Book Image

UX for the Web

By : Marli Ritter, Cara Winterbottom
Book Image

UX for the Web

By: Marli Ritter, Cara Winterbottom

Overview of this book

If you want to create web apps that are not only beautiful to look at, but also easy to use and fully accessible to everyone, including people with special needs, this book will provide you with the basic building blocks to achieve just that. The book starts with the basics of UX, the relationship between Human-Centered Design (HCD), Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), and the User-Centered Design (UCD) Process; it gradually takes you through the best practices to create a web app that stands out from your competitors. You’ll also learn how to create an emotional connection with the user to increase user interaction and client retention by different means of communication channels. We’ll guide you through the steps in developing an effective UX strategy through user research and persona creation and how to bring that UX strategy to life with beautiful, yet functional designs that cater for complex features with micro interactions. Practical UX methodologies such as creating a solid Information Architecture (IA), wireframes, and prototypes will be discussed in detail. We’ll also show you how to test your designs with representative users, and ensure that they are usable on different devices, browsers and assistive technologies. Lastly, we’ll focus on making your web app fully accessible from a development and design perspective by taking you through the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG).
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Using quantitative techniques


In many ways, it is easier to use quantitative techniques for research, as long as you follow the structures and guidelines for setting them up. The difficulty with quantitative techniques is that the results do not have context. The context provided with qualitative research provides some insight into its validity. With quantitative techniques, numbers are often shown for how big an effect is, or how often something happens without describing how they were gathered or calculated. These numbers rely on careful data gathering and use of the correct statistical techniques for the size and shape of the population.

If you have analytics based on actual usage of a website, this provides some reliability, as the numbers come from people who are actually using your product. However, if you gather quantitative values through usability testing or surveys, the metrics that you use to gather the data and the sample of people that you test with is often hidden. This information...