Evaluation

Surveys for UI Evaluation

What are some advantages and disadvantages of using survey documents for evaluating user interfaces?

People are used to taking surveys, so they are generally widely accepted. They are easy for managers and designers to understand, an inexpensive way to gather feedback, and can result in a large base of statistical data. Of course, if the survey isn’t well-crafted and properly targeted from the beginning, the resulting data won’t be worth much.

Surveys can reveal much more about a user’s real feelings than simple analytics or quantitative measurements. However, some responses can be biased. But overall, I think surveys are very effective as long as clear goals are established before designing the survey, and the questions are well thought out and clear. I also think it’s a good idea to test a survey on a small group before deploying it to thousands of users.

Personally, I generally don’t mind taking surveys. But I must say I always bail out of a website survey if I was told it would be “brief,” and then I’m ten minutes into it with no end in sight. For those types of random, pop-up type surveys, I think it’s important to let the user know exactly what to expect.

Content Strategy Evaluation

This presentation summarizes the results of a content inventory, audit, and analysis of an educational website that offers instructional content for people interested in learning the Spanish language. The site offers free instructional content for beginners. For intermediate and advanced learners, the site offers a premium monthly subscription membership or a complete conversational Spanish course.

I selected this site for the project because: I was already familiar with the site’s content and structure; the modular structure of the site’s content simplified selecting a manageable subsection of the site that fit the scope of the project, and; the site offered a good deal of very useful content, but the content needed be presented in ways that better met business goals and user needs.

The content strategy goal was to provide quality instructional content that attracts the most possible users, while presenting it in a way that encourages them to pay for the full course.

My evaluation indicated that while the website did provide useful, relevant basic Spanish instructional content, significant improvements were needed for the site to remain relevant and competitive, attract more users, and increase sales.

Course: Content Strategy

Project PDF: Content Strategy Evaluation Results and Recommendations