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A taxonomy for alerts and notifications
uxdesign.cc
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A while back, in the early days of our design system, we had a ticket for a component sitting in our backlog, with the title “Alert.” My initial reaction was “Oh yeah, a colored box with a little icon to the left of it and some text, easy.” Oh dear reader, how naive I was…

The Role of Emotion in UX
www.linkedin.com
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What separates great products from good ones? Attractive designs? User testing? Genius designers? Well, these might be contributory factors, but the true distinction lies in how they make users feel. Emotional design plays a huge role in the success of UX design.

The metamorphosis of the MVP (and how to save it)
uxdesign.cc
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The MVP awoke one morning from uneasy dreams and found itself transformed into a giant insect. It had devolved so far that it bore no resemblance to its former self. However, the fault was not in The Lean Startup but in a pervasive culture of overpromising and underdelivering.

The Product-Manager Archetype
www.nngroup.com
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Product managers share common goals, strengths, activities, and skill sets. Awareness of these commonalities helps designers figure out how to best collaborate with product managers on Agile teams.

The 6 Levels of UX Maturity
www.nngroup.com
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Our UX-maturity model has 6 stages that cover processes, design, research, leadership support, and longevity of UX. Use our quiz to get an idea of your organization’s UX maturity.

05/02/2023
NN/g UX Maturity Quiz
forms.nngroup.com
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We'll ask questions about how your organization approaches UX. Based on your answers, we'll give you an estimate of your organization's UX maturity. This assessment is based on the Nielsen Norman Group UX Maturity Model. There are six stages in the UX maturity model.

05/02/2023
“Learn More” Links: You Can Do Better
www.nngroup.com
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The phrase ‘Learn More’ is increasingly used as a crutch for link labels. But the text has poor information scent and is bad for accessibility. With a little effort, transform this filler copy into descriptive labels that help users confidently predict what the next page will be.

Use AI to Enhance My UX Design Process
boagworld.com
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Chat GPT to brainstorm ideas, write document outlines, compose tweets, make my emails friendlier, and much more. Recently, I even used it to suggest a possible information architecture based on the site content I provided.

Infinite Scrolling: When to Use It, When to Avoid It
www.nngroup.com
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Infinite scrolling minimizes interaction costs and increases user engagement, but it isn’t a good fit for every website. For some, pagination or a Load More button will be a better solution.

More Choices More Trouble (UX Slogan 12)
www.nngroup.com
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The more choices a user has to make, the bigger the risk of getting into trouble. More features can easily reduce usability.

Make it Easy (UX Slogan #8)
www.nngroup.com
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It's hard work to make a user interface that's easy to use. The end result may seem obvious to an outsider, but ease-of-use comes from trying out many design ideas and rejecting ones that are too difficult while polishing those that make the UI better.

5 Ways to Use Behavioral Science to Create Better Products
www.interaction-design.org
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A myriad of fields, skills and insights come together to create the overarching discipline of user experience design... Let’s explore five behavioral science insights you can use right now to design better products

Your Step-by-Step Guide to Heuristic Evaluation in UX Design
careerfoundry.com
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In this article we’ll be taking at look at what exactly UX designers mean by the term heuristic evaluation, how to conduct a heuristic evaluation for yourself, what to do if you can’t afford a usability expert, and the difference between a heuristic evaluation and user testing.

Optimize for Return Visits, not Bounce Rate
www.nngroup.com
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Use bounce rate as a red flag for possible issues lurking on your site, but don’t make design decisions aimed solely at chasing that second click. Optimize for long-term engagement through return visits and track deeper conversion goals.

What is UX Research?
www.interaction-design.org
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UX (user experience) research is the systematic study of target users and their requirements, to add realistic contexts and insights to design processes. UX researchers adopt various methods to uncover problems and design opportunities. Doing so, they reveal valuable information which can be fed into the design process.

How Long Do Users Stay on Web Pages?
www.nngroup.com
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Users often leave Web pages in 10–20 seconds, but pages with a clear value proposition can hold people's attention for much longer. To gain several minutes of user attention, you must clearly communicate your value proposition within 10 seconds.

06/10/2022
First Rule of Usability? Don't Listen to Users
www.nngroup.com
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To design the best UX, pay attention to what users do, not what they say. Self-reported claims are unreliable, as are user speculations about future behavior. Users do not know what they want.

10 Usability Heuristics for User Interface Design
www.nngroup.com
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Jakob Nielsen's 10 general principles for interaction design. They are called "heuristics" because they are broad rules of thumb and not specific usability guidelines.

The Funnel Technique in Qualitative User Research
www.nngroup.com
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The funnel technique is used in user interviews and usability tests and ensures you get rich insights while not compromising validity.

How To Conduct Effective User Interviews (paywalled webinar)
www.interaction-design.org
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To design a delightful product, it isn’t enough to have your user in mind—you need to truly know your user’s mind. And the most effective way to achieve this is through user interviews.

Card Sorting: How To Get Started
www.interaction-design.org
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concept of card sorting... UX. The popular, low-tech research technique is used to organize data sets. It’s especially useful for information architecture, menu structures, workflows and website navigation. While it’s easy enough to run a card sort, there’s a massive difference between a flop and a success.

User Research: What It Is and Why You Should Do It
www.interaction-design.org
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User research is an essential part of UX design. Unless we understand who we are designing for and why, how can we even know what to create or where to begin?

What is User Research?
www.interaction-design.org
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User research is the methodic study of target users—including their needs and pain points—so designers have the sharpest possible insights to work with to make the best designs. User researchers use various methods to expose problems and design opportunities, and find crucial information to use in their design process.

A complete UI Glossary: 100 terms all designers should know
www.uxdesigninstitute.com
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If you want to work in UI (or work with a UI designer), you need to speak the language. In our UI glossary, we’ve compiled (and explained) 100 terms, phrases and resources all designers should know.

01/07/2022
10 cognitive biases that shape our world
uxdesign.cc
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Being aware of our cognitive biases helps to recognize their power in shaping our thoughts, opinions, attitudes and the decisions we make. Let’s check out these effects by analyzing ten cognitive biases that shape our world today.

Data Tables: Four Major User Tasks
www.nngroup.com
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Table design should support four common user tasks: find records that fit specific criteria, compare data, view/edit/add a single row’s data, and take actions on records.

Support Recall Instead of Recognition in UI Design
www.nngroup.com
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To strengthen people’s memory skills, we should design interfaces that help users practice recall.

Autonomy, Relatedness, and Competence in UX Design
www.nngroup.com
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Addressing these 3 fundamental psychological needs in our products increases user motivation and well-being and keeps them engaged and likely to use our designs.

10/01/2022
5 Facilitation Principles for Both UX Workshops and User Tests
www.nngroup.com
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Both UX workshops and usability tests benefit when facilitators are focused on goals, follow a meeting guide yet are open to improvisation, encourage participants to act, and don’t talk too much.

11 principles of design (and how to use them)
dribbble.com
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principles of design every graphic designer should be familiar with:HierarchyBalanceAlignmentEmphasisProportionMovementNegative SpaceContrastRepetitionVarietyUnity

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