I can understand why people may find this video hard going, but in terms of information and learning, its an absolute goldmine. It is veeeery content heavy and requires some re-watches. But in terms of what you can learn from it if you really listen, its excellent.
I have say, that class was very boring. Where is the pratice part? I just spent 20 min listening a girl talking things that I not going to use. Again, where is the pratice part? Where are the examples?
This lesson is hard. But listen it 2-3 times you will understand it. As UX Designers we need to adopt a mindset to tackle difficulty as it our part of the job. Thnx Google
I am doing the course currently i am in midway i would like to a work as a freelancer at the end of my journey can you guide me to help me reach there as a friend
I have say, that class was very boring. Where is the pratice part? I just spent 20 min listening a girl talking things that I not going to use. Again, where is the pratice part? Where are the examples?
In the usability study drawbacks, there is a point that said you have to bring the users to the lab but that is not the case always. We can do post launch usability study as well.
Great stuff, thanks! Well-structured, informative, focused, easy to digest and pretty inspirational, too! Excellent inro and invitation the the course itself.
I have done this whole course it was just fantabulous, Thankyou for what do you doing for us, I am very much interested to work on Google since I have started my career from 2007
I have say, that class was very boring. Where is the pratice part? I just spent 20 min listening a girl talking things that I not going to use. Again, where is the pratice part? Where are the examples?
Taking screenshots will do little to help you actually cement that knowledge. Unless you have photographic memory (which you wouldn’t need to screen shot it), research shows that handwriting (more than typing) or sketch notes are the best methods to increase your comprehension
These steps are almost as inefficient as actually having to conduct research yourself. We at Emble solve this by having an all-in-one platform for user research, streamlining the whole process saving hours of resource, not to mention frustration 😉
I just got to this part and I feel blind-sided. Interviews? Release forms? Gift certificates? I thought this was going to be hypothetical and I don't even know where to start.
These deal with the day to day reality of doing research. Having some experience in this field (of research, generally) helps. If you are going to college, I would highly suggest trying to be an research assistant to get familiar.
Hello sir, I want to join and attend all of the courses provided by you, but you have issues with payments with other banks..... I'm unable to make payment because you have just given access to only few banks .... Please resolve that problem A.S.A.P. because I don't want to miss out on your course and join the outdated ones.
Primary research methods shared are surveys, interviews, usability studies - **interviews** are used to collect people’s opinions, thoughts, experience & feelings. Use them when you require a detailed response. Open ended questions that makes user speak. Understand what users think and why. - **surveys** are used in order to understand what most people think about a product. They come handy once you have a basic knowledge about the user’s pain points & want to solidify that. Lack of in-depth feedback could be a problem. - usability study is used to discover pain points with the prototype before shipping it to the public. You can also interview users after **u.study** to better understand the problem and improve the UX. Secondary research methods such as literature review ie articles, reports, trying out similar apps so that you can understand the domain.