UX design is all about providing your users with the information they’re looking for, and doing so in the cleanest and most intuitive way possible. However, in order to do this successfully, UX designers must understand how their visitors experience the website or mobile app; a task which can get a little sticky if they don’t have the right tools in place. In fact, I can think of one tool in particular that may consider to be an extremely important currency when it comes to UX design. Let me introduce you to user feedback…
https://mopinion.com/why-ux-designers-need-user-feedback/
E-commerce business models are undergoing a dramatic shift. Initially businesses relied on consumers to do the 'heavy lifting' to discover the product and to make the purchase decision. The vendor's role was to ensure that the product was discoverable and — most importantly — available at the geographic location where the transaction potentially would take place.
But the new e-commerce business model is optimized by driving the consumer to subscribe to 'an experience.' Think of Spotify or Apple Music, for example. The customer purchases access to a seemingly endless supply of music and tools that ensure their experience is maximized. The focus of the experience moves from a 'warehouse experience' to more of a concierge, personalized and curated experience. The consumer has already purchased, and so the emphasis is placed on ensuring that they stay engaged and active. Most importantly, the service makes recommendations and learns what the consumer likes, making the discovery of music a delight. In this model the better the tools engage the customers the better the company will prosper.
https://www.retailcustomerexperience.com/blogs/digital-transformation-driving-the-personalized-retail-customer-experience/
While digital performance is deemed critical, and successful digital strategies can have a meaningful impact on the business, there is a significant digital performance gap that exists today, impacting the customer experience, diminishing productivity and pushing out deadlines.
https://www.itweb.co.za/content/mYZRXM9P1Zm7OgA8/
Solutions that aids in user experience design a call to digital user experience Solutions and comprises of a process which improves and enhances the satisfaction of the end-user by improving the accessibility of a product boosting the pleasure derived from using the product, and improving the usability of the product by good human computer interaction design. Human computer interaction or HCI plays a huge role in digital user experience solutions as it gathers the information as well as maps the actual interaction between humans and the product. In order to design a product for enhanced user experience, higher amount of data from HCI is beneficial.
http://www.editiontruth.com/digital-user-experience-solutions-market-growing-demand-enhancing-customer-experience/
Have you ever made a purchase online following someone’s advice? What about the recommendations that were prompted to you by the website itself? Being quite a common element of an eCommerce app, tailored product recommendations have proven to be an extremely effective tool for revenue growth.
Namely, Amazon’s recommendation engine is said to generate 35% of the platform’s total revenue. Taking into account its actual sales volume ($178 billion in 2017), this makes an additional $62 billion per year. Quite impressive, right?
Yet, eCommerce recommendation engines represent only one example of app personalization strategies. There are many more use cases any digital business can put to use.
In this article, we will shed some light on several of the proven mobile app personalization tactics and real-life examples to help you spur your imagination.
https://dzone.com/articles/how-to-create-a-great-user-experience-fresh-app-pe/
Here are 5 lessons for improving UX that brands and marketers can borrow from the UI of popular social networking sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter.
https://www.martechadvisor.com/articles/content-marketing/5-ux-lessons-from-the-ui-of-facebook-twitter-and-linkedin/
Digital Experiences need to be powered by technology. But what is the right technology for you? How can you prioritize the technology investments for the ultimate customer experience? And what do the new, immersive technologies mean to marketers that want to build 360degree brand experiences? Mark Troester, Vice President of Strategy at Progress, the leading provider of application development and digital experience technologies, tells us more in this edition of MarTech Musings.
https://www.martechadvisor.com/articles/customer-experience-2/from-digital-experiences-to-adaptive-experiences/
The digital ecosystem has evolved to such a level, where our everyday customer journeys are just that - everyday. We expect our online shopping experience to be seamless. If it is anything less, then it becomes a bad user experience, frustrating and annoying to the consumer.
Users are moving away from tolerance and more and more towards proneness. This shift is seen in the unsurprising stat that since January 2013, ad-blocking software has grown by 400% with currently 200 million users worldwide. More often than not, someone downloads AdBlocker not because of ads, but because of a bad ad experience.
This means that now more than ever, the customer is always right. They hold so much power over brands today, who are often scrambling to show an ad to as many people as possible whilst keeping returning customers loyal.
https://performancein.com/news/2018/08/13/user-experience-serving-better-ads-users-and-your-website/
In the era of GDPR, informed users were expecting to have greater control of their data. But what they hoped for, maybe subconsciously, was that this control would not just keep their personal data safe but also improve the user experience of digital services. Fewer surprising (and not in a good way) emails; fewer creepy ads; more transparent and therefore trustworthy and, dare I say, fun-to-use websites.
However, it’s clear that the variety of different approaches to compliance have not produced a utopian consistency in web forms, check-boxes and privacy notices – the user experience side of GDPR. Let’s not wade through the finer points of the legislation again; suffice to say that some companies have let ‘legitimate interests’ do more legwork than others, for better or worse, and the guidance from the ICO has not always been seen as gospel.
https://www.marketingweek.com/2018/08/14/ben-davis-gdpr-user-experience-is-still-broken/
The success of your mobile app rests on multiple different factors; however, the most important factor is easily user experience (UX) design. Expectations for mobile interactions have grown, and as a result, UX design has become an essential part of the mobile app development process.
http://customerthink.com/user-experience-best-practices-to-enhance-your-mobile-app-design/