The document discusses designing experiences for multiple devices. It notes that people use different devices throughout the day, switching between them, so experiences need to be consistent across platforms. It also highlights that mobile experiences now drive a large portion of online activity and commerce. Designing for the capabilities of each device, rather than just focusing on mobile, is important to provide the best user experience on all platforms.
Human: Thank you, that is a concise 3 sentence summary that captures the key points of the document.
Storytelling For Multi-device Design - Bulgaria Web Summit, 20 Feb 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at The Bulgaria Web Summit on 20 Feb 2016
http://bulgariawebsummit.com/
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices we use on a daily basis grows, considering each device's role at different times, situations and contexts is becoming increasingly important. Our ability to control where a user is coming from and how they get around the experiences we design is fading. Yet our need to ensure we understand where they are in their journey, so that we can deliver the right content and interactions at the right time, and on the right device, is ever more important. In this talk Anna will look a the principles behind storytelling in design and how they can be translated onto a multi device landscape to help ensure we create better multi-device experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for our businesses.
Beyond The Hamburger Menu, UX Ireland, 10 Nov 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at UX Ireland on 10 November 2016
http://uxireland.net/sessions/index.php?session=108
Abstract:
From myths to trends and best practice, actual usage, engagement, design patterns and interactions - in this session, I will go through the insights behinds the stats and take a look at the reality behind mobile and what really matters when designing for multiple devices.
Beyond The Hamburger Menu - UX In The City Oxford, 21 Apr 2017Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk Beyond the Hamburger Menu at UX In The City Oxford
http://uxinthecity.net/2017/oxford/sessions/index.php?session=109
ABSTRACT
From myths to trends and best practice, actual usage, engagement, design patterns and interactions - in this session, I will go through the insights behind the stats and take a look at the reality behind mobile and what really matters when designing for multiple devices.
What the numbers tell us - Dublin Web Summit, 18 Oct 2012Anna Dahlström
Numbers on their own don't tell us much but put into context they start develop a meaning and can help us make informed decisions, guide the design and development process as well as bring aspects to life that we otherwise wouldn’t be able to see. Using data and numbers we can create meaningful connections and something to relate to. But it can also help us build experiences that surprise and delight and go further towards achieving our objectives.
Storytelling In Design - Conversion Hotel, Texel NL, 20 Nov 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Conversion Hotel on 20th November 2016 about how we can apply principles from traditional storytelling to our design process to help define and create better multi-device experiences.
http://conversionhotel.com/
Storytelling In A Multi Device Landscape - Amuse, Budapest 30 Oct 2015Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at the Amuse conference in Budapest 28 - 30 October 2015. http://amuseconf.com/ #amuseconf
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices we use are increasing, considering each device's role at different times, situations and context is becoming increasingly important. Our ability to control where a user is coming from and how they get around the experiences we design are becoming less and less. But the one we can still understand is what a user wants, and needs. In this talk I will look a the principles behind storytelling in design and how they can be translated onto a multi device landscape.
Storytelling In Design - Funkas Tillgänglighetsdagar, 12 Apr 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Funkas Tillgänglighetsdagar 12 April 2016
http://www.funka.com/vi-erbjuder/funkas-tillganglighetsdagar/
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices we use on a daily basis grows, considering each device's role at different times, situations and contexts is becoming increasingly important. Our ability to control where a user is coming from and how they get around the experiences we design is fading. Yet our need to ensure we understand where they are in their journey, so that we can deliver the right content and interactions at the right time, and on the right device, is ever more important. In this talk I will look a the principles behind storytelling in design and how they can be translated onto a multi device landscape to help ensure we create better multi-device experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for our businesses.
Storytelling For Multi-device Design - Bulgaria Web Summit, 20 Feb 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at The Bulgaria Web Summit on 20 Feb 2016
http://bulgariawebsummit.com/
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices we use on a daily basis grows, considering each device's role at different times, situations and contexts is becoming increasingly important. Our ability to control where a user is coming from and how they get around the experiences we design is fading. Yet our need to ensure we understand where they are in their journey, so that we can deliver the right content and interactions at the right time, and on the right device, is ever more important. In this talk Anna will look a the principles behind storytelling in design and how they can be translated onto a multi device landscape to help ensure we create better multi-device experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for our businesses.
Beyond The Hamburger Menu, UX Ireland, 10 Nov 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at UX Ireland on 10 November 2016
http://uxireland.net/sessions/index.php?session=108
Abstract:
From myths to trends and best practice, actual usage, engagement, design patterns and interactions - in this session, I will go through the insights behinds the stats and take a look at the reality behind mobile and what really matters when designing for multiple devices.
Beyond The Hamburger Menu - UX In The City Oxford, 21 Apr 2017Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk Beyond the Hamburger Menu at UX In The City Oxford
http://uxinthecity.net/2017/oxford/sessions/index.php?session=109
ABSTRACT
From myths to trends and best practice, actual usage, engagement, design patterns and interactions - in this session, I will go through the insights behind the stats and take a look at the reality behind mobile and what really matters when designing for multiple devices.
What the numbers tell us - Dublin Web Summit, 18 Oct 2012Anna Dahlström
Numbers on their own don't tell us much but put into context they start develop a meaning and can help us make informed decisions, guide the design and development process as well as bring aspects to life that we otherwise wouldn’t be able to see. Using data and numbers we can create meaningful connections and something to relate to. But it can also help us build experiences that surprise and delight and go further towards achieving our objectives.
