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This episode we discuss Michelle's favorite card sorting method—Modified-Delphi card sorting! We cover the basics, where the method shines, and best practices for trying it out for your next card sort. We'd love to hear if you try it. Talk to us on the zeroheight Slack community! (bit.ly/zheroes), comment below or reply on Twitter @uxinreallife or Instagram @ux.inreallife.
Power of Ten is a podcast about design operating at many levels, zooming out from thoughtful detail through to organisational transformation and on to changes in society and the world. My guest in this episode is Donna Spencer, an independent design consultant with 20-plus years of experience across the entire design spectrum. Donna is recognised internationally as a leading UX practitioner, is a regular conference speaker and has written five books, including A Practical Guide To Information Architecture, Card Sorting and Presenting Design Work. Many listeners will know her for co-creating the UX Australia conference, which she ran for nine years. Here Donna speaks about her experience, her books, the need to present design work well. And we talk about how Dungeons & Dragons is an excellent way to learn about facilitation. Show Links Episode page and transcripts Donna Donna's website Donna on LinkedIn Donna on Twitte Presenting design work A practical guide to information architecture Card sorting: Designing usable categories How to write great copy for the web Facilitation for design thinking workshops Andy Subscribe to Power of Ten Subscribe to Andy's newsletter Doctor's Note Andy on Twitter Andy on LinkedIn Polaine.com Suggestions? Feedback? Get in touch!
Schweizer Pokemon TCG Investment Podcast Thomas der Spielkojote führt den grössten UNERLAUBTE / UNGESPONSORTE / UNKONTROLLIERTE Schweizer Pokémon Podcast für Trading Card Games. Gefüllt mit Gierlappen, Bösen Investoren, und ….3.696969% weiblichen Zuschauern.
Schweizer Pokemon TCG Investment Podcast Thomas der Spielkojote führt den grössten UNERLAUBTE / UNGESPONSORTE / UNKONTROLLIERTE Schweizer Pokémon Podcast für Trading Card Games. Gefüllt mit Gierlappen, Bösen Investoren, und ….3.696969% weiblichen Zuschauern.
Each episode of Digital Insights is based on the articles of Paul Boag. To read the post related to this post go to: https://boagworld.com/how-to/card-sorting-online/
When working out how to organise things and what to call them, Card Sorting offers an easy and rapid research method to ensure that what seems obvious to you is also obvious to your users.Every successful product is built around a genuine human need. But you don't need to have an experienced researcher by your side to uncover user insights and guide your human-centred product development. Anyone on a team should know the basics and be able to even lead successful research sessions. This is the third episode in a mini-series to introduce you to those essentials.Subscribe to my newsletter Seven Things and learn more at www.thomasessl.com/ or follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/Thomas_Essl---Music: Aeronaut by Blue Dot SessionsLegal notice: Any opinions expressed in this podcast are my own and do not represent those of any present or former employers.
En el podcast nº 5 expliqué qué es la arquitectura de la información, hoy te hablo de la técnica del card sorting que está muy vinculada a la creación de esa arquitectura. Una de las preguntas que solemos hacernos al diseñar una Arquitectura de la información es cómo debería ser la estructura y de qué forma debería organizar la información ¿De forma cronológica? ¿por tema? ¿por tarea o mejor por jerarquía?. La técnica de card sorting nos ayuda a responder estas preguntas. Es una técnica que sirve para evaluar la estructura y la jerarquía involucrando al usuario. Se trata de descubrir cómo los usuarios creen que deberían estar organizados los contenidos, conocer cuál es el modelo mental de nuestros usuarios. ¿Te interesa aprender diseño de experiencia de usuario? Descarga nuestra guía gratuita "Quiero ser UX"
Rob Veres (Burbank Sportscards) and I discuss strategies for effectively integrating a (very) large purchase of cards (such as the two pallets of cards he purchased at the National) into his already massive inventory.
