Even after all these years, it seems like “UX” is still a buzzword at many companies—“We don’t just need a designer,” the VP of Product declares, “We need a UX Designer!” An audible gasp is heard in the room; everyone in the meeting nods in agreement while surreptitiously Googling “What is UX design?” and “What does a UX designer do?”

By now, most people know that UX stands for user experience. But knowing what it stands for is not the same as really understanding the details that make it up and make it work. In fact, most people would have a hard time explaining what designing for a user experience means, or what a UX designer actually does.

UX—in short—is all aspects of a system (website, app, product, service, community, etc.) as experienced by users. Companies strive to create positive, consistent, predictable, and desirable outcomes with UX, which may include interface, industrial design, physical interactions, and more.

User experience design is the discipline of what UX designers do and user-centered design (UCD) is the UX processDesign thinking is another term that’s widely used. This practice typically includes user research, sketching, wireframing, interaction design, visual design, prototyping, user testing, and continuous iterating on designs.

Design thinking, Tim Brown IDEO

Understanding UX design—what it is and what it is not—will help everyone involved build great products with great UX. To that end, here are some common misconceptions and myths about UX design:

UX Is Not UI

The interface is not the solution. UI design generally plays an important role in the work of a UX designer, but it is not the only part. Think of it this way: UX design is the journey and the UI is the destination.

UX design is a multi-step strategic design process that aims to create a product or site that customers/users are drawn to, find easy to use, and quickly understand. And through the UX design process, we arrive at the right user interface solution.

There are at least ten steps in the full-stack UX design process that must be taken before getting to the final UI as outlined in a previous article “The 10 UX Deliverables Top Designers Use.”

  1. Business goals analysis and technical specifications
  2. Competitive analysis reports
  3. Crafting of personas and UX research
  4. Sitemap and information architecture
  5. Experience maps, user journeys, and user flows
  6. Sketches and wireframes
  7. Mockups and interaction design
  8. Interactive prototypes
  9. Usability testing
  10. Visual design

Ultimately arriving at the final UI design—the destination.

UX is not UI, the difference between UX and UI

Illustration by Shane Rounce

UX Design Is Not Just about Aesthetics

Aesthetics alone will not provide great usability—they are solely about how something looks. UX design is about how something looks, feels, and works.

Great user experiences are a must if digital product design is to succeed. To be sure, great looking designs and aesthetics in general are important, but they are simply the final touch complementing a usable product that is also a pleasure to use. Some call it “the coat of paint” that is applied once everything is built. Striving for aesthetic perfection while abandoning usability is ultimately a loser’s game.

If UX were just about aesthetics, product usability would need to take a back seat. Usability is a crucial quality attribute that determines how easy a product is to use. A customer is unlikely to care much about how a product looks if they are unable to use it.

Whether a product is useful is defined in terms of utility as well as usability. Utility provides the features people need; usability is how easy and pleasant those features are to use. Designs that focus on aesthetics alone and ignore the basic tenets of usability end up being useless by definition.

Quote by Jonathan Ive of Apple on product design

UX Design Is Not a Step in the Process

UX design is not a checkbox. It needs to be integrated into everything a company does.

“Most clients expect experience design to be a discrete activity, solving all their problems with a single functional specification or a single research study. It must be an ongoing effort, a process of continually learning about users, responding to their behaviors, and evolving the product or service.”
– Dan Brown, Co-founder and principal at EightShapes

Rather than being just a step in the design process, UX design is an iterative, continuous engagement of design thinking around a customer’s interactions with a company’s services and product. It never ends.

For example, the Interaction Design Foundation defines UX design as: “The process of creating products that provide meaningful and personally relevant experiences. This involves the careful design of both a product’s usability and the pleasure consumers will derive from using it. It is also concerned with the entire process of acquiring and integrating the product, including aspects of branding, design, usability, and function.”

Quote by Ralph Caplan: Thinking about design

UX Design Is Not Just about Digital Product Design

UX design doesn’t end at the edges of a user’s screen. Nor is it a layer or component of a product or service; it’s the entire experience working on all levels contextually as an interconnected whole.

UX design considers human moments in context and incorporates all aspects of the ecosystem in which a product is employed. It is about designing an experience holistically where “the whole is considered more than the sum of its parts,” and maintaining this bias throughout the consumer lifecycle, along with all the touchpoints where a user interacts with a product.

As Don Norman says: “User experience encompasses all aspects of the end-user’s interaction with the company, its services, and its products.”

“UX design is not limited to the confines of the computer. It doesn’t even need a screen… User experience is any interaction with any product, any artifact, any system.”
– Bill DeRouchey, Director of interaction design at Ziba Design.

img alt tag: Quote by Steve Jobs on the importance of UX design

UX Design Is Not Just about Usability

Without question, usability is of paramount importance in order for any user experience to be a success. Nevertheless, many things make up what’s under the user experience “umbrella,” and usability is just one aspect of it. A UI can be designed to be extremely usable, but fall short when it comes to delivering the right things, at the right time, in the right way.

As mentioned previously, a UI can be aesthetically pleasing and a pleasure to use, but fail miserably when put under the microscope of heuristic analysis where all the boxes making up good usability are checked.