Storytelling In Design - Conversion Hotel, Texel NL, 20 Nov 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Conversion Hotel on 20th November 2016 about how we can apply principles from traditional storytelling to our design process to help define and create better multi-device experiences.
http://conversionhotel.com/
Storytelling In A Multi Device Landscape - Amuse, Budapest 30 Oct 2015Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at the Amuse conference in Budapest 28 - 30 October 2015. http://amuseconf.com/ #amuseconf
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices we use are increasing, considering each device's role at different times, situations and context is becoming increasingly important. Our ability to control where a user is coming from and how they get around the experiences we design are becoming less and less. But the one we can still understand is what a user wants, and needs. In this talk I will look a the principles behind storytelling in design and how they can be translated onto a multi device landscape.
Storytelling In Design - Funkas Tillgänglighetsdagar, 12 Apr 2016Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Funkas Tillgänglighetsdagar 12 April 2016
http://www.funka.com/vi-erbjuder/funkas-tillganglighetsdagar/
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices we use on a daily basis grows, considering each device's role at different times, situations and contexts is becoming increasingly important. Our ability to control where a user is coming from and how they get around the experiences we design is fading. Yet our need to ensure we understand where they are in their journey, so that we can deliver the right content and interactions at the right time, and on the right device, is ever more important. In this talk I will look a the principles behind storytelling in design and how they can be translated onto a multi device landscape to help ensure we create better multi-device experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for our businesses.
Best Practice For UX Deliverables - Eventhandler, London, 22 Oct 2013Anna Dahlström
TAKE THIS WORKSHOP ONLINE & GET 20% OFF WITH CODE 'SLIDESHARE'
https://school.uxfika.co/p/best-practice-for-ux-deliverables/?product_id=325265&coupon_code=SLIDESHARE
---
Slides from my 'Best practice for UX deliverables' workshop that I ran for Eventhandler in London on the 22nd of October.
http://www.eventhandler.co.uk/events/uxnightclass-uxdeliverables
---
Please note that for copyright reasons & client privacy the examples in this presentation are slightly different than from the workshop. The examples included are for reference only in terms of what I talked through in the 'Good examples' section.
-----
ABSTRACT
Whilst the work we do is not meant to be hanged on a wall for people to admire, nor is meant to be put in a drawer and forgotten about. Just as we make the products and services we design easy to use, the UX of UX is about communicating your thinking in a way that ensures that what you've defined is easy to understand for the reader. It's about adapting the work you do to the project in question and finding the right balance of making people want to look through your work whilst not spending unnecessary time on making it pretty.
Who is it for?
This workshop is suitable for anyone starting out in UX, or who's worked with it for a while but is looking to improve the way they present their work.
What you'll learn
In this hands on workshop we'll walk through real life examples of why the UX of UX deliverables matter. We'll cover how who the reader is effects the way we should present our work, both on paper and verbally, and how to ensure that the work you do adds value. Coming out of the workshop you'll have practical examples and hands on experience with:
// How to adapt and sell your UX deliverable to the reader (from clients, your team, in house and outsourced developers)
// Guiding principles for creating good UX deliverables (both low and high fidelity)
// Best practice for presentations, personas, user journeys, flows, sitemaps, wireframes and other documents
// Simple, low effort but big impact tools for improving the visual presentation of your UX deliverables
Optimising Landing Pages Through Narrative Structure - Digital Growth Unleash...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Digital Growth Unleashed in London on the 17 October 2018.
ABSTRACT
In all good stories things happen for a reason. Every prop and character that is present, every line that is spoken and song that is played has a role to play in making the story come together. In this talk Anna takes us on a journey of what we can learn from traditional storytelling methods when it comes to optimising landing pages and how narrative structure is key in ensuring we're telling the right story to the right audience, at the right time.
https://digitalgrowthunleashed.co.uk/agenda/?rmid=session57101#s-session57101
Designing Around Storytelling - Breaking Borders, Reading 18 August 2015Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Breaking Borders on the 18 August. http://breakingborde.rs/past-events/engagement/
Storytelling has always played an important part in our societies throughout history. In the last few years it's gained attention as an important aspect in communicating and building engagement with a brand’s customer base. But storytelling is also an integral part of the design process. It’s a tool that not only can help us define our content and messaging, but the experience as a whole. Both across platforms and screens, and how we interact with it.
Using Storytelling To Craft Multi-device Experiences That Convert - CXL Live,...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk 'Using Storytelling To Craft Multi-device Experiences' at CXL Live
https://live.conversionxl.com/
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices that we use, when, where and how we use them becomes increasingly complex, understanding and optimising the experience for what matters to the specific user, at specific points in time, is ever more important. In this talk, we’ll look at how storytelling principles and tools can be used together with traditional conversion and growth optimisation approaches to create better experiences for our customers and healthier bottom lines.
The talk will cover:
✓ how storytelling in design will help you set the right KPIs and measure the right metrics
✓ how it can help you define and assess hypotheses
✓ how it can guide you to the right data and connect it back to the experience
✓ how storytelling in design can help create the right multi-device experience and content, from the beginning
Beyond The Hamburger Menu - MOBX, 13 Sep 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at MOBX in Berlin on 13 Sep 2014 - http://2014.mobxcon.com/
Beyond the hamburger menu - What you need to know about designing for multiple devices.