En este episodio hablamos sobre card sorting como método de investigación generativa en user research.No olvides revisar nuestras redes sociales: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SalaUXPodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/SalaUXPodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/salaux/
A través del card sorting, diferentes etapas de un proyecto se pueden mejorar. Una de ellas es la estrategia de contenidos, que muchas veces debe replantear los formatos en proyectos nuevos o de rediseño. Léenos en nuestro Blog ¡Resolvamos dudas y hablemos de UX! https://blog.ida.cl/experiencia-de-usuario/contenidos-experiencia-de-usuario/ https://blog.ida.cl/diseno/como-realizamos-card-sorting/ Venos en youtube https://youtu.be/y5BDp8OSdU0
¿No sabes lo que es un Card Sorting? En este nuevo capítulo de "Los Martes son de UX", nuestros directores Rodrigo Vera y Maximiliano Martín, describen qué es y para qué sirve el card sorting. Además, en base a la experiencia en el trabajo IDA, detallan parte de su proceso, aportes en la investigación y tipos de ejercicios, entregándote las mejores recomendaciones para que lo apliques en procesos de rediseño y/o creación de sitios web. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwUMcxupRA8&t=1s https://blog.ida.cl/diseno/arquitectura-informacion-estructurar-plataformas-digitales/
What tools and methods should you use in your next UX project? Our guest today is Andrew Mayfield, CEO of Optimal Workshop. We talk about their amazing collection of UX research tools, and dive into some of the methods — card sorting, tree testing, and others. Podcast feed: subscribe to http://simplecast.fm/podcasts/1441/rss in your favorite podcast app, and follow us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Play Music. Show Notes Optimal Workshop — Andrew's company Treejack, OptimalSort, Chalkmark, Questions, Reframer — UX research tools we're talking about Card Sorting 101 — a guide at Optimal Workshop blog Card Sorting — a book by Donna Spencer Tree Testing for Websites — a free book-length guide by Dave O'Brien, inventor of Treejack Follow Andrew on Twitter: @andrewfantastic, @optimalworkshop Today's Sponsor This episode is brought to you by Balsamiq, the super-simple wireframing tool that can help you focus your design on what really matters to your customers. Try it free for 30 days at balsamiq.cloud. Interested in sponsoring an episode? Learn more here. Leave a Review Reviews are hugely important because they help new people discover this podcast. If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please leave a review on iTunes. Here's how.
We've been building websites for decades, yet each project imposes new challenges when it comes to navigation. Our guest today is Els Aerts — a famous usability expert, speaker, and co-founder of AGConsult. We talk about the core principles behind effective navigation, how to figure out what information deserves the spotlight, and how to avoid common pitfalls. You'll also learn how to deal with navigation challenges in different industries: government websites, ecommerce, and SaaS. Podcast feed: subscribe to http://simplecast.fm/podcasts/1441/rss in your favorite podcast app, and follow us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Play Music. Show Notes AGConsult — Els' agency Identifying Customer Top Tasks — an article by Gerry McGovern Treejack, OptimalSort — tools by Optimal Workshop for tree testing and card sorting Balsamiq, Axure, InVision — prototyping tools Information Scent — a definition at Optimizely Glossary Navigation versus search — Els' article GOV.UK — a good website example without top navigation Jakob Nielsen, Jared Spool, Gerry McGovern — usability authorities to follow CTAConf 2018 — one of the upcoming conferences where Els will give a talk (August 27-29, 2018 in Vancouver, Canada) Follow Els on Twitter: @els_aerts Get €200 off user research training by AGConsult Academy using promocode UIBREAKFAST (valid until June 31, 2018) Today's Sponsor This episode is brought to you by Balsamiq. This super easy-to-use wireframing tool can help you and your team get user interface ideas down before you start coding or sweating the details on fancier tools. Try it free for 30 days at balsamiq.cloud. Interested in sponsoring an episode? Learn more here. Leave a Review Reviews are hugely important because they help new people discover this podcast. If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please leave a review on iTunes. Here's how.
Internet Marketing: Insider Tips and Advice for Online Marketing
In today's episode we talk to Pierre Croft from Decibel Digital and covering one of the key approaches of Information Architecture – Card Sorting. What it is, why it matters ... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Ux,web design
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Celeste Lyn Paul about the state of usability efforts in open source software, and about her card sorting method - the Modified Delphi.Celeste mentioned Open Usability (openusability.org)Gerry mentions a previous card-sorting episode of UXpod with Donna Maurer (tinyurl.com/3xzglj)Celeste mentioned Michael Gladwell's book 'Blink' (http://tinyurl.com/235vnd)The spreadsheet that Celeste spoke about is Joe Lamantia's on BoxesAndArrows (http://tinyurl.com/3742xt)Celeste's blog is weblog.obso1337.orgDuration: 25:46File size: 8.84MB
I spoke to Donna Maurer on the topic of card sorting. I think she has a very nice and practical approach to card sorting.Donna referred to the OzIA conference (http://www.oz-ia.org/2006/) which takes place on September 30 and October 1 2006 in sunny Sydney.You should also check out Donna's blog (http://maadmob.net/donna/blog/) if you're interested in Information Architecture.You can also keep up with news on Donna's forthcoming book on card-sorting (http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/cardsorting/).