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W tym wydaniu CX Czwartku prezentujemy trzy spojrzenia na projektowanie doświadczeń.
You probably know all these films about sports teams made up of boring losers who most of the time kick themselves in the forehead and get it from some scoundrel, and then miraculously reach the final of the competition, in which - after a touching speech by the coach - they win? Or those films in which the life of the main character is tarnished, until finally it turns out that the guy has a talent for being someone, he takes over and is no longer anyone, just a wolf from Wall Street.
It would seem that thinking about preserving the view of a Parisian street in a picture before the invention of the camera was pure abstraction. Meanwhile, when Louise Daguerre snapped the first photograph in 1839 (the exposure time of which was several long minutes), the invention - despite the fact that nothing was the same after it - was smoothly accepted by society and the French government, which declared, moreover, that it belonged to the whole world. And kick the soul! And family portraits, and bathroom selfies. It doesn't matter. The important thing is that people were prepared for this type of solution - although spectacularly innovative, it is nevertheless inscribed in some context - because we have already heard about the fact that you can write an image on paper.
First there was a flat Earth. Flat as Italian pizza. From its shores, the oceans flowed in hectoliters, watering any circulation of water. Then the Earth inflated like a balloon and landed in the center of everything, like a navel in the middle of a big belly, and everything that glittered revolved around it. But then it turned out that what shines brightest is in the center, and the Earth is not only not in the center, but is also one of many other things altogether similar. What am I talking about? About the brand, of course. It was flat and bland at first - as if more local, showering some larger marketing efforts. Then she was stuffed with marketing, which inflated the balloon - there did not have to be much inside, but it is important that there was quite a lot outside. And so our brand swelled up like Smurf Ważniak and stood in the middle of everyone, weighing too much to move the “ass” to people, just flaunting itself. It was only here that it turned out that in reality the perspective is different - it is not the brand that stands in the center, but the people.
In the old days, when a newcomer appeared in a castle or palace, he was presented with all the more or less real merits - that brave, valiant, just, etc. - what PR, such presentation. This is exactly how we get to know the product in advertising. But what if every ad was Pinocchio? If so, with every lie, lie, naked truth, then the nose would stretch like another section of the Polish highway, like a memorable signal of the wrong answer in Familiada, which, when watching an advertisement in moments of half-truth, would let us know that someone was probably... carried away by the imagination.
Who was Alan Turing? A brilliant British mathematician and cryptologist who became a silent hero of World War II. He created a machine that eventually cracked the most complicated cipher in history - the Enigma code - the German cipher machine. In 1950, Turing became interested in artificial intelligence research, claiming that one day machines would be able to think at the same level as humans. So he developed a test that checked whether the robot was already developed enough that it could be mistaken for a human in conversation. What did such a study consist of? The judge asked questions to several parties that he did not see. One of them was a machine. If in five minutes the robot “scooped” at least 30% of the judges - it passed the test.
“OH! You take care of customer experience. And is it not by chance the same as...” - and then there are usually several proposals, thrown adequately to the casting industry. So how is it with this CX? Answering the question of what he is not, by the way, we will tell you about what he is.
Once upon a time there was a princess who lived with seven colleagues of not very tall stature. She studied cosmetology every day, and the guys worked in a nearby TV factory, so the queen was associated with this brand. Once, when the housemates in a sweat of their forehead were folding the televisions on the production tape, the queen heard a knock on the door. There stood a very charismatic, thin middle-aged guy in round glasses and socks. The acquirer introduced himself as Steve, after which he began to tempt the queen by buying a bitten apple, which allegedly simplifies everything and makes a person better. Who wouldn't want to?! He left some room for her free choice, and she willingly took the apple in her hands, looked from every side, and felt as if she had fallen into a blissful dream in which she actually became a Queen by a capital “K”.
In 1860, the Pony Express disseminated information about the results of the presidential election. California newspapers found out who became president of the United States 7 days and 17 hours after the East Coast newspapers — it was definitely setting a new speed record. Letters and parcels were delivered in this way, and often at a much slower rate, until 1861 something more capacious, more convenient, and safer arrived — a railway that delivered parcels not in a few weeks, but in a few days.
Thursday morning sun fell into the kitchen somewhere between a hot cup of coffee and the memory of a warm bed. Stefan phlegmatically chewed a bite of scrambled eggs with his head hanging over the tablet. He felt like a sloth hanging on a tree to which everything hangs. Except that he was the only sleepless sloth in the world. He slowly swiped his finger across the screen. He looked into the Flipboard application, where news awaited him from all the sources that usually interested him, including social media. It turned out that only in his kitchen everything dragged on like chewing gum, while the world all night managed to inflate an already large balloon of events, which at any moment could burst at him from the screen. Between yawning and sipping coffee, he switched to another app — Quartz. A messenger appeared on the screen — Stefan was greeted by his private virtual content provider — in the word: bot — who, like an old, decent Clipboard from Microsoft Word, chatted amicably and threw a few selected news previews for “good morning”, interspersed with curiosities from the world and memes. Stefan liked this guy. Even though he didn't exist — almost like some imaginary childhood friend. Stefan read a few news stories until he found out that running was becoming more popular and — as he was about to start — asked his “colleague” to write more about it before he left for work.
For 3 years we have been sending to more than 6000 readers an overview of the most interesting articles from the UX world
The Likert scale is one type of rating scale often used in UX surveys. It allows you to obtain from the questioner his opinion on a given topic - perception, preferences or beliefs. What exactly is it and where can it be checked?
Today, a variety of solutions are available on the market — applications, systems, programs. So how do you stand out from the crowd? The price may not be enough, but the quality is. The matter is facilitated by optimal UX, UI, which help build user loyalty. Why pay attention to customer experience?
With a pale dawn, we begin the celebration of International Cat Day. Anyone who has seen an individual of this species fight (not necessarily a loss) against the laws of physics has no doubt that cats are guided in life by the principle of “think outside the box” — paradoxically often doing so from the inside of the box. Therefore, today we offer you a reading of texts that encourage you to look at the topics of artificial intelligence, electronic banking and design thinking methodology from a different angle. Today`s set of texts also includes a portion of comments on user preference settings and a look at one of the potential trends in the gaming industry.
International Ditch Day could herald a hard day at work, but we remind you that golden retrievers also celebrate their holiday (supposedly always early to dig something out of the ground). We assume that you also have your own ways to spare time, so we invite you to read. Today we dug up articles for you about user-centered SEO, an agile approach to design and interesting examples of the direct sales model. There are also considerations about ethics in two contexts: the use of gamification mechanisms in digital products and conducting research with users.
Why is creating UX mockups so important for a project? To understand this, you need to thoroughly understand the user experience design system. It starts with an audit and research and ends with the implementation of a ready-made solution. One of the stages is the creation of the UX mockup mentioned earlier. What exactly is it and what role does it play in the whole process?
Design Sprint is an action methodology that aims to solve problems quickly. He draws his experience and knowledge from design thinking, created by Google Venturees — creative design of solutions related to products and services. Why use this methodology? When to decide on it?