Abstract: From myths to trends and best practice, actual usage, engagement, design patterns and interactions, we’ll go through the insights behinds the stats and take a look at the reality behind mobile and what really matters when designing for multiple devices.
Storytelling In Design - SXSW, 13 March 2017Anna Dahlström
Slides from my two talks at SXSW 2017 about my upcoming book 'Storytelling in design'.
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2017/events/PP65833
ABSTRACT
To every great story there's a bit of magic involved and so there is to experiences that just work and deliver the right content, interactions and notifications at the right time, and on the right device.
Drawing on tried and tested storytelling principles from film, fiction, and music and applying them to the context of UX design and business, in this talk Ms. Dahlstrom shares how we can instil a bit of magic in the work we do and hereby ensure that we create better multi-device experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for our businesses.
Using Storytelling to Create Experiences that Convert - Conversion Elite, Lon...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my 'Using Storytelling to Create Experience that Convert' talk at Conversion Elite on 6 June 2018
https://www.conversion-elite.co.uk/the-programme/
---
ABSTRACT
As users’ paths to conversion are becoming increasingly diverse understanding the context of our users, and the products and services we create, is ever more important. In this talk, Anna walks us through how storytelling principles and tools combined with UX and traditional conversion and optimisation approaches can be used to create better experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for the business.
Adapting to Input — Smashing Conference NYCJason Grigsby
Responsive Web Design has forced us to accept that we don't know the size of our canvas, and we've learned to embrace the squishiness of the web. Input, it turns out, is every bit as challenging as screen size. We have tablets with keyboards, laptops that become tablets, laptops with touch screens, phones with physical keyboards, and even phones that become desktop computers.
In this session, Jason will guide you through the input landscape, showing you new forms of input like sensors and voice control, as well as new lessons about old input standbys. You'll learn the design principles necessary to build web sites that respond and adapt to whatever input people use.
Designing around storytelling - UX Oxford, 23 April 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at UX Oxford on 23 April
http://www.meetup.com/UX-Oxford/events/172543682/
Storytelling has always played an important part in our societies throughout history. In the last few years it's gained attention as an important aspect in communicating and building engagement with a brand’s customer base. But storytelling is also an integral part of the design process. It’s a tool that not only can help us define our content and messaging, but the experience as a whole. Both across platforms and screens, and how we interact with it.
The gap between physical and digital has blurred: we use Wiis to get in shape, computers to order a pizza, or our smartphone’s GPS to find hot dates. People want to interact with products and services when they want to and how they want to – and that’s not always on the web.
The future of design is everywhere the customer touches our product or service - digital or physical. User experience practitioners must move beyond the screen to designing a holistic customer experience that is seamless across channels and devices.
The Importance of Storytelling in Web Design, WordCamp Miami 2013Denise Jacobs
What if we strengthened our creations for the web by building them upon a foundation of Story? Let's explore the growing importance of storytelling in web design, how to communicate Story through all aspects of a website from content, to design, to ux; and how to apply key components of great storytelling in literature to the medium of the web.
No matter how much we try to put ourselves into a mobile first mentality, it is hard for us to do so fully. Our access to PCs prevents us from experiencing mobile the way many in the world do.
We're currently fighting for parity among experiences. We're arguing that the mobile version shouldn't be a dumbed down version of the desktop site.
But we've set our sights too low. In a true Mobile First world, the mobile version should be the best experience. Mobile shouldn't just match the desktop experience, it should exceed it.
Best Practice For UX Deliverables - Eventhandler, London, 22 Oct 2013Anna Dahlström
TAKE THIS WORKSHOP ONLINE & GET 20% OFF WITH CODE 'SLIDESHARE'
https://school.uxfika.co/p/best-practice-for-ux-deliverables/?product_id=325265&coupon_code=SLIDESHARE
---
Slides from my 'Best practice for UX deliverables' workshop that I ran for Eventhandler in London on the 22nd of October.
http://www.eventhandler.co.uk/events/uxnightclass-uxdeliverables
---
Please note that for copyright reasons & client privacy the examples in this presentation are slightly different than from the workshop. The examples included are for reference only in terms of what I talked through in the 'Good examples' section.
-----
ABSTRACT
Whilst the work we do is not meant to be hanged on a wall for people to admire, nor is meant to be put in a drawer and forgotten about. Just as we make the products and services we design easy to use, the UX of UX is about communicating your thinking in a way that ensures that what you've defined is easy to understand for the reader. It's about adapting the work you do to the project in question and finding the right balance of making people want to look through your work whilst not spending unnecessary time on making it pretty.
Who is it for?
This workshop is suitable for anyone starting out in UX, or who's worked with it for a while but is looking to improve the way they present their work.
What you'll learn
In this hands on workshop we'll walk through real life examples of why the UX of UX deliverables matter. We'll cover how who the reader is effects the way we should present our work, both on paper and verbally, and how to ensure that the work you do adds value. Coming out of the workshop you'll have practical examples and hands on experience with:
// How to adapt and sell your UX deliverable to the reader (from clients, your team, in house and outsourced developers)
// Guiding principles for creating good UX deliverables (both low and high fidelity)
// Best practice for presentations, personas, user journeys, flows, sitemaps, wireframes and other documents
// Simple, low effort but big impact tools for improving the visual presentation of your UX deliverables
Optimising Landing Pages Through Narrative Structure - Digital Growth Unleash...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Digital Growth Unleashed in London on the 17 October 2018.
