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Fixing Bad UX Designs

You're reading from   Fixing Bad UX Designs Master proven approaches, tools, and techniques to make your user experience great again

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787120556
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Lisandra Maioli Lisandra Maioli
Author Profile Icon Lisandra Maioli
Lisandra Maioli
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding UX and its Importance FREE CHAPTER 2. Identifying UX Issues – UX Methodologies 3. Exploring Potential UX Solutions 4. Increasing Conversion with UX 5. Using UI and Content for Better Communication 6. Considering Accessibility As Part of the UX 7. Improving Physical Experiences 8. Improving IA for Better Navigation 9. Prototyping and Validating UX Solutions 10. Implementing UX Solutions 11. Measuring UX Solutions 12. Keeping Up to Date 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Bad UX is bad for your business

A badly designed experience can not only be frustrating to the user, but can also highly impact a business, especially when we talk about online businesses. To give you an idea and statistical evidence to demonstrate this statement to your clients or boss, a report by the Baymard Insititute shows that a better design and checkout flow experience could have improved about 35% of ecommerce conversion, in other words, by fixing small UX issues, companies could saved billions of dollars.

It is interesting to closely analyze the study by Baymard (2016) and note that most of the reasons for the abandonment of a business are related somehow to the whole user/client experience:


From a study by Baymard.com (Last updated: January 9, 2017)

The study The App Attention Span (2014)—by AppDynamics in partnership with the Institute of Management Studies (IMS) at Goldsmiths, University of London—demonstrates that 90% of users confirmed that they stopped using an app because of poor performance, and 86% of them deleted or uninstalled an app because they found problems with its functionality or design. According to the Customer Experience Report (2010) by RightNow, 82% of customers have left a company because of a bad customer experience.

Other studies show the negative impact of a bad experience: About 40% of users might abandon a website if it takes more than three seconds to load, while 79% will search for another website in order to be able to complete their task.

Going beyond these figures, a bad user experience can impact not only on the customer's relationship with the companies, but also on the employee's performance. In 2013, the Avon Products company reported that it had discontinued a $125 million mobile software development project after running a pilot in Canada, which showed that the iPad version was too hard to use, resulting in many sales reps quitting the company.

You have been reading a chapter from
Fixing Bad UX Designs
Published in: Feb 2018
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781787120556
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