Heuristic evaluation of UI design usability and UX

A heuristic evaluation uncovers bad usability. An example of a heuristic evaluator identifying usability issues (dashboard by Corey Haggard).

A great product should satisfy users on many levels. It should be:

Useful
Is there a reason I should use this? Does it serve a purpose? Does it satisfy needs?

Usable
Is it intuitive? Is it easy to use? Is it accessible?

Desirable
Is it aesthetically pleasing? Is it differentiated? Is it memorable?

Sustainable
Can it be maintained? Can it evolve? Can it be supported? Can it scale?

Social
Does it facilitate conversation? Does it support sharing? Does it encourage community?

“Unusable” means “I’m moving on,” and no matter how good-looking the visual design—how fancy that micro-animation is—mess up the UX design and your user experience is kaput. Get it right and you’ll be well on your way to a much better UX. The product will have a greater chance of succeeding, which in turn will contribute to the bottom line.

“While usability is important, its focus on efficiency and effectiveness seems to blur the other important factors in UX, which include learnability and visceral and behavioral emotional responses to the products and services we use.”
– David Malouf, Professor of interaction design Savannah College of Art & Design

Quote by Jacob Nielsen

UX Design Is Not Just about the User

UX design also has to meet business goals and objectives. It all starts with an understanding of the product vision, i.e., the reason for the product’s existence from a business perspective. The target market needs to be considered, the problem needs to be addressed, and a viable solution crafted.

If a UX designer only focuses on creating optimal experiences for users while neglecting business goals, they will fail. Many novice UX specialists make this mistake and propose recommendations that are unrealistic. Businesses need to be profitable in order to exist.

Using the S.M.A.R.T. Framework when defining business goals for a UX project is one way to look at the needs of the business. S.M.A.R.T. stands for: Specific, Measurable, Actionable, Realistic, and Time-Based. Designers need to look at their work from a business perspective, think strategically, consider the primary objectives, and design toward both users and business goals.

“We just can’t always do what is best for the users. There are a set of business objectives that are needing to be met—and we’re designing to that, as well.”
– Russ Unger, Director of Experience Planning, DraftFCB

UX Design quote from Susan Weinschenk

UX Design Is Not Expensive

True, one could spend a lot—“go all in”—using the full spectrum of methods and tools that make up the entire UX process. In reality, nobody really does this. Most companies use the excuse of high expenses (a myth) and not enough time to forego implementing the most vital of UX design activities such as user research and user testing. In point of fact, especially when it comes to user research, companies can’t afford not to do it.

In reality, the best UX designers have a toolbox of options, picking and choosing methods that make sense for the particular project and budget. For example, without spending very much, great design opportunities can be discovered and a lot of insight gained from doing user research with just five users. Similarly, putting together a simple product prototype and user testing it with five users is cheap, will reveal most usability issues, and show the product team what works and what doesn’t.

Another method is heuristic analysis. With as few as five expert evaluators, it is a cost-effective way to spot over 80% of usability issues with a product’s design—and it’s not expensive, especially when one considers the cost of not doing usability testing.

“Poor design creates friction.”
– Jared M. Spool, Founder of User Interface Engineering

Bad UX is more expensive than good UX. The consequences of poor UX always add up to major friction for the user. Friction leads to frustration and when extreme frustration occurs, people simply abandon the product.

The ROI of User Experience Design

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O94kYyzqvTc]

UX Design Is Not Just the Role of One Person or Department

Focusing on the customer experience should be the responsibility of the entire company. When companies don’t embrace a customer-centered design methodology around their products and services, they’re sure to be overtaken by a competitor who does. Relegating UX design professionals to work in isolation and “pretty up things” after a product is already built is a major mistake.

Integrating user-centered design (UCD) into a company’s vision, mission, and culture is vital. All of the most successful companies do it. UX design has a variety of different definitions; some call it “customer-centered design,” as Amazon does, or customer experience (CX), or “service design.”

UX is the responsibility of the whole company

UX Design Is Not a Single Discipline

A UX designer is a design thinking practitioner, a “jack of all UX disciplines” whose focus is the customer’s satisfaction with a product. Many different disciplines make up UX design, which is as an umbrella term for a vast universe of disciplines, approaches, methodologies, and tools. Some of these are: business goals analysis, competitive analysis, persona development, user research, empathy mapping, user journeys, information architecture, content strategy, interaction design, interface design, visual design, prototypingheuristic analysis, and user testing… to mention just a few.

The User Experience Model

The User Experience Model (by Corey Stern, cubiux.com)

UX Design Is Not Optional

In today’s world UX design can_not_ be an afterthought. It’s misguided to think it’s an “add-on” and something companies do after the “important stuff” is done—like defining business goals, market research, product requirement documents (PRDs), engineering, sales, and marketing. These days, integrating UX design into everything a company does is crucial.

Products are not about features and functionality. Websites, apps, or B2B SaaS products are not just utilities. Businesses don’t get the full return on their investment if the outcome is only a momentary emotional response from customers because design efforts were built around utility and aesthetics alone. Any long-term positive emotional response has to have a strong value component and must be intricately designed into the product in order to consistently please and delight users. So UX design is not merely an option. It’s an absolute must if companies are to succeed in the long term.

Tim Cook quote about great products and how UX design should work

 

This article is written by Miklos Philips and originally posted at Toptal