Design Thinking into an established organization, sharing advice for helping others think and work in new ways.
Attendees will learn:
- How are Research Sprints different from Design Sprints
- When is the right time or moment to conduct a Sprint
- What it takes for Sprints to be successful
- How to amplify Sprint outcomes for change in your organization
UX STRAT USA 2019: Richard Baker, GE TransportationUX STRAT
Many engineering-focused enterprises have become solution driven—it's in the very nature of their work. Oftentimes it can be tricky to convince your stakeholders to use valuable time and resources on user experience.
Over the past two years, the innovation and design teams at GE Transportation have been refining their processes to enable engineering-heavy teams to capitalize on long-term strategy and short-term design-led execution through four key principles:
Simplify the complex
Work in bite-size chunks to make things manageable
Built-in exit ramps to ensure relevancy and quality
Work in full transparency
In this presentation, Richard will walk through how user-centric design was scaled in an engineer-led enterprise of thousands mechanical, electrical, and computer engineers.
Topic: UI/UX DESIGN IN AGILE PROCESS
Why do we integrate design into our Agile process?
As we all know, the Agile Manifesto is well-received and successfully adopted as it is today thanks to the 12 underpinning principles. While “good design” is one main reason that “enhances agility”, “Agile processes promote sustainable development”.
At Axon Active, it’s important for us to do everything Agile and work with one another collaboratively in Collaboration Model. It gets people on the same page, makes everyone engage more with the product, encourages them to share more creative ideas, and gives them the flexibility they need to improve themselves.
Indeed, Designers and Developers can collaborate more closely and effectively, and subsequently integrating design into Agile process will yield numerous benefits.
For that reason, Scrum Breakfast Da Nang this October will be the very chance for you to learn:
• How to successfully integrate design into Agile process in practice
• How different Collaboration Model is from traditional model
• The benefits of Collaboration Model when done correctly
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lka7nsDsZk8
There’s real evidence that Agile software engineering projects work better than waterfall. In Silicon Valley, Agile is the de-facto standard for innovating new products. But an Agile project needs good product management and good UX design to succeed. Fitting UX in with product management and Agile can be uncomfortable for UX designers. Once you get it, though, you’ll never want to work any other way. We’ll look at:
- Why Agile works well for innovation and for software delivery
- What product management is and why your software product can’t succeed without it
- The different product phases: Discover, expand and exploit
- The role of UX in each phase
- Setting up hypotheses and metrics to keep Agile teams on track
With the adoption of methods based on rapid experiments to validate hypotheses with customers, there is also a need for design to adapt and respond continually. As such, there is a need to balance the decisions taken in autonomy by teams and the overarching service coherency. Inspired by devOps principles, designOps is a practice that aims to support people across the organization to continuously redesign their products without compromising design excellence. This talk, based on the experience of coaching design teams at different levels, explores the possibilities of moving out from heavyweight upfront analyses, reducing handoffs, and creating reliable feedback loops with end users. A new paradigm, where the ability of design is shifting from being a specific practice to genuinely becoming part of everyone’s job. A key component to enables others, designers and non-designers, to create meaningful experiences in a complex environment.
Agile and UX both put user's needs at their center, but their foundational beliefs have set them at odds over the years.
Presented at part of "24 Hours of UX" 2022.
Make It Fast: Delivering UX Research to Agile TeamsUXPA Boston
One of the biggest challenges facing UX designers working with agile teams is providing user research in a quick, effective way. Design sprints take less time than in the past and development makes it difficult to slip user feedback into the mix. Traditional research takes time to design, set up, recruit for, run and analyze. Since that could span several sprints, “traditional” research simply doesn’t work in today’s rapid pace development, and the user experience suffers. Many organizations are tackling this challenge.
We’ve brought together 4 panelists who are using methods to address the issue of rapid UX research. Panelists come from both in-house teams and agencies. We’ll share our approaches and offer practical advice about how to do it, why it works and what could be improved. We’ll cover both unmoderated tests and more traditional moderated tests. You’ll learn some new approaches and get a chance to ask questions or share your own experiences.