ABSTRACT
In all good stories things happen for a reason. Every prop and character that is present, every line that is spoken and song that is played has a role to play in making the story come together. In this talk Anna takes us on a journey of what we can learn from traditional storytelling methods when it comes to optimising landing pages and how narrative structure is key in ensuring we're telling the right story to the right audience, at the right time.
https://digitalgrowthunleashed.co.uk/agenda/?rmid=session57101#s-session57101
Designing Around Storytelling - Breaking Borders, Reading 18 August 2015Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Breaking Borders on the 18 August. http://breakingborde.rs/past-events/engagement/
Storytelling has always played an important part in our societies throughout history. In the last few years it's gained attention as an important aspect in communicating and building engagement with a brand’s customer base. But storytelling is also an integral part of the design process. It’s a tool that not only can help us define our content and messaging, but the experience as a whole. Both across platforms and screens, and how we interact with it.
Using Storytelling To Craft Multi-device Experiences That Convert - CXL Live,...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk 'Using Storytelling To Craft Multi-device Experiences' at CXL Live
https://live.conversionxl.com/
ABSTRACT
As the number of devices that we use, when, where and how we use them becomes increasingly complex, understanding and optimising the experience for what matters to the specific user, at specific points in time, is ever more important. In this talk, we’ll look at how storytelling principles and tools can be used together with traditional conversion and growth optimisation approaches to create better experiences for our customers and healthier bottom lines.
The talk will cover:
✓ how storytelling in design will help you set the right KPIs and measure the right metrics
✓ how it can help you define and assess hypotheses
✓ how it can guide you to the right data and connect it back to the experience
✓ how storytelling in design can help create the right multi-device experience and content, from the beginning
Beyond The Hamburger Menu - MOBX, 13 Sep 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at MOBX in Berlin on 13 Sep 2014 - http://2014.mobxcon.com/
Beyond the hamburger menu - What you need to know about designing for multiple devices.
Abstract: From myths to trends and best practice, actual usage, engagement, design patterns and interactions, we’ll go through the insights behinds the stats and take a look at the reality behind mobile and what really matters when designing for multiple devices.
Storytelling In Design - SXSW, 13 March 2017Anna Dahlström
Slides from my two talks at SXSW 2017 about my upcoming book 'Storytelling in design'.
http://schedule.sxsw.com/2017/events/PP65833
ABSTRACT
To every great story there's a bit of magic involved and so there is to experiences that just work and deliver the right content, interactions and notifications at the right time, and on the right device.
Drawing on tried and tested storytelling principles from film, fiction, and music and applying them to the context of UX design and business, in this talk Ms. Dahlstrom shares how we can instil a bit of magic in the work we do and hereby ensure that we create better multi-device experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for our businesses.
Using Storytelling to Create Experiences that Convert - Conversion Elite, Lon...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my 'Using Storytelling to Create Experience that Convert' talk at Conversion Elite on 6 June 2018
https://www.conversion-elite.co.uk/the-programme/
---
ABSTRACT
As users’ paths to conversion are becoming increasingly diverse understanding the context of our users, and the products and services we create, is ever more important. In this talk, Anna walks us through how storytelling principles and tools combined with UX and traditional conversion and optimisation approaches can be used to create better experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for the business.
Adapting to Input — Smashing Conference NYCJason Grigsby
Responsive Web Design has forced us to accept that we don't know the size of our canvas, and we've learned to embrace the squishiness of the web. Input, it turns out, is every bit as challenging as screen size. We have tablets with keyboards, laptops that become tablets, laptops with touch screens, phones with physical keyboards, and even phones that become desktop computers.
In this session, Jason will guide you through the input landscape, showing you new forms of input like sensors and voice control, as well as new lessons about old input standbys. You'll learn the design principles necessary to build web sites that respond and adapt to whatever input people use.
Designing around storytelling - UX Oxford, 23 April 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at UX Oxford on 23 April
http://www.meetup.com/UX-Oxford/events/172543682/
Storytelling has always played an important part in our societies throughout history. In the last few years it's gained attention as an important aspect in communicating and building engagement with a brand’s customer base. But storytelling is also an integral part of the design process. It’s a tool that not only can help us define our content and messaging, but the experience as a whole. Both across platforms and screens, and how we interact with it.
The gap between physical and digital has blurred: we use Wiis to get in shape, computers to order a pizza, or our smartphone’s GPS to find hot dates. People want to interact with products and services when they want to and how they want to – and that’s not always on the web.
The future of design is everywhere the customer touches our product or service - digital or physical. User experience practitioners must move beyond the screen to designing a holistic customer experience that is seamless across channels and devices.
The Importance of Storytelling in Web Design, WordCamp Miami 2013Denise Jacobs
What if we strengthened our creations for the web by building them upon a foundation of Story? Let's explore the growing importance of storytelling in web design, how to communicate Story through all aspects of a website from content, to design, to ux; and how to apply key components of great storytelling in literature to the medium of the web.
