UX and UI - Evolving Customer Experience
UX and UI, user experience and user interface, form a marriage between aesthetics and product usability that guides the journey of a user when they visit your site and sets the tone for your overall customer experience.
Well-executed UI/UX design influences everything about the user’s behavior from how much time they spend on your site to how much money they are willing to invest in your products and services. UI/UX embodies your marketing, is the vehicle for introducing your brand, and is also responsible for a client’s first approach interacting with your product.
There’s a fantastic Marilyn Monroe quote from Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, “Don’t you know that a man being rich is like a girl being pretty? You wouldn’t marry a girl just because she’s pretty, but my goodness, doesn’t it help?”
Your customers won’t buy your product just because it is attractively presented and your site is easy to navigate…or will they?
“U” Is All about Them
The story goes like this… Once upon a time a cognitive scientist named Don Norman invented the term UX and decreed that it embodied every aspect of the end user’s interaction with a company’s website, products, services, and features.
Every element of a site’s accessibility revolves around user testing, user experience, and the user interface. In the “U” world, clean lines and sharp graphics go far beyond looks, extending to influence user navigation and click actions. Object placement; where your buttons are located, where your navigation menu is placed, etc. all influence what a user will select first from the page.
User Interface
Art lesson 101: Perspective
There are certain rules in art and design, the rule of thirds for example says to place your subject in the left or right third of an image, leaving the other 2 thirds more open. Especially in mediums like photography, this rule leads to compelling shots. Why? Because the viewer’s eye is drawn straight to the subject since there isn’t a lot else left to focus on.
Obviously, you don’t want a web page with a solitary button on the left third of the page, but you do want to keep your key elements in mind, and make sure they maintain the user’s focus.
On a webpage, art subjects become access points and what the user’s eyes are drawn toward is what they will click on. This is how user interface design controls page pathways and navigation.
Don’t Break the Wheel
There are universal page elements that are familiar. The primary navigation bar and menu icons go at the top of the page. Shopping cart icons generally live in the top right. Key information and links live in the footer. When you are considering your user interface design it’s important to remember that you’re not inventing a user experience, you’re building off the universal elements of what we have standardized in terms of hosting on the internet.
4 Types of User Interface
Keeping “universal page templates” in mind, the next step is to determine the type of user interface you want. This part links largely to User Experience. First, answer the question, “what type of product do I have?” Website? Web-based application? Mobile App? Then ask, “how will the user interact with your product?”
Command Line Interface
Not all your UI requirements will be for consumers. Though not common, Command Line Interface requires users to type appropriate instructions directly into the command line. If you’re designing something like a cloud-based terminal, shell, or panel then you might take a functional approach to your design.
Menu-driven Interface
The menu-driven Interface presents the user with a range of options in list form through a menu. Some considerations you might take:
- Will the menu be full screen like at a gas station?
- Will you need a dropdown menu for site navigation?
- Is the menu triggered and displayed through a popup?
Graphical User Interface
The Graphical Interface is familiar territory, these are your classic click-through websites. Your users may be viewing on a larger screen, and using a mouse or trackpad. You can be a little more generous with elements and buttons as there is usually more page real-estate to play with. Graphical Interfaces also offer a lot of space for branding and company messaging which plays a huge part in UI design.
Touchscreen Graphical User Interface
Often, Touchscreen Interfaces need to be identical, or similar to their Graphical counterparts. This is the medium where your users will be consuming your product via devices, like their phone or tablet. Their fingers will be their primary navigation tools. With touchscreen, not only do you have to prioritize your elements, but you have to make them easy to pinch, zoom, and swipe with a finger, so designing around gestures becomes a factor.
User Experience Elevates Customer Experience
If Old Don Norman declared that UX encompassed all of the interactive and product objectives, I would argue that his philosophy would also include the importance of UI.
UX is the basis for UI, it determines what needs to be featured, what should be clicked first, and maps the pathways that UI attempts to guide the user to. The primary goal of both UI and UX is to facilitate the customer journey that the company needs to facilitate to not only sell, but to teach the user about the product and educate them on how to use it.
- Does an element need to be downloaded?
- Are there system requirements?
- Is the product accessible to the user’s physical location?
Multiple factors influence pathway decisions. The more clear those pathways are, and the more solid their foundations, the more exceptional your customer service will be. If something is easy it will bring satisfaction to the end user.
UI and UX are all about conveying clarity. The tech landscape is not always easy to navigate. TECKpert can help. Reach out to our team today for an assessment and see how we can help you clarify your company objectives and convey them through design.