You'll learn:
- How to design ahead of development without chaos
- How to conduct user research within Agile
- How to deliver consistent UX on tight timelines
Similar to Maximizing the impact of UX in an agile environment: Mixing agile and Lean UX (20)
- Learn how to "usability test" AI interactions with humans and measure success
- Understand the two distinct ways that humans construct commands to AI systems and how, using physiological measurements, you can measure the human response to the AI system responses
Description
John Whalen explores the concept of cognitive design, describing how humans structure their commands to AI systems (syntax, word usage, prosody) and how to measure human reactions to AI responses using biometrics (facial emotion recognition, heart rate, GSR). Along the way, John shares insights into how to optimally architect the customer experience.
John offers an overview of the results of an evaluation of four major AI systems (Siri, Cortana, Alexa, and Google Assistant), tested by the young and old, those new to AI systems and those that use these tools every day, native and non-native speakers, and techies and non-techies. Each were asked to interact with the systems to request facts, complex information, jokes, commands, and calendar information while the evaluators recorded their commands, the AI response, and the human’s physiological response to the AI response (facial emotion, heart rate, and GSR).
There were several intriguing findings:
- There were two distinct ways humans constructed commands for the AI systems.
- The testers’ favorite AI systems were not always the ones that performed the best in terms of giving correct answers.
- There was a distinct physiological signature associated with a positive experience.
John explains how these findings can help you determine how you should measure the success of your AI system or chatbot and suggests new ways to predict market success that go beyond AI answer accuracy.
The Future of UX is here: AI and Cognitive DesignJohn Whalen
Facebook, Google and Microsoft are betting the farm on “deep learning” artificial intelligence. Alexa, Siri, Cortana and Google Assistant demonstrate interfaces need not be screen based. Welcome to the era of Cognitive Design.
Marketers, Product Owners, and Experience Designers need new skills to compete. You don’t need to a PhD Psychologist and Machine Learning Computer Scientist (though it doesn’t hurt). But you do need to move beyond traditional user experience research and design thinking empathy.
Step 1: We will begin by defining the new “Zero UI” world which includes new possibilities with zero ui, machine learning, and new interaction possibilities. We want to show the intensely human response to AI: Ever notice that in a sentence people call a chair “it”, but call Siri or Cortana “she”?
Step 2: Given those possibilities, we will describe AI/narrow AI, AR, given and provide exposure to what machine learning is, and provide a sense of what a training set might be like, and how to test the new tool.
Step 3: Determine how best to augment cognition with AI. We will provide several examples and demonstrate how to train and test an augmented experience. We will consider which modalities and interfaces to use, and how best to augment cognition with AI for the optimal experience.
Step 4: Show participants best practices and tips & tricks to conduct usability tests with these AI tools and show how these techniques differ from classic usability testing.
Given most participants will have never had exposure to this, we make sure we go slow, provide examples, and show that most audience members are using this several times a day (e.g., Netflix, Google Search, Facebook Chatbots, etc.). Providing concrete examples will help to make concrete this new world.
Find out how you need to change your UX/CX practice and start doing Cognitive Design today!
Building Buy-In: Internally Positioning UX for Executive ImpactJohn Whalen
Why can’t other people in your organization see what you see? That UX insights you uncovered will revolutionize your company and delight your customers like never before! Doesn’t everyone “get” UX nowadays?
The truth is more complicated than just recognizing UX value: Your professional goals and focus are different than those of others in your organization (e.g., C-Suite, Product Managers, Marketers, Developers) by design. What to do? Learn how to position and present your work for maximum uptake to ensure UX has a sizeable and valuable impact on your products and customer experience.
We reveal what we have learned – often the hard way – about linking UX research and design with organizational goals and strategic directives. With a little planning, you can to ensure your creative UX work has an influence and actually sees the light of day when the product is launched.
#UXPA2016
Design studio: A team alignment secret weapon - Modev MVP ConferenceJohn Whalen
Design studio: A team alignment secret weapon - Modev MVP Conference
We all want the best user experience, but often other priorities get in the way: “Bob from Marketing wants it to…”, “The developers don’t like that approach...”, “That feature is a ‘nice to have’”.
What if you had a tool that can help folks sharpen their UX skills, get them prioritizing the users and their goals, and align everyone on a common vision that revolves around a great user experience?
This hands-on tutorial will walk you through a design studio and how it can be a great tool to align product owners, developers and UX teams on an approach that balances user and business needs. We’ll also show you how to conduct a “mini design studio” before an agile sprint.
You’ll gain hands-on experience with different aspects of running a design studio through individual and group exercises throughout the tutorial.
John Whalen (CEO at Brilliant Experience):
John Whalen has a PhD in Cognitive Science with over 15 years of User-Centered Design experience. He currently leads Brilliant Experience – a consultancy that supports intra- and entrepreneurs to ensure the success of mission-critical innovation projects by using our unique blend of user-centered design, psychology, design thinking and lean startup techniques.
John’s specialty is to provide businesses with competitive advantages using a mix of user research insights and expert knowledge of human vision, attention and memory. He has experience (and great stories to tell from) working with Fortune 500 clients in the ecommerce, financial, healthcare and government verticals. John’s currently focusing on helping large enterprises integrate brain science into agile, design thinking, and UCD projects.
Emergent UX: Seducing the Six Minds - IXDA-NYCJohn Whalen
Presented in New York at IXDA-NYC 03-20-2015
Startups and large organizations alike have to be nimble and react to market change faster than ever. The entrepreneurs and intrapreneurs within these organizations know that, but don’t always have the right methods at their disposal to be successful. Our team has increasingly been asked to support these innovators and their teams to create exceptional User Experience Designs and gain organizational support of the process.
Emergent UX is a process we use to (1) deeply understand the users’ currently unmet needs on a cognitive, behavioral and emotional level, (2) create an open platform for innovation using the best of User-Centered Design, Design Thinking, and Lean Startup, and (3) gather critical insights about stakeholders and harness persuasive psychology to positively align the team on goals, ultimately nurturing both the product and the team behind it.
Architecting Information for the Mind: Introducing Emergent UXJohn Whalen
UX has become a vital component of mission-critical projects. But you can’t just start designing screens. UX doesn’t happen on a screen – it happens in the mind. This talk introduces Emergent UX - a process designed to dramatically improve product design by deeply understanding your audience's conscious and unconscious needs on cognitive and emotional levels. We describe how we go beyond traditional UX techniques by using psychology to deeply understand what is in your users’ mind (or minds), what deliverables we produce, and how to apply that concretely to UX design. Learn about the six minds, what it takes to seduce them, and how to add Emergent UX processes to your projects.
Emergent UX: Seducing the Six Minds - Full TalkJohn Whalen
UX has become a vital component of mission-critical “bet-the-farm” projects. But you can’t just start designing screens. UX doesn’t happen on a screen – it happens in the mind.
Join us as I describe Emergent UX – a process that goes beyond traditional UX techniques by using psychology to deeply understand what is in your users’ mind (or minds) and applying that to UX design. Learn about the 6 minds, what it takes to seduce them, and how we use the Emergent UX process when working on large high-visibility projects.
This talk introduces Emergent UX - a process designed to dramatically improve product design by deeply understanding your audience's conscious and unconscious needs on cognitive and emotional levels.
Cognitive science of design in 10 minutes or lessJohn Whalen
We as Designers underestimate the power of automatic brain processes and don’t take full advantage of them. By understanding the interactions between automatic and conscious processes, we can provide better experiences and more strongly influence decisions and behavior. Learn about how we perceive, how we make choices and persuasive design - all in 10 minutes or less!
Design Thinking Introduction & Workshop - NoVA UXJohn Whalen
What's Design Thinking, you ask? Design Thinking is a collaborative, human-centered approach to solving a wide range of complex problems. This one-hour, hands-on workshop will rapidly go through each stage of the design thinking process: understanding user's needs, framing the problem for creative solutions, ideating, prototyping, and testing.
