#Definition of #User #Experience #UX
Philosophy of UX
User experience is about making people’s lives better not just changed
A persons experience is based in their mind and their emotions and can be established by both actual interaction and reflective (biographical experience) inputs.
In UX we define inputs in digital or real world frameworks which enable the creation of solutions that have meaningful impact and that can be measured.
Overview of UX
The current approach to UX is that it is the practical implementation of audience drivers, cognitive acuity, usability standards and accessibility laws with ergonomics (physical, contextual use) and anthropometric (digital behaviours analytics) measures. Creating an integration of business context into user context, to facilitate alignment, transactions and communications.
Definition; A user is a representative of the target audience. They are not involved in the project in any way. They will use the final product or service either as a customer or as an internal business user.
UX is not involved in the Look and Feel associated with GUI’s but rather delivers the human solution that can be accessed through any user interface this is why UX is closely associated with assistive technologies used in accessibility which are in turn derivatives of technologies developed for the military and space exploration.
While UX is not rocket science, it has been involved in the space program
The UX Process
We first try to ‘Understand the Problem’ from the user perspective (user research) so that we can create User Requirements, these combined with Business Requirements and Implicit Requirements create Project Requirements.
This process often called Discovery and can find new requirements, challenge business requirements or redirect the entire project along a route that delivers the business or organisation what they want but in a totally different way.
To de-risk human error (needing to be right) we work from researched archetypes (persona modelling) which creates the opportunity to ‘think like a user’ a great support tool if users are not always available.
This post is republished from an earlier blog from 2001.
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