Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Reflection on different tools

Tools (Reflection)

User journey mapping:
It is a visual representation of the journey that a user makes when he/she attends a service which allows us to identify the weak points and strengths of our service in order to improve the first and maintain the second. Its goal is to identify the elements of the service and understand the interaction between them in order to improve any fails during the process, which is counted since the user gets to know about the service until he/she leaves it.
The main benefit is that as it breaks down the process into smaller parts it makes it very easy to identify the problems, which is the main step to be able to correct them.
It is important to bear in mind that different users will make different uses of the same service so it is very useful to repeat it for different types of users, thus creating a map with multiple journeys.

I will create an example with a small store which sells kitchen material:
Lisa is passing by the street and sees on the window of the shop cooking utensils. She remembered she needs a special baking utensil and enters the shop. After searching for a while she is unable to find it, and asks the staff. They take some time to find it but finally they hand it to her. Lisa was not expecting that it would take such a long time for this because she is a busy working mother but buys it and leaves.

With this example we have discovered that there is a problem referred to the time the particular task of searching for products in the storage section takes, which we can now improve by implementing a better storage organisation which could even include having an inventory linked to the computer.

User shadowing:
A user is observed in order to identify and understand his/her needs.
The key point here is choosing the right people to shadow in order to get as much information as possible.
The main advantage is that it shows an outside view of the process which makes it possible to identify things the consumer is not aware of and also prevents the information the consumers give from being biased as what they say they do and what they actually do might not necessarily coincide.

User personas:
Information from many different people is gathered, these people are then divided counting on their similarities and their information is synthesised into one sole character or persona which represents them all.
Focus should be made in the fact that these characters or personas must be archetypes, which means that their differences must be rounded up, and not stereotypes, which are based on believes more than on objective information.
This is useful as today’s market demands each time more personalisation of the services instead of mass producing. Although it is risky to make a representation of a whole group of people based just on an average value of their personal information it is something that has to be done as it is impossible to take into account everyone’s individual wishes.



I have chosen these 3 particular methods because I think they complement each other very well. Journey mapping takes the consumers point of view (which is one of the most important things as the use of our services relies on them) and divides the service into its basic tasks and activities which makes it very easy to identify problems. Shadowing does a similar thing but records the process from the outside (not from the customers view) which takes away the bias on the information provided by the client and includes information he/she might not be aware of. Lastly Personas takes all these different personal experiences and clusters them into representatives to make it easy  to attend to the different needs of the customers.
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Sources:
Design methods for developing services-Technology Strategy Board

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