Friday, October 26, 2012

Personas and Scenarios: From Hypothetical Situations to Reality



Before you begin designing your website, it is important to have some method of anticipating your user's needs. But who are your users? How will they interact with your website? Asking yourself these questions helps, but in order to ask more concrete questions, creating personas becomes a necessity.

A persona is a character that has all of the traits of an actual person, except these traits are chosen in order to reflect the website they have been designed for.
Essential traits include:

  • Name
  •  Age
  • Gender

Don't forget to find a picture to represent your persona! Personas should be as representative of real life as possible, and having a photograph to tie to each persona's details helps make the persona seem more like a real person.

Personas can also be used as the main characters in scenario writing, a commonly employed usability tool. Scenarios are written examples of your persona's attempts to fulfill their goals through your website, and are created in order to lay out each interaction. Doing so allows you to plan out your website in great detail, and also allows you to immerse yourself more deeply into your persona's character.

To summarize:

  • Personas should be detailed fictional characters who share traits with your users.
  • Scenarios should be created around each persona's interaction with your website (whether you have created a design for it yet or not)

In my next post, I will detail some of the features your users have that are important to address in persona creation.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Introduction to Usability



Are you an amateur (or professional) web designer looking for ways to improve your web designing? Well, you've come to the right blog. Usable Design Made Easy is a blog created with the intent of educating web designers in techniques that will make your websites... well, usable.

But what is usability, exactly? According to the International Organization for Standardization, usability is:

"The extent to which a product (in our case, a website) can be used by specified users to achieve specified goals with effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction in a specified context of use."
Effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction. These three attributes are key factors of any great design, and to know how to implement them properly requires research. Luckily, there is an abundance of usability research, to the point where there are blogs with hundreds of posts about usability; unluckily, the information out there is not organized well. This blog will attempt to organize information that can be readily applied to web design in a linear manner.

Things to know:
  • This blog will be written in a tutorial format. Posts are meant to be read in chronological order, but will also be titled in such a way that readers can easily access the steps at their own pace.
  • This blog will not explain web design tools such as HTML, CSS, or image manipulation software. Readers should already have a basic knowledge of the tools necessary to create a website. If you are new to web design and would like some more information on these, please refer to these resources:
 Further reading for usability and web accessible design can be found readily here: