vote up 2 vote down
star

I'm wondering about the many ways practitioners convince stakeholders and decision makers to let them do their thing.

In my experience, showing video clips from the usability testing (I use Morae) does the trick. But you don't always have video at hand for every important design change you want to make.

What else works?

Have you ever successfuly used examples from completely different domains to help people understand usability concepts?

Disclosure: I'm not employed by the people who make Morae.

flag

8 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

For specific issues, I like to use examples as much as I can and they seem to work really well. I started a small collection of research, real-life examples for the very same reason at www.defendyourdesign.com.

Also, I like to prepare all documentation (from concepts to wireframes) with documenting both how I got to the solution and how it will support the goals that we have. This also seems to smooth discussions on designs.

But if there are usability findings for the project at hand, that works the best. Like a charm almost always.

link|flag
Nice site you referred me to! Thanks. – JeromeR Nov 3 at 7:10
vote up 3 vote down

There's an interesting article published today on A List Apart called "Can You Say That in English? Explaining UX Research to Clients" that outlines some nice cost benefits, and ways to communicate them, for UX research

http://www.alistapart.com/articles/can-you-say-that-in-english-explaining-ux-research-to-clients/

HTH

Alex

link|flag
The article says to use your own examples, so I immediately wrote some examples relevant to our workplace and then distributed the article internally. – JeromeR Nov 4 at 17:16
vote up 2 vote down

Personally, I always find talking about money (to the management) gets them interested quickly.

Show them how you can actually save/make money if you take care of the site's usability/user experience. You could even take it a step further and estimate how much money you'd save/make through the site if it was easier and more pleasant to use. Of course, you need to base your claims on real usage data.

People might think UX/usability is interesting, but they won't really invest in it until it actually save/make them money, and it does most of the time.

Hope this helps :)

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Create an initial implementation or "proof of concept" of your design, and let end users play with it. We've done that, and their reactions – "That's so much better!" "Oh, this is going to save me so much time." "I love this!" – make a compelling case for the defence. It's not always easy to set up, but we've found it to be very effective.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I don't know why but you can easily impress stakeholders by showing them a great number of early sketches and mockups. Even if they understand nothing at all, sketches may work like magic. But though it's invaluable to impress it doesn't work so well with little details and particular design changes.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I use the user stats and error logs to do some quick flashy charts in a power point that they can shoot up the chain. I employ some sketches/wireframes that show how we could easily decrease some of the errors we see or increase access to pages users aren't visiting.

Quite frankly I only use it for management, it's not really good/complete analysis and sketches/wireframes are always just "ideas", not what we actually end up implementing after real research.

link|flag
Would you post an example of your quick, flashy charts? You can remove or modify confidential details, if needed. I'm looking for an example. – JeromeR Nov 14 at 17:39
vote up 1 vote down

"Institutionalization of Usability": A Step-by-Step Guide by Eric Schaffer contains quite a lot of useful content regarding your question. Recommended.

link|flag
For me, the bad news in this book was "you must have an executive champion," because this news came at a time when we had an executive who only SAID he believed in UX and usability. While biding my time, I looked for low-hanging fruit and win-win projects; when management changed I had lots of ready samples to show what could be done. With a real executive champion in place, Schaffer's book provided useful "next steps" to take, toward what Jakob Nielsen calls corporate usability maturity. (useit.com/alertbox/maturity.html) – JeromeR Nov 14 at 17:29
vote up 0 vote down
check

Wow! Five different answers, and all of them good ideas.

The interface is asking me to choose one answer. i can't, so I'm cohosing this one, to say "I choose them all."

(But I must wait 32 hours before I can choose this answer. Grumble.)

-=- Jerome

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.