Book Image

User Experience Mapping

By : Peter W. Szabo
Book Image

User Experience Mapping

By: Peter W. Szabo

Overview of this book

Do you want to create better products and innovative solutions? User experience maps will help you understand your users and improve communication with them. Maps can also champion user-centricity within the organization. This book is the first print resource covering two advanced mapping techniques—the behavioral change map and the 4D UX map. You’ll explore user story maps, task models, and journey maps, while also creating wireflows, mental model maps, ecosystem maps, and solution maps. You’ll learn how to use insights from real users to create and improve your maps and products. The book delves into each major user experience map type, ranging from simple techniques based on sticky notes to more complex map types, and guides you in solving real-world problems with maps. You’ll understand how to create maps using a variety of software products, including Adobe Illustrator, Balsamiq Mockups, Axure RP, and Microsoft Word. Besides, you can draw each map type with pen and paper too! The book also showcases communication techniques and workshop ideas. You’ll learn about the Kaizen-UX management framework, developed by the author, now used by many agencies and in-house UX teams in Europe and beyond. Buying this book will give you hundreds of hours worth of user experience knowledge, from one of the world’s leading UX consultants. It will change your users’ world for the better. If you are still not convinced, we have hidden some cat drawings in it, just in case.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface
Free Chapter
1
How Will UX Mapping Change Your (Users) Life?
12
References

Test objectives


Before deciding anything else about our test, we need to clearly define our objectives. Arguably, this is the most important step in test design. A well-defined set of objectives will make most test design decisions easy, if not obvious. It will help you to decide where and how to test, what kind of users to invite, and what tasks to give them; it goes even further. It will help us in the next chapter when you will create the analysis guidelines, find and summarize user insights, and communicate them in the form of a map. 

Note

The objectives are the base for designing, analyzing, mapping, and communicating any user test. The highest level objective for all user tests should be to gain a better understanding of the users and their behavior. 

Besides the better understanding of the users and their behaviors, you will also need to have lower-level objectives--objectives that are specific to the test you will be running. Test objectives should always be rooted in our the opportunity...