No matter how much we try to put ourselves into a mobile first mentality, it is hard for us to do so fully. Our access to PCs prevents us from experiencing mobile the way many in the world do.
We're currently fighting for parity among experiences. We're arguing that the mobile version shouldn't be a dumbed down version of the desktop site.
But we've set our sights too low. In a true Mobile First world, the mobile version should be the best experience. Mobile shouldn't just match the desktop experience, it should exceed it.
Responsivt - Inte bara för mobilen + Webbdagarna Växjö, 04 Dec 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at Webbdagarna Växjö on the 4 December 2014.
http://www.webbdagarna.se/vaxjo-2014/program
Video (in Swedish): http://internetworld.idg.se/2.1006/1.600683/responsivt---inte-bara-for-mobilen
Abstract:
Responsiv design ses av många som ett sätt att anpassa sina sajter till att användare surfar på mobilen eller surfplattan. Men responsivt är mycket mer än så. Det är ett sätt att framtidssäkra sina digitala tjänster för en framtid med nya enheter av alla olika storlekar.
Slides from my talk at Cambridge Usability Group on the 12th of May 2014
http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/designing-better-ux-deliverables-tickets-11542298325
Needing to produce some kind of deliverables throughout a project is inevitable: it might be user research reports to inform senior stakeholder; usability test results to communicate to developers; sketches and wireframes to pass on to web designers.
Just as we make the products and services we design easy to use, the UX of UX is about communicating your thinking in a way that ensures that what you've defined is easy to understand for the reader. It's about adapting the work you do to the project in question and finding the right balance of making people want to look through your work whilst not spending unnecessary time on making it pretty.
You have an idea, lot of motivation and some skills. That’s a great beginning if you want to build a product but you might find a few issues on the way of making it successful.
Let’s discuss together about what is a product.
Don’t expect the magic formula but tools and questions to help you transform your idea into something valuable.
Talk given at Softshake 2015
Slides from my talk at Generate London on the 23 September 2016 http://www.generateconf.com/london-2016 #generateconf
ABSTRACT
There was a time when we did glossy page designs and those designs were pretty much what we saw in our desktop browsers. With the rise of smartphones, tablets and smartwatches, there isn’t one view of our designs any more.
With further developments in technology and screens, our content could go anywhere. As a result we need to move away from designing for specific devices to solutions that are device-agnostic. For UX designers that means means letting content guide layouts, and moving away from designing pages to focusing on the modules that those views are made up of.
In this talk Anna will walk through why device-agnostic design matters, what it means and how we go about it.
Designing Big Data Interactions Using the Language of DiscoveryJoe Lamantia
Looking deeper than the celebratory rhetoric of information quantity, at its core, Big Data makes possible unprecedented awareness and insight into every sphere of life; from business and politics, to the environment, arts and society. In this coming Age of Insight, ‘discovery’ is not only the purview of specialized Data Scientists who create exotic visualizations of massive data sets, it is a fundamental category of human activity that is essential to everyday interactions between people, resources, and environments.
To provide architects and designers with an effective starting point for creating satisfying and relevant user experiences that rely on discovery interactions, this session presents a simple analytical and generative toolkit for understanding how people conduct the broad range of discovery activities necessary in the information-permeated world.
Specifically, this session will present: • A simple, research-derived language for describing discovery needs and activities that spans domains, environments, media, and personas • Observed and reusable patterns of discovery activities in individual and collaborative settings • Examples of the architecture of successful discovery experiences at small and large scales • A vocabulary and perspective for discovery as a critical individual and organizational capability • Leading edge examples from the rapidly emerging space of applied discovery • Design futures and concepts exploring the possible evolution paths of discovery interactions
Frédéric Mauger (@fmauger) and Géraud de Laval (@geraudch) talk about enterprise mobility. The arrival of mobile devices in the companies brings new challenges for developers and for IT managers as well. Along this talk, you'll find the various need and issues related to the mobility. You'll discover technologies which can help you in this process: MDM, MAM, Sandbox, VPN, ... We end the presentation with the overview of our solution SENSE which uses several technologies and mix them together.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Frédéric Mauger (@fmauger) et Géraud de Laval (@geraudch) de chez Sysmosoft à propos de la mobilité en entreprise :
"L'arrivée des appareils mobiles dans les entreprises entraîne de nouveaux challenges, pour les développeurs comme pour les responsables informatiques. Nous présenterons les différents besoins et enjeux liés à la mobilité des entreprises ainsi que les familles de technologie qui y répondent. Nous traiterons notamment: MDM, MAM, Sandbox, SDK et VPN. Nous finirons par un aperçu de SENSE notre solution de sécurité mobile qui utilise plusieurs de ces technologies."
A talk we had at Texity systems.
Topics were
“ Are you really a User Experience Designer ?
The shift from product design to process design”
Contents
- what is user experience ? A bit of historical perspective
- Who coined the term and what did he mean ? ( Don Norman coined this term)
- how does IA, interaction design, usability, user research, relate to user experience ?
- what is product user experience ?
- how is different from user experience design of a service ?
- if this is User Experience, then what exactly is customer experience ?
- Should there be a designation called User Experience designer?
- The CEO, the engineer, the sales manager , product manager ….. are they UX designers or they aren’t ?
- Product design vs Process design
- The notion of a User , and who is the Customer ….. can user and customer be same ?
