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Product design

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Strategic insights on how to scale up a product successfully by investing in the UX process and design team.

Article by Adam Fard
Scaling A Startup: A UX Perspective
  • One of the major causes for failure in scaling up is the lack of idea validation.
  • Design Thinking framework provides a valuable path for preparing start-ups to scale up by assessing users’ needs and priorities. Another key step is to expand the UX team at the right moment to ensure proper validation and testing of ideas.
  • Investing in UX design allows to scale up a start-up efficiently while minimizing the risks.
Share:Scaling A Startup: A UX Perspective
7 min read

A quick guide to introducing your app to users

Article by Andre Augusto
How to design onboarding flows
  • Well-thought user onboarding is essential for customers engagement, satisfaction and ultimately their retention.
  • Best practices of exceptional onboarding experience include providing a simple overview of the product’s main features, use of visual content and motion design, concise copy.
  • Additionally, it is important to allow users to see their progress in the onboarding and skip non-essential steps.
Share:How to design onboarding flows
4 min read

Support logs are one of the most important sources of customer insights. These ‘insights’ are often ignored or sidelined by other departments’ teams because they are mistrusted or lack context.

Article by Ben Goodey
6 Tips for Making Customer Insights Actionable
  • Support logs are one of the most important sources of customer insights, but they’re often ignored or sidelined by other departments’ teams because customer insight isn’t trusted in general.
  • To trust customer insight, you need to make sure it answers these two questions:
    • Is the information provided something I can actually make a business decision based on?
    • How much will it matter if I do make a decision based on it?

6 characteristics of actionable insights:

  1. Contextualized. There are a few ways to contextualize customer insight: volume, sentiment, tying it to outcomes data.
  2. ‍Insightful. Insightful customer feedback says something new and useful.
  3. Fast. Try looking at improving speed to insight by tagging ‘reasons for contact’ in support tickets and using NLP to sort them faster.
  4. Granular—the devil is in the details. Customer feedback surveys are often not actionable without a further root cause analysis; answers are often too high level or generic.
  5. Statistically Significant. It’s easy to get hung up on quantitative measures, and it takes a lot of time to sift through qualitative feedback, and usually, only a small sample is taken. How can large business decisions be made without statistically significant evidence?
  6. Unbiased. There are two main buckets of customer survey bias to avoid: response bias (how the actual survey questionnaire is constructed) and selection bias (the results are skewed a certain way).
Read the full article to get ideas on how your teams can start getting meaningful insights from support logs.
Share:6 Tips for Making Customer Insights Actionable
5 min read

Cooking lovers came together to build an app to help reinforce cooking skill-sets for busy people that want to cook at home.

Article by Matt Lillis
Share:Case study: An educational cooking app
6 min read

A UX Design Case Study on Bumble BFF and making friends during a pandemic

Article by MacKenzie Legg
Share:Case Study: Adding pandemic-friendly features to a friendship app
9 min read

Did you know UX Magazine hosts the most popular podcast about conversational AI?

Listen to Invisible Machines

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