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High On Line: Applying Psychology to Web Design at #SXSW2012

Sunday, March 11 2012 at South by Southwest, Austin, TX
by Jason HrehaBehavior Designer+UX Advisor, Applied Psychologist, www.persuasive.ly, Co-founder of Dopamine, UX Advisor @ 500 Startups

Research from the StansfoJason Hreha - positive.lyrd Persuasive Tech Lab

D – dopamine

Why do we need a UX Design / Motivational framework?

  • Design with Intent Deck – 101 Patterns for Influencing Behaviour Through Design – decks
  • Mental Notes – ways to bring psychology to web design.
  • Influence: The Psycology of Persuation
  • Gamification – instead of thinking in a step by step way, it becomes a conglomeration of incentives, but what’s the point?

Why do these tactics work? What are we changing?

Model was created by BJ Fogg (leader of the Stanford Pers Lab) – Behavior Model

What causes behavior? (What needs to come together in order for behavior to occur?

3 things need to coincide for behavior to occur

Read the rest of High On Line: Applying Psychology to Web Design at #SXSW2012

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Be Real and Be Nice in Social Media

The Jeter FamilyIt’s amazing how some days just have a theme. Today in my daily ritual of browsing my social spaces, the theme of being real, being helpful and being polite when participating in Facebook, Twitter, Google+, etc. kept coming up over and over again.

First, I read a great article by Jonathan Morrow on Copyblogger, (which creates the Genesis Framework that I use on my blog) called “21 Warning Signs You’re Becoming a Social Media Snob” that gives great insight and a cool self-evaluation tool to see if you have become a “Social Media Snob”. I won’t divulge my score, but I think I’m doing okay, but it’s a good reminder that I can be doing better. My favorite part of the article is the solution, which is to show empathy and caring in your social interactions online.

Read the rest of Be Real and Be Nice in Social Media

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Morning Keynote Panel “Search: Where to Next?”

Moderator:
Anne F. Kennedy, SES Advisory Board, International Search Strategist, Beyond Ink USA
Speakers:
Eli Goodman, Media Evangelist, comScore, Inc.
Zephrin Lasker, CEO and Co-founder, Pontiflex
Alan Osetek, President, Resolution Media
Dana Todd, Vice President of Performance Innovation, Performics

Eli: Brand marketing has been mainly offline, but is moving more and more online, especially in search and especially for big brands.

Dana: Want it to be measurable and see ROI. Branding is not just exposure to a brand over and over. There is no funnel. People don’t suddenly go into buying mode just because they’ve been exposed to something. We need to test with search, it’s not just about the next big idea.

Alan: it’s all about people and where they’re spending their money. The CMO doesn’t want to see huge changes in structure, but it can change slowly over time, naturally. Probably in the next 3-5 years.

Read the rest of Morning Keynote Panel “Search: Where to Next?”

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Local + Social: the Future of Promotion

A giant QR Code linking to a website, to be re...

Image via Wikipedia

Moderator:
Anne F. Kennedy, SES Advisory Board, International Search Strategist, Beyond Ink USA
Speakers:
Benu Aggarwal, Founder & President, Milestone Internet Marketing
Gregg Stewart, President, 15miles

local + social
Gregg Stewart

importance of local search
Online retail only represents 7% of all spending. Most research is done online, but purchases still occur offline for the most part.

Consumers are increasingly using more sources to find local information. 1/3 of Facebook users use Facebook on a mobile device. Social networkers are frequently finding local business information through recommendations from connections and consumer reviews.

Consumers are looking for businesses in a variety of places and expect the information to be easily available and accurate. 49% of social network searchers are looking for address/location and other basic business data.

Best Practices for local search.

business names do not:

Read the rest of Local + Social: the Future of Promotion

  • include marketing tag lines in your business name
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Jared Spool – Mobile & UX: Inside the Eye of the Perfect Storm

UIE Web App Master’s Tour – Seattle, Washington – May 23, 2011

 

h2. Mobile & UX: Inside the Eye of the Perfect Storm

Session 1 – Jared Spool

The UX aspect of mobile has really exploded recently.

Examples:

My Coke Rewards – mobile site had to have Flash. Excluded all iPhone users.

Fox Weather “Alternate content should be placed here.”

MikePanetta.com – QR code on sign, but no mobile site.

Mariott Hotel – connect to wifi via mobile

h3. Sturgeon’s Law

Theodore Sturgeon “90% of everything is crap!”

United airlines email link to 404 page

Coke has fixed the flash problem, but shows the entire site when user is trying to input a code.

You would think by now that we now how to show sites on mobile now, but companies still have issues: verizon wireless, att, apple, air canada

Read the rest of Jared Spool – Mobile & UX: Inside the Eye of the Perfect Storm

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Steve Portigal – Design Fieldwork: Uncovering Innovation From The Outside In

UIE Web App Master’s Tour – Seattle, Washington – May 24, 2011

Steve Portigal - Design Fieldwork - Uncovering Innovation From The Outside In

Steve Portigal - Design Fieldwork

Main Topics

  1. How insights from users can impact our designs
  2. How to gather those insights

Be a methods-polygamist

Choose, mash-up or create methodology based on the problem, integrate (Triangulate) with other methods, Create a library of methods and artifacts (screeners, interview guides, stimulit, storyboards, etc.) You can even create new ones and make it up as you go.

Different methods work together.

Innovation means getting beyond pain points

Users may not actually know what is causing the problem.

Pain points may not really be that painful anyway

Satisficing (Herbert Simon – 1956) refers to our acceptance of good enough solutions.

thereifixedit.com

Fieldwork leads to refined beliefs about customers

“You are not your user.” It’s good to realize that you are different than your users/clients, but it’s also necessary to realize similarities and commonality.

Read the rest of Steve Portigal – Design Fieldwork: Uncovering Innovation From The Outside In

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Julie Zhuo – Facebook: Data-Informed vs. Data-Driven Design Decisions

UIE Web App Master’s Tour – Seattle, Washington – May 23, 2011

Julie Zhuo – Facebook - Data-Informed vs. Data-Driven Design Decisions

Julie Zhuo – Facebook - Data-Informed vs. Data-Driven Design Decisions

Facebook likes the start-up culture. They believe in small teams: photos, engagement, etc. Each team is treated like a small company with a product designer, researcher, engineers & a product manager.

Facebook uses data to form a lot of the decisions that are made. Data helps understand how users use product and how they can be optimized.

Facebook had great ideas, built products and then left them to move on to the next thing.

Photos

Were using an old photo uploader tool built in Java, didn’t work well and was poorly designed. Built their own tool, which required a plugin. Tested it and only 34% users successfully uploaded photos. Went back to the drawing board. Research showed that people were bailing at the plugin install step.

Read the rest of Julie Zhuo – Facebook: Data-Informed vs. Data-Driven Design Decisions

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