This was a hands-on workshop in Design Thinking, where we'll roll up our sleeves and tackle some design problem-solving in groups.
Lean UX for Startups and Enterprise: Ten Secrets to SuccessJohn Whalen
We have consulted with startups and large enterprises seeking to produce the right product (e.g., mobile app, web application) faster. We will reveal the remarkable similarities between startups and large organizations seeking to be as nimble as startups.
In a majority of cases the challenges were the same: - they were not sure how to speed development - they had difficulty balancing user and business needs - they typically had strong development teams with established methodologies that had blended agile and waterfall methodologies - they typically had little user experience expertise or input in the existing designs - designs / development builds were underway but the results of the designs were unsatisfying to users
We have done LeanUX design projects with a number of clients continuously testing and honed our process by testing various techniques: - rapid iterative design and improvement (design thinking) - brain storming sessions (design thinking) - design studios (traditional art school critiquing process) - rapid prototyping, usability testing and revision
We also want to share the pitfalls as you start to get involved in lean startup including having: - The “genius designer” mentality within the UX team - The "stay in the building until the product is ready" mentality - Different internal groups (design, development) that work against each other - Executives that swoop down and influence (aka hijack) the process - Too little contact between the designers and other team members - Too many chefs leading to poor focus - The anti-cheerleader who always says “No!”
Through a series of case studies we will describe the processes and flow that worked best for both large enterprises small startups: - Conducting a strategy workshop to align the team on business and user needs - Rapidly developing personas and scenarios as a team with all stakeholders - Conducting a design studio with all stakeholders to agree on the design directions to explore - Rapidly iterated prototype and guerilla testing - Creating non-technical, but partially functional prototypes through available tools (e.g., Axure, Proto IO, iRise)
Nearly every group we worked asked: - Does this work for a company like mine (Startup, Enterprise, Healthcare, Government, etc.)? - What was the composition of the most successful LeanUX teams? Number of team members? Types of expertise? - How did the process differ between Startups and Large Enterprises?
Learn how to create a winning strategy and design concepts through strategy workshops and design studios. Find out how UX is at the heart of hot concepts such as LeanUX, Design Thinking and Agile Development.
WANT TO KNOW THE SECRET TO A GREAT UX? Knowing what your users are thinking before they do is a great start...
Academicians know so much about what draws our attention, how we make decisions and what can change our behaviors but have typically buried that knowledge in research papers that rarely cross the chasm into mainstream user experience. Join me for an interactive guide to how your users think and why it matters to your UX practice.
Want to know where users will look first on your interface and why? We’ve got a demo for that. Want your app to be more addictive? We can give you some good suggestions. Want people to buy more stuff or sign up more often? We can help there too. Wish you knew what an affordance was? Okay, maybe that wasn’t keeping up at night but we’ve got that covered too.
John will present a series of fun demos to make the psychological principles memorable and then demonstrate how to apply what you learned to your user experience challenges.
The hybrids are coming: The Era of Touchscreen HybridsJohn Whalen
Interaction Design For Keyboard / Touchscreen Hybrids: How Your Designs Need To Change
John Whalen, UX Lead & Founder
Brilliant Experience
User Focus 2012 - UXPA-DC
Learn how interaction design is changing in the era of "tablet transformers" and "touchscreen laptops".
When do users click or touch? How do interaction designs need to change to provide a great user experience? Using some of the biggest sites on the web built here in Washington (e.g., Marriott, Living Social, USA Today) we will reveal the strengths and weaknesses of state-of-the-art designs.
In a live "UX cage match" volunteers from the audience will race to find the answer to questions using different sorts of devices (small tablet, tablet with keyboard, tablet transformer, laptop), demonstrating the unique benefits and constraints of each device type.
After that we will show clips from our research revealing how current designs fall short for users of touch/type hybrids. Based on the data we collected we will attempt to answer the key UX question: How are interaction design patterns changing and how will my site need to change to accommodate the next wave of devices?
Top 11 usability recommendations for 2011John Whalen
User Experience (UX) professionals know that audiences are demanding ever increasing levels of sophistication from your websites.
