UX Facilitation Overview
Jose Caballer
Lesson Info
2. UX Facilitation Overview
Lessons
Class Introduction
15:08 2UX Facilitation Overview
07:02 3Brand Attributes, Customer Profiles, & Business Goals
18:32 4The Facilitation Framework
13:40 5Introducing The Client: SmartFeed
03:55 6UX Overview Q & A
14:23 7Meet the Client: The SmartFeed Stakeholders
07:45 8Alignment Exercise
06:51Creating an Agenda
07:41 10Creating a User Profile: Single Dad
15:17 11Creating a User Profile: Millennial Mom
16:40 12Defining Awareness Goals
20:40 13Establishing Efficiency Goals
22:44 14User Story Introduction
06:00 15Sketching The User Story
50:16 16Sketching Page 2
08:59 17Checking In: What Is or Isn't Working
25:31Lesson Info
UX Facilitation Overview
The next thing I'm going to talk about is you x and live facilitation very specifically try to provide some context then I'm going to talk about the brand the user and the goals which is going to be a foundation at the core of what we're doing then the framework for facilitation then we're going to introduce the client who they are and what it is that we're going to do for them today and talk a little bit about what we're going to do with the client in the second session and the third session so let's start with you x and live facilitation you wanted to learn marry some terms and some of this stuff in jargon and like concrete terms there's a lot of them so you know we have a u x you user experience you the customer experience cx sixty designed thinking lean that you exaggerate like I know what I mean who cares none of the solve matters they're all means something read the definitions I don't worry about all these things because they're all the same thing they all talk about how do you ...
get you know from knowing what you need to delivering it at the end of the day whether it's a customer experience or the user experience they're just words but for the sake of today let's just talk about user experience design and the definition of it by the dictionary the process of enhancing user satisfaction by improving the usability, accessibility and pleasure provided in the interaction between the user and a product so that's kind of like a really broad definition so accessibility usability pleasure those air all fairly simple now but challenges who's a filmmaker here I'm not a genius I'm guessing I mean I'm talking I talk to you but in film film making the word filmmaking isn't you think of the film when it's in the can and you're watching in the theatre this is a film it was made by filmmaking but it had a cinematographer had a director it had, you know, craft services that had art director it had cost assumes it had an editor had color correction it had a financier had all these different rules collectively it's all filmmaking right? The same is the case with user experience all of these are aspects of user experience the actual design, the visual design, the functionality of the information architecture they all are part of creating a good a user experience. You could make a bad one so a user experience today and what we're going to talk about in cover is really talking about things that informed the information architect, the architecture, the functionality, the usability of the product content strategy potentially a good way to illustrate this is also from the book the elements of user experience by jesse james garrett was one of the seminal books written about user experience so eric you're transitioning from print to webb this is a great book to have in your library everybody should have this in their library and it really looks at the different elements of music experience in terms of layers from abstract to concrete so the surface is what we see you know, the interface that two buttons on this you know, the interface on my iphone the next thing is the skeleton, which is what we call wire frames what it is structured as below that is overall taxonomy or the structure of the site you know what this what sections doesn't have etcetera, this is an important one, especially if you're working in a start up and we talked about this what's the scope like what are you actually building and why? And the third well, the third to fifth I don't account really well the fifth or the bass player's a strategy, which is the question of why why do we do this in a ruin your strategists? And this is where you come in with a client figuring out why do you do this? We all know this aspect you know of user experience of deliverables wire frame site maps, there's a bunch of other ones use their personas if you've gone to any course and user experience, you've been trained or you and shown what these are the question is how do you use these and in what context? So today and in what we're going to cover we're really going to shift our mindset and a lot of people call what we're talking about design thinking and ibm recently release a really great study about how ibm is using design keep in mind the definition of design is not graphics because there's product design there's all types of design architecture there's designers to organize that's what if you look in the dictionary it says I have designs on have plans on so planning and organizing is really what design is the visualization aspect of it or pre visualization is required for you to be able to envision what it is that you're going to make it something that's manifested in the real world it has you have to see it that's one of our senses ah lot of that those starts in words and in language and it all starts with empathy so design thinking, empathy definition the ideation prototyping testing than repeating that in a loop repeating that in a loop repeating that on a loop over and over again but notice that the first one is empathy and one of the things that's interesting and in what I'm seeing in my role as a designer I'm a graphic designer that's what I studied I learned how to do the formal things color typography, etcetera my transition into u ex overtime really became ah lot about my ability to empathise and my ability to play the role of the user so I'm really good at being able to let go of my point of view that's hard for designers because we're trained in design school that you need to like you know be like you know your point of view your idea your concept as artist sometimes we're little word in italian is tested uh in spanish stubborn maybe we might be a little stubborn concept's might be a little concrete that's a challenge and user experience because you have to become you know the user you have to be like a method actor you have to know what these air feels, how they and the challenges that that's not who you are especially if you're a developer or they technically minded designer your skills and empathy might not be as developed so I'm gonna just touch on that because that's really important what you're experiencing and what I'm talking about it's all under the milieu to learn words marie of design thinking and it's a whole new thing and people are going to talk about it I'm I'm what I would say like switzerland I don't necessarily I use all of the different ideas but I'm not like I'm well but design thinking rama about one specific thing I try not to be dogmatic because I try to flow
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Karey Covey
Great session. Covered a lot of information. Only suggestion for improvement was at the end, just giving a quick overview of the entire process again just to tie it all back together. Awesome info, well articulated, and very inspirational. Thank you!
Jonella
Love this class and so glad I bought it. I'll be able to refer back to his lessons again and again. His work with an actual client is what really sets this class apart, having provided specifics on how to ask a client a question, how to get them down to what matters most and on and on! Can not express how valuable this will be for me. Thank you Jose and thank you Creative Live!
Carl Rosati
Loved it, big fan of Jose anyway but this is more comprehensive than the videos on youtube from Skool (or at least a deeper dive). Would be really useful if we could also download the slide deck for quick reference. Can this happen?