- A better term : DUX ( designing for user experience )
UCD14 Talk - Anna Dahlstrom - Device Agnostic Design: How to get your content...UCD UK Ltd
Anna Dahlstrom - Device Agnostic Design: How to get your content to go anywhere
There was a time when we did glossy page designs and when those designs were pretty much what we saw in our desktop browsers. With the introduction and rise of smartphones, tablets, phablets there isn't one view of our designs anymore.
Instead, what we create needs to be able to adapt in a way that is suitable for the device as well as where and how it’s being used.
With responsive design we've learnt the basics of how to adapt content, interactions and layouts so that it works across devices. But with further developments in technology and screens, our content is going to go anywhere. As a result we need to move away from designing for specific devices to solutions that are device agnostic. For us as UX designers this means means letting content rather than devices guide layouts, and also increasingly moving away from designing and wireframing pages to focusing on the modules that those views are made up of. But there are other aspects to consider in device agnostic design.
In this talk Anna will walk through why device agnostic design matters, what it means and how we go about it.
Device Agnostic Design - UCD2014, London 25 Oct 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my Device Agnostic Design talk at UCD London
http://2014.ucduk.org/session/device-agnostic-design-how-to-get-your-content-to-go-anywhere/
ABSTRACT:
There was a time when we did glossy page designs and when those designs were pretty much what we saw in our desktop browsers. With the introduction and rise of smartphones, tablets, phablets there isn’t one view of our designs anymore.
Instead, what we create needs to be able to adapt in a way that is suitable for the device as well as where and how it’s being used.
With responsive design we’ve learnt the basics of how to adapt content, interactions and layouts so that it works across devices. But with further developments in technology and screens, our content is going to go anywhere. As a result we need to move away from designing for specific devices to solutions that are device agnostic. For us as UX designers this means means letting content rather than devices guide layouts, and also increasingly moving away from designing and wireframing pages to focusing on the modules that those views are made up of. But there are other aspects to consider in device agnostic design.
In this talk I walk through why device agnostic design matters, what it means and how we go about it.
More people are using mobile platforms to access information - can your business afford to be left behind in an age of rapid digital transformation?
When once it was acceptable to be in the late majority when it came to adjusting your business to technological advancements, nowadays you have to lead the pack in order to be a viable business.
Presented by Stephanie Rieger at Breaking Development in Dallas, April 11 2011 and Mobilism in Amsterdam, May 12, 2011.
Context is often cited as the single most important factor in design for the mobile medium. Mobile devices are of course 'mobile', but they are also small, always on, always with us, and can instantly connect us to the people we love. Mobile services must therefore be simple, social, and well-focussed--enabling us to quickly get things done on even the smallest screens.
This is all well and good, but mobile devices have changed. They may be mobile, but many have already stopped being 'phones'—nor do they resemble what we traditionally think of as computers. This presentation will explore how our use, and perception of mobile devices is changing, and how these changes may impact how we should design for them going forward.
With the mobile.infobroker.de Web-App 1.2 ordering of international company data and company reports has never been
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Ordering is done in 3 steps. Activate the order-form by credit card or PayPal. Place your order and retrieve the data
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About infobroker.de: German based information professional since 1991. Serving international company data profiles, trademark searches, trademark
monitoring and market data research.
Mobile UX 101 - current trends, behaviours, design considerations, common mistakes, platform choices and general advice for anyone entering the mobile design and development industry
This is a short slide show that goes throught the history of cell phone technology and how it has progressed through the mobile marketing stage into the machine it has become.
How To Use Storytelling To Craft Experiences That Engage - IIeX EU, Amsterda...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk at IIeX EU 2018 in Amsterdam
225331
ABSTRACT
To every great story there's a bit of magic involved. The same applies to experiences that just work and deliver the right content, interactions and notifications at the right time, and on the right device.
Drawing on tried and tested storytelling principles from film, fiction, and music and applying them to the context of UX design and business, in this talk Anna shares how we can instill a bit of magic in the work we do and thereby ensuring that we create better multi-device experiences for our users and healthier bottom lines for our businesses.
Storytelling In Design - DXN, Nottingham, 8 Feb 2017Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk about Storytelling In Design at Design Exchange Nottingham on 8 Feb 2017.
http://dxnevent.com/
ABSTRACT
To every great story there's a bit of magic involved and so there is to experiences that just work and deliver the right content, interactions and nudges at the right time, and on/via the right device. Drawing on tried and tested storytelling principles from film, fiction, and music and applying them to the context of UX design, in this talk Anna shares how the increasingly complex world we’re designing for is our biggest asset and how storytelling in design can help us instil a bit of everyday magic in the work we do, for our users, and for us.
Best Practice For UX Deliverables - Eventhandler, London, 05 March 2014Anna Dahlström
TAKE THIS WORKSHOP ONLINE & GET 20% OFF WITH CODE 'SLIDESHARE'
https://school.uxfika.co/p/best-practice-for-ux-deliverables/?product_id=325265&coupon_code=SLIDESHARE
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Slides from my 'Best practice for UX deliverables' workshop that I ran for Eventhandler in London on the 05th of March 2014.
http://www.eventhandler.co.uk/events/uxnightclass-uxdeliverables3
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Please note that for copyright reasons & client privacy the examples in this presentation are slightly different than from the workshop. The examples included are for reference only in terms of what I talked through in the 'Good examples' section.
