Brian Winters, Improve Your User's Experience; Improve Your Bottom Line
1. Improve Your User Experience
Improve Your Bottom Line
Brian Winters
Director of Usability
Text
Careerbuilder.com
www.thisisbroken.com
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2. Brian Winters
Over 15 years exp. in marketing programs
Ten years expr. in user insights & usability
Symantec, Intel, Proxicom Consulting, United.com
Director of Usability, Careerbuilder.com
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3. Experiences
“Business success is always defined by the
quality of the overall customer experience.”
— Forrester Research, 2001
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Examples of good and bad experiences offline/online with products/services.
13. Why UX is Important?
Perceived Credibility
Profitability
Intent to Return
Intent to Purchase
User Satisfaction
Word of Mouth
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Perceived Credibility - sites that are easy to use are more credible.
Profitability - happy customers buy more. Help users achieve their goals easily and you will be make more $.
Intent to Return - people will come back to good shopping/browsing experiences and avoid bad ones
Intent to Purchase - many users will abandon a process or shopping cart flow if it is hard to understand and use.
User Satisfaction - if users can accomplish their goals easily, they leave feeling empowered.
Word of Mouth - this is probably the most important aspect of the experiences good or bad. This usually holds the most
influence for future customers.
14. UX
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bryce/106972762/
Web Content 2007 – Improve your User Experience, Improve Your Bottom Line
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This chart was developed by the consultants at Experience Dynamics. It shows in a nice and simple way the chain of elements that go into
either a good or bad experience.
15. Why focus on UX?
Experiences are designed
Experience is a differentiator
The market is changing
Improving experience has a real ROI
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When you design an experience, you are much more in tune with the users’ needs matched against your business objectives. If you design
something just to meet your business objectives, the end result can wind up being not very efficient.
Today companies can all buy the best software to run their companies, they have many of the same tools and means to reduce costs, so the
next horizon for differentiation is design and customer experiences with their brand.
The market is moving towards customized experiences. Web 2.0 is building the foundation of a different conversation with users.
As you improve the site experience for your users, you will see repeat business, higher conversion rates and overall increases in
satisfaction.
16. Steps to Improve UX
Hire usability/design experts
Site analytics
Usability testing
Surveys
Focus groups
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•Hire good usability folks. Duo Consulting has great talent when it comes to user experience and interaction design.
•Site Analytics gives you instant feedback on what users are actually doing on your site. Conversion rates are the easiest metric to look for.
•Usability tests add “context to web site analytics
•Remote testing is very cost effective, simple and easy to do.
•Surveys
•Focus Groups provide more general attitudes towards your site/brand/web site. Users will never give you specific answers in a focus group
to solve their problems. You need to really listen.
17. Steps to Improve UX
Understand user goals
Focus on design early
Use AJAX where possible
Measure everything
Test, test, test
quot;In our first year we didn't spend a single dollar on
advertising... the best dollars spent are those we use to
improve the customer experience.quot;- Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com
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If you can’t understand the goals of the user, then you can’t really provide them with the best experience possible. Otherwise, design is just
based on business goals and ignore the user.
It is far more cost effective to design the user experience early in the development process. This means doing research early to get inputs
before development begins.
AJAX is a great way to improve the experience for users. It allows you to do things that used to take page load after page load to accomplish,
often times removing the user from the task at hand.
Measuring and testing are important. If you don’t know if your design decisions are helping users achieve their goals, then your shooting in
the dark.
18. Improving User Experience at
Careerbuilder.com
Core metric is job applications
Test, test, test
User research
Alignment of business and user goals
Agile development environment
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One of the main measures for our web site is # of job applications and the ratio at which unique visitors apply. Our goal is to have a UV apply
ratio of one-to-one.
We test often. This keeps us on our toes and we learn new things all the time. Just when you think you got it right, even after user research
and heavy design work, you have to test it to know.
User research takes all forms at Careerbuilder. Usability testing, surveys, focus groups, A/B testing
Careerbuilder tries to align our business goals and user goals as much as possible.
Having an agile development environment lends itself to multiple quick iterations of a page/process. This is really advantageous when you
are trying to improve the user experience across your entire site. It also allows you flexibility to try different things without straying too far
from your business goals. As you iterate and gather feedback, each iteration becomes stronger and your intuition improves.
21. Apply Button Project
“It’s just a button...”
Goal = more job applications
Project started as a simple test
Yielded astonishing results
“The ability to simplify means to eliminate the
unnecessary so that the necessary may speak.”
—Hans Hofmann
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23. Before After
“I don’t have a resume.”
“What is a posted resume?”
“I have not posted yet.”
“Do I have to post a resume to
apply to this job?”
“I don’t want to post, just apply.”
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24. Before After
Simple – Apply Now!!!
“I don’t have a resume.”
New user traffic improved 40%
“What is a posted resume?”
New resumes increased
“I have not posted yet.”
Applications increased 15%
“Do I have to post a resume to
apply to this job?”
“I don’t want to post, just apply.”
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25. Apply Via Email Project
Conversion rates were 50%
Process wasn’t “broken” so why fix it
Highest volume of applications
Special tracking was difficult to change
quot;Improving user experience can increase both revenue
and customer satisfaction while lowering costs.quot;
- Get ROI from Designquot;, Forrester Research, June 2001
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30. Results Page Refresh Project
Goal = improve search experience
10% of users clicked on search filters
Filters were almost eliminated
Most users liked the filters after first use
“The average UI has some 40 flaws. Correcting the easiest 20 of these yields
an average improvement in usability of 50%. The big win, however, occurs
when usability is factored in from the beginning. This can yield efficiency
improvements of over 700%.quot; - Landauer, 1995
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We knew the results page was due for an overhaul, but this highly trafficked page made any changes risky to our business metrics.
We also knew that only 10% of users actually used the search filters. The running assuming, or inference on that data was that people didn’t
like them, or understand them
If they were only be used by 10% of users, there was the possibility to eliminate them and use that real estate for something else.
However – it was discovered that when people used the filters they found them very helpful. How can this be? Users like the filters, but only
10% of user actually click on them???
We needed some user testing to provide context for the things we already knew.
36. Improve your UX, impact
your business
Understand user goals
Test your assumptions
Use technology like AJAX
Design the customer experience
Start early in development cycle
“The product is the brand. You build brand in our industry
through the product and the experience - Jim Wicks, Motorola, 2006
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