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Remote Usability Testing

You're reading from   Remote Usability Testing Actionable insights in user behavior across geographies and time zones

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788999045
Length 202 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Rebecca Okoroji Rebecca Okoroji
Author Profile Icon Rebecca Okoroji
Rebecca Okoroji
Inge De Bleecker Inge De Bleecker
Author Profile Icon Inge De Bleecker
Inge De Bleecker
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Why Everyone Should Run Remote Usability Studies FREE CHAPTER 2. What Not to Forget When Planning Your Study 3. How to Effectively Recruit Participants 4. Running a Remote Moderated Study 5. Running a Remote Unmoderated Study with User Videos 6. Running a Remote Unmoderated Study with a Survey 7. Running a Remote Unmoderated Study with a Hybrid Approach 8. What to Consider When Analyzing and Presenting the Study Results 9. Thanks! And What Now? 10. Sample Material and Further Reading 11. Other Books You May Enjoy

Who are the stakeholders?


As the word implies, a stakeholder is anyone that has a stake in the interface that is being tested. Stakeholders can include (but are not limited to) the following:

  • Upper management (especially for new products)
  • The product manager and owner of the interface
  • The engineering and development team
  • The UX team
  • The design team
  • The marketing team
  • The sales team

In a small company or a company that is new to usability testing, the stakeholders can be virtually anyone within that company: the CEO, a UX contractor, product management, and even the quality assurance team. In larger companies, especially those with more experience in usability testing, the stakeholders are often representatives of the in-house UX and UI teams or the product owner, if the company does not have a dedicated UX team.

Whether or not each of these potential stakeholders needs to be involved will be determined by the UX researcher, and is very specific to each company.

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