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ABSTRACT
Whilst the work we do is not meant to be hanged on a wall for people to admire, nor is meant to be put in a drawer and forgotten about. Just as we make the products and services we design easy to use, the UX of UX is about communicating your thinking in a way that ensures that what you've defined is easy to understand for the reader. It's about adapting the work you do to the project in question and finding the right balance of making people want to look through your work whilst not spending unnecessary time on making it pretty.
Who is it for?
This workshop is suitable for anyone starting out in UX, or who's worked with it for a while but is looking to improve the way they present their work.
What you'll learn
In this hands on workshop we'll walk through real life examples of why the UX of UX deliverables matter. We'll cover how who the reader is effects the way we should present our work, both on paper and verbally, and how to ensure that the work you do adds value. Coming out of the workshop you'll have practical examples and hands on experience with:
// How to adapt and sell your UX deliverable to the reader (from clients, your team, in house and outsourced developers)
// Guiding principles for creating good UX deliverables (both low and high fidelity)
// Best practice for presentations, personas, user journeys, flows, sitemaps, wireframes and other documents
// Simple, low effort but big impact tools for improving the visual presentation of your UX deliverables
Selling UCD - how to get buy-in & measure the value - Eventhandler, London 26...Anna Dahlström
Slides from my Eventhandler workshop on 26th of February about how to get buy-in for UCD and measure the value of UX initatives.
http://www.eventhandler.co.uk/events/uxnightclass-sellingucd
Designing Around Storytelling - Digital Pond, London 06 Feb 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk around storytelling in design at the Digital Pond meet up on 06 Feb 2014
http://www.meetup.com/The-Digital-Pond/events/159211742/
Stories have played an important part in our societies and development through history. In the last few years it's gained attention as a tool for and important aspect in communication, and rightfully so. But it's also an integral part of the design process and at the Digital Pond I talked about why as well as how we can use it, from the start, during definition and development as well as going forwards.
Three part series: Designing for multiple devices - GA, London, 20 Jan 2014Anna Dahlström
Slides from my three-part series Designing for Multiple Devices class run on the 20th of January with General Assembly in London.
The rise in mobiles and tablets have not only changed the way we consume and interact with content, but also the way we design and what we base our design approach on.
This series of classes will cover how user expectations as well as behaviour and consumption patterns have shifted—and what that means for designing products that will be used on multiple devices. Coming out of these classes, you'll be equipped with the essential principles and tools to tackle the multiple device jungle.
Three part series: Designing for multiple devices - GA, London, 26 Nov 2013Anna Dahlström
Slides from my three-part series Designing for Multiple Devices class run in one evening on the 26th of November with General Assembly in London.
https://generalassemb.ly/education/designing-for-multiple-devices-3-part-series
The rise in mobiles and tablets have not only changed the way we consume and interact with content, but also the way we design and what we base our design approach on.
This series of classes will cover how user expectations as well as behaviour and consumption patterns have shifted—and what that means for designing products that will be used on multiple devices. Coming out of these classes, you'll be equipped with the essential principles and tools to tackle the multiple device jungle.
Designing Around Storytelling - UCD2013, London 08 Oct 2013Anna Dahlström
Slides from my talk around storytelling in design at the UCD 2013 Conference in London http://2013.ucduk.org.
Stories have played an important part in our societies and development through history. In the last few years it's gained attention as a tool for and important aspect in communication, and rightfully so. But it's also an integral part of the design process and at UCD 2013 I talked about why as well as how we can use it, from the start, during definition and development as well as going forwards.
Can AI do good? at 'offtheCanvas' India HCI preludeAlan Dix
Invited talk at 'offtheCanvas' IndiaHCI prelude, 29th June 2024.
https://www.alandix.com/academic/talks/offtheCanvas-IndiaHCI2024/
The world is being changed fundamentally by AI and we are constantly faced with newspaper headlines about its harmful effects. However, there is also the potential to both ameliorate theses harms and use the new abilities of AI to transform society for the good. Can you make the difference?
Book Formatting: Quality Control Checks for DesignersConfidence Ago
This presentation was made to help designers who work in publishing houses or format books for printing ensure quality.
Quality control is vital to every industry. This is why every department in a company need create a method they use in ensuring quality. This, perhaps, will not only improve the quality of products and bring errors to the barest minimum, but take it to a near perfect finish.
It is beyond a moot point that a good book will somewhat be judged by its cover, but the content of the book remains king. No matter how beautiful the cover, if the quality of writing or presentation is off, that will be a reason for readers not to come back to the book or recommend it.
So, this presentation points designers to some important things that may be missed by an editor that they could eventually discover and call the attention of the editor.
Expert Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) Drafting ServicesResDraft
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Hello everyone! I am thrilled to present my latest portfolio on LinkedIn, marking the culmination of my architectural journey thus far. Over the span of five years, I've been fortunate to acquire a wealth of knowledge under the guidance of esteemed professors and industry mentors. From rigorous academic pursuits to practical engagements, each experience has contributed to my growth and refinement as an architecture student. This portfolio not only showcases my projects but also underscores my attention to detail and to innovative architecture as a profession.
Beyond the hamburger menu - Digital Doughnut, London 25 Nov 2014
1. hamburger
@annadahlstrom | Digital Doughnut, 25 November 2014
www.flickr.com/photos/alexnormand/5992512756
BEYOND THE
MENU
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT DESIGNING FOR MULTIPLE DEVICES
3. “ Design for everyone and you design for no-one”
https://www.flickr.com/photos/coofdy/12245978213/in/photostream/
4. With mobile the
impossible has become possible
https://www.flickr.com/photos/fotobib/13759982694
5. !
!
“ A third of all smartphone users in the U.K.
—or 11 million adults—check their phone
within five minutes of waking. ”
www.flickr.com/photos/exlibris/2552107635
- Source: WSJ
6. !
!
“ A third of all smartphone users in the U.K.
—or 11 million adults—check their phone
within five minutes of waking. ”
www.flickr.com/photos/exlibris/2552107635
- Source: WSJ
7. “ Just a giant iPhone. ”
https://www.flickr.com/photos/bfishadow/4604166391
18. “ Your mobile phone has more computing
power than the computers used for the Apollo
11 moon landing. ”
www.flickr.com/photos/patdavid/9391602153
- Source: www.factslides.com/s-Mobile-Phones
20. !
!
!
“ 7 out of 10 smartphone and tablet users
expect the same quality of experience on all
devices. ”
www.flickr.com/photos/pandiyan/4550066009
- Source: Vibrantmedia
21. Myth:
Mobile users are rushed & on the go
Image courtesy of Shutterstock
22. !
!
!
!
!
“ 88% of smartphone owners used their mobile
as part of their Christmas shopping last year. ”
https://www.flickr.com/photos/pavlinajane/11389693545
- Source: Weve
23. Mobile Search MoMentS
UnderStanding how Mobile driveS converSionS
Mobile search is always on, happening
on the go, at home and at work
of mobile searches
occur at home or
work; 17% on the go 77%
0RELOHVHDUFKHVDUHVWURQJOWLHGWRVSHFLȴFFRQWH[WV
Shopping queries are 2x more likely to be in store
Mobile searches drive valuable
outcomes for businesses
3 of 4 mobile searches
trigger follow-up actions
Actions triggered by mobile search
also happen very quickly
of conversions (store visit,
phone call or purchase)
happening within an hour 55%
On average, each mobile search triggers
nearly 2 follow-up actions
Product shopping searches have a
higher number of outcomes
Number of follow-up actions per mobile search
3.56 2.52 2.08
2.20 2.07
Beauty Auto Travel Food Tech
36%
Continued
Research
18%
Shared Information
17%
Made a Purchase
25%
Visited a Retailer’s
Website
17%
Visited a Store
7%
Called a Business
Source: http://www.thinkwithgoogle.com/infographics/creating-moments-that-matter-infographic.html
24. Devices are
used interchangeably
www.flickr.com/photos/soyproject/6066959891
26. “ Smartphones accounted for 57.6% of total
sales in fourth quarter of 2013 ” *
- Source: Gartner
www.flickr.com/photos/aforgrave/6168689222
27. “ Android accounted for 85% of all smartphones
shipped in Q2 — its highest ever proportion ”
- Source: Tech Crunch
https://www.flickr.com/photos/jantik/4620819221/sizes/o/
31. “ The hottest app among
Silicon Valley early adopters
right now is Secret.
You use it to post anonymous
secrets. For the past two days
it's all anyone is talking about
on Twitter. ”
!
- Nicholas Carlson, Business Insider
32. “ The good news for Apple is
that it's available on iPhone.
The bad news for Apple is
that it's really hard to find
Secret through the App Store
app on your iPhone. ”
!
- Nicholas Carlson, Business Insider
33. Apple: 1.3 million (Sep)
Android: 1+ million (July)
Windows: 300,000+ (Aug)
Blackberry: 130,000 / 370,000
34. 30hrs 15 mins / month
https://www.flickr.com/photos/alvy/12769050423
+
26.8 apps / month
=
More time spent, but not more apps used
36. Should I do an app?
www.flickr.com/photos/tomitapio/4053123799/in/photostream
37. ” Money spent developing a pretty but
limited iPhone app only benefits [...] the few,
but money spent on the website UI would have
benefitted everyone. ”
www.flickr.com/photos/dougbelshaw/4360008898
- Gary Marshall on ‘The app trap’ in .net Magazine
38. Avoid native apps
Invest in the web UI
https://www.flickr.com/photos/michaelgoodin/3315541855
55. “ One third of Americans who already
own some sort of wrist-mounted device
stop wearing theirs after six months” ”
- Source: FastCompany
https://www.flickr.com/photos/djkeino/8667722768
57. “ In order for any wearable to be
successful it has to disappear from the
foreground, and its utility in your life has
to far outweigh any small inconvenience. ”
Screenshot: http://www.apple.com/uk/
- Source: Mashable
58. A talks to B talks to C
talks to D talks to …
… understands to the user
63. “ They should demand our attention
only at truly demanding moments. ”
https://www.flickr.com/photos/pure9/2603089643
- Global Moxie,
Smart Watches, Wearables, and That Nasty Data Rash
72. Adapt to device, platform,
purpose usage
www.flickr.com/photos/visualpunch/7351572896
73. “ And just as the first wave of desktop
apps ported to mobile were
underwhelming and replaced by mobile-first
applications, so will companies
quickly realize that it isn’t just a new
screen but a brand-new platform. ”
- Source: Techcrunch