Top 5 Strategic Reasons for Usability Testing

Posted by admin on Fri, Aug 7, 2009
Filed Under | Featured, Usability


5. Usability data is addicting and can lead toward a long term desire to better serve your customers. Watching a usability testing session unfold in real time allows you, the product maker, to take a step away from the product and understand what is happening on the ground. Without empathy, it is much more difficult to come to the right design decisions.

4. Surveys, while inexpensive to conduct and in some cases statically valid, rely heavily on self-reported behavior or preference (and on retrospective accounts of past behavior). Since people are notoriously bad at articulating what they want and need, and are often unaware of their own behavior, surveys can fall short. Usability testing, because it depends on measuring behavior can find problems that would not be revealed in a survey.

3. Although a heuristic or expert usability review will give you insight to usability problems and can catch some issues inexpensively, usability testing can help define the scope and severity of usability issues so that you can tackle problems in the order of priority. Usability testing always results in findings that we didn’t know existed prior to testing (as usability professionals).

2. You are a project manager or executive and would like to generate buy-in from your peers/leaders about changes that need to happen. For one reason or another, the user experience has taken the backburner, but you need to convince stakeholders that there is definite room for improvement – that will directly impact your bottom line. A usability test is the perfect way to measure the user experience and get the evidence you need. You’ll even test your own assumptions.

1. Your website needs a redesign. Your team has inspired (or at times contentious) viewpoints in terms of strategy and content, but you need to understand how users experience your site. Usability testing can help you make the right decisions and compromises, because you’ll hear directly from those who your site is affecting the most. Drive forward with data.

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This post was written by:

admin - who has written 68 posts on The Blast Advanced Media Blog.



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  • You said-
    Surveys, while inexpensive to conduct and in some cases statically valid, rely heavily on self-reported behavior

    That's a great point, and an ongoing problem with any survey taking. This problem now has a new face on it because supposed 'surveys' are circulated through forwarded emails...only problem is, only those individuals with an agenda are responding to the 'survey'.
  • I enjoyed watching the "Watching a usability testing session " YouTube video. It wasn't what I thought a usability testing session was about. I was thinking that a usability test was a measurement of who clicked on what, when, how, etc.

    This recording of what a user is thinking as they go through the site is elucidating.

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  • Great article. Usability testing allows us to see how real users do real tasks in the real world. It can uncover pitfalls in an existing website before a redesign and evaluating the usability of a website after the design. Currently we are going through this phase while we are designing our website.
  • professionalwebsitetemplates
    I feel usability testing can create overkill to however, depending on what the budget is for the site or project, wouldn't you agree?

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  • I keep want to start this comment with ‘good’ or ‘nice’ or ‘great’ but none of these seems strong enough, or appropriate enough for what you just posted.Just fantastic and mindblowing blog keep it up..!!!
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