However, before you invest big bucks in the latest [social/mobile/local] solution, let's make sure your site passes 11 basic tests for usability.
A majority of sites still make Usability 101 mistakes. Are you leaving customers frustrated or losing business because of errors that can be fixed hours or days?
Join our webinar and take our 2011 Usability Test to find out how you score (then call us to help with the social/mobile/local project).
While providing raw data in places like Data.gov is a great first step in opening up government, it is insufficient. Realizing the spirit of the Open Government Directive will require dramatic improvements in user experience. Concrete examples to demonstrate how government agencies can harness the power of information visualization to give the American people the insights they need (not just the data needed) to make informed decisions and dramatically improve interactions with the government.
The future of location based services: What you need to knowJohn Whalen
How will we use location aware applications? How are they being used today? Why are they profitable? What do I need to know today to start using them for my b-to-b and b-to-c sales opportunities?
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Securing your Kubernetes cluster_ a step-by-step guide to success !KatiaHIMEUR1
Today, after several years of existence, an extremely active community and an ultra-dynamic ecosystem, Kubernetes has established itself as the de facto standard in container orchestration. Thanks to a wide range of managed services, it has never been so easy to set up a ready-to-use Kubernetes cluster.
However, this ease of use means that the subject of security in Kubernetes is often left for later, or even neglected. This exposes companies to significant risks.
In this talk, I'll show you step-by-step how to secure your Kubernetes cluster for greater peace of mind and reliability.
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
JMeter webinar - integration with InfluxDB and GrafanaRTTS
Watch this recorded webinar about real-time monitoring of application performance. See how to integrate Apache JMeter, the open-source leader in performance testing, with InfluxDB, the open-source time-series database, and Grafana, the open-source analytics and visualization application.
In this webinar, we will review the benefits of leveraging InfluxDB and Grafana when executing load tests and demonstrate how these tools are used to visualize performance metrics.
Length: 30 minutes
Session Overview
-------------------------------------------
During this webinar, we will cover the following topics while demonstrating the integrations of JMeter, InfluxDB and Grafana:
- What out-of-the-box solutions are available for real-time monitoring JMeter tests?
- What are the benefits of integrating InfluxDB and Grafana into the load testing stack?
- Which features are provided by Grafana?
- Demonstration of InfluxDB and Grafana using a practice web application
To view the webinar recording, go to:
https://www.rttsweb.com/jmeter-integration-webinar
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
Kubernetes & AI - Beauty and the Beast !?! @KCD Istanbul 2024Tobias Schneck
As AI technology is pushing into IT I was wondering myself, as an “infrastructure container kubernetes guy”, how get this fancy AI technology get managed from an infrastructure operational view? Is it possible to apply our lovely cloud native principals as well? What benefit’s both technologies could bring to each other?
Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...
Maximizing the impact of UX in an agile environment: Mixing agile and Lean UX
1. Maximizing the Impact of UX
in an Agile Environment:
Mixing Agile and Lean UX
John Whalen, Ph.D.
Principal, Strategy & User Experience
Brilliant Experience
2. Research
Stakeholder Interviews
Field Research
Competitor Reviews
Expert Reviews
Strategy and Ideation
Strategy Workshop
Design Studio
Rapid Prototyping
Iterative Refinement
UX and Design
IA & Flow
Interaction Design
Concept Realization
Visual Design & Branding
3. Agenda
‣ Part 1: The Rise of Agile
‣ Part 2: Mixing Agile & Lean UX
‣ Part 3: Lessons Learned on Adopting Lean UX & Agile
10. To help you understand what “this” is,
let’s play: ‘Name that Methodology’
11. 1 2 3 4
Empathize with
the audience
you are
designing for
Brainstorm
possible
designs
Build a
representation of
one or more of
your ideas
PrototypeIdeateResearch
Test your ideas
for feedback
Test
12. 1 2 3 4
Empathize with
the audience
you are
designing for
Brainstorm
possible
designs
Build a
representation of
one or more of
your ideas
PrototypeIdeateResearch
Test your ideas
for feedback
Test
Design
Thinking
31. Will Evans, TLC Labs
‣ Good source for relation between
Kanban, Cynefin, Design Thinking,
Lean UX and cognitive science.
