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Customers Request the Darndest Things* 10 Challenges for VUI Designers Eduardo Olvera User Interface Designer
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Exhibit 1: The Customer Purchased system/solution Has Business need Has clear Objectives (most of the time) Needs to hit numbers –Return on Investment –Call Volumes –Transfer rates Brings preconceptions/experiences
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Exhibit 2: The Service Provider Provides system/solution Keeps User needs in mind Brings experience/best practices Has open mind Understands design implications
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Exhibit 3: The “user”
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Exhibit 4: The Interaction
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What to do? Find root of the problem Understand fear, limited experience, business pressure Explain reasons behind design decisions
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10 things customers requested what they meant what they really mean how to respond
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“Instead of arguing, let’s just make it an option ” 1 “I guess I want 1. You give me too many choices.”
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Situation: Debate between options, good arguments, let user decide Interpretation: Hungry, no data, no way to guess Real Problem: Not enough info to decide
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Design is about decisions UI Designers know users Only add things if need can be proven User profiles – effect? value? When in doubt, don’t add it
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“We could just ask callers and move on” 2
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Situation: Application needs parameter not available when needed Interpretation: Less work for me, can up sell more Real Problem: Questions are easy. Complexity passed on to callers
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Hide complexity from users Relevant questions only Usability drives, technology follows Evaluate impact of interruptions
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“You are the experts. I just need that option, you decide where to put it” 3
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Situation: “minor” change, major impact Interpretation: I know business, control is mine, but I’ll give in a little Real Problem: Our perspective on roles and responsibilities is different
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Design is about data and standards Consistency is key – single source Groups should reach consensus Key players to drive and make decisions
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“Don’t make it too advanced. Our customers aren’t very sophisticated ” 4
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Situation: Users, designers and business owners are different (location, education, experience) Interpretation: How can users understand what took you so long to explain? Hold their hand Real Problem: Users won’t figure out something isn’t clear to me, plus complex implementation
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Users know their tasks and needs More steps or less information doesn’t make designs simpler Understand and observe users User profiles
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“But what if the customer does X?” 5
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Situation: Everyone attempts to provide as much information as possible Interpretation: We have list of errors, design should avoid them Real Problem: A design that doesn’t include all cases is incomplete
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Focus on how will it work Focus on what callers will do Best experience when things go well Consider most common errors only
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“Can we move it up to the main menu to make it obvious?” 6
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Situation: Someone couldn’t find option Interpretation: If I’m confused, design should change. Minor fix, low impact. Real Problem: Important for us, afraid too hidden
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Not everything should be obvious Context filters information Importance is relative Design for all, not a few Voice coaching provides flexibility
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“But our current system (or other) does it differently” 7
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Situation: Surprise due design aspect different from preconception Interpretation: You’re not only one knows similar systems and what they do Real Problem: Why your design is different from what I was thinking
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Each design solves unique problems Copying success is good… …but understand their flaws Successful companies do things differently from leaders
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“You don’t get it. They need to know we offer X” 8
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Situation: Attempt to up sell or advertise low usage/new products Interpretation: You know design. I know business. Need to increase usage and chance to sell Real Problem: Prove negative impact without trying
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Explain compromise % benefited vs. affected Objective measures Human factors – effect? Inform, hope for reason
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“I don’t see why you say it’s confusing ” 9
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Situation: Successful system in place, customers and employees trained, you make suggestions Interpretation: We’ve been successful, we are leaders, we are the industry standard Real Problem: Identified problem they didn’t see
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First experience, fresh perspective Usability could reinforce, but resources better spent elsewhere Users adapt, doesn’t mean it’s right User profiles – effect? value? Prioritize and categorize suggestions
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“We need to keep them in the system …in a friendly way” 10
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Situation: Callers press 0 or ask for operator Interpretation: If they tried it and followed instructions, they would like it Real Problem: Giving users control complicates internal systems’ state
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User’s can’t be forced They’ll beat the system or get frustrated Move on, even with incomplete data Minimalist and simple design
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And because with Customers there’s always something else…
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“Why is Spanish not working as well as English? We translated all clips…” 11
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Situation: Reach exploding market, minimize cost (hard to justify) Interpretation: Pesky requirement, everyone translates, straightforward process Real Problem: Don’t speak language. Lack of culture understanding
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All languages same importance Callers, tasks and needs are different No neutral Spanish Localization: language+culture+brand Do it in full, look for divergence
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Systems are not automated agents They support agents and automate simple, common things Agents should handle complex tasks, add value and build relationships
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Q&A Eduardo Olvera eduardo.olvera@nuance.com Slides available at vuidesign.net
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