‣ Sure to throw in a quote from
Sartre, Kierkegaard or Wittgenstein
32. Bill Scott, PayPal
‣ Developer by trade, but strong proponent
for UX/Dev partnership and dev flexibility
to accommodate user needs
33. Andrew Crow, GE
‣ Good resource for how to do Lean UX
with standards at scale (like all of GE)
42. Client 1: Major Tech Company
‣ Revenue: $11.5 billion
‣ Employee Count: 70,000+
!
‣ Needed to blend UX (long term research) with Agile sprints (yikes!)
43. Client 1: Major Tech Company
Sprint 0 Sprint 1 Sprint 2Dev
UX
Sprint 1 Iteration Sprint 2 Iteration Sprint 3 Iteration
Time
Sprint 1 Support Sprint 2 Support
44. Client 1: Major Tech Company
Successes:
‣ Much better communication with developers.
‣ More influence in product design.
!
Difficulty
‣ Still cultural challenge (UX needs 6 months of research to produce wireframe).
‣ Some PMs / Dev still want all screens in advance + “spec”.
‣ Challenged to keep up when one UXer has to do both just-in-time work and
work for future sprints simultaneously.
47. Client 2: NASDAQ/NYSE Watchdog
‣ Review 6 Billion trades daily
‣ Employee Count: 3,400 employees
!
‣ Two roles:
- Anthropological work, help build user stories.
- Work on current sprint on immediate needs of developers.
48. Client 2: NASDAQ/NYSE Watchdog
Sprint 0 Sprint 1 Sprint 2Dev
UX
Time
Sprint 1 Support Sprint 2 SupportUX Research
49. Client 2: NASDAQ/NYSE Watchdog
Successes:
‣ UX deeply integrated into process because of senior management support.
‣ Doing small tests with users for sprints.
!
Difficulties:
‣ Heavily focused on just-in-time work.
‣ Difficult to get enough “design thinking” done during a sprint.
51. Client 3: Major US Government Agency
‣ Founded 1862 during the Civil War by President Lincoln
‣ Works with 144 million Americans
!
‣ Role:
- Developing prototype of new tools for individuals using an iterative, Agile UX
approach.
- Assisting Agile development of new systems for every American.
52. Client 3: Major US Government Agency
Sprint 0 Sprint 1 Sprint 2
Dev
UX
Time
Sprint 3
Sprint 0 Sprint 1 Sprint 2
Sprint 0 Sprint 1 Sprint 2
Sprint 4 Sprint 5 Sprint 6 Sprint 7
UX
53. Client 3: Major US Government Agency
Successes:
‣ Doing small tests with users within sprints.
‣ Well ahead of developers, but including developers as we go along.
‣ Prototype + Style Guide is the product definition.
!
Difficulties:
‣ Development somewhat disjointed from UX, though getting better.
‣ Crazy pace when working on two different sprints simultaneously.
55. Agile UX Secret 1:
Set the stage for UX’s role with
Strategy Session / Design Studio.
56. CEO: I know you had an agenda,
but let’s just sketch our ideas
anyway...
57. Strategy Session / Design Studio
Get internal focus on
what matters.
Prioritize your
audiences, define
them and scenarios.
Brainstorm ways to
satisfy 1 & 2.
IdeationAudience NeedsBusiness Needs
Get stakeholders on
board with conceptual
direction.
Sketching
1 2 3 4
58. Agile UX Secret 2:
UXers need to be prepared
to get ahead of developers
AND stay with them.
59. Client 1: Major Tech Company
Sprint 1 Sprint 2Dev
UX
Sprint 1 Iteration Sprint 2 Iteration
Time
Sprint 1 Support Sprint 2 Support
74. Agile + Lean UX Secrets
!
1. Set the stage with Strategy Session / Design Studio
2. UXers need to get ahead of developers AND stay with them
3. Make wireframes “the spec”
4. Conduct quick, focused research