Conducting Quick Check Testing to Get User Feedback

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Given at Usability Professionals Association Conference June 6, 2012

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+Conducting Quick Check Testing to Get User Feedback

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Introduction 3:00 – 3:02

Quick check testsWhat are they? What problems do they solve? How do they compare to traditional testing?

3:02 – 3:10

Planning & conducting a quick check test 3:10 – 3:15

Comparison 3:15 – 3:20

Group Exercise 3:20 – 3:30

Discussion 3:30 – 3:35

Case Study 3:35 – 3:45

Questions / Discussion 3:45 – 3:50

Tips & Takeways 3:50 – 3:55

Wrap-up, Final questions 3:55 – 4:00

Schedule

+Today’s Challenges(And yesterday’s and tomorrow’s)

Knowing whether a design will work

Time

Budget

Resources

Access to users

+Quick Check Tests

Post your design and gather feedback and reactions Quickly Low or no cost

Validate design or ask specific questions Gauge understanding of content Check effectiveness, impact of design Explore interactions

Can conduct online or post print-outs

Provide an alternative to more thorough usability testing

Picture Source: Whitney Quesenbery

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1. Decide what you want to check Content, flow, design, colors, images, understanding, tone Documents, screenshots, video Tasks, questions

2. Consider context and bounds What instructions and context will participants need to be helpful? Number / label areas to help provide easy reference points How can you convey that without biasing them?

3. Pick a good location, time High-traffic areas or low-traffic, secured areas

4. Coordinate logistics and set it up

5. Check in and observe

Planning a Quick Check Test

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Where would you look to complete [task 1]?

Was there anything that helped you know that?

How clear is the content?

Are there any design elements that help you understand how to use this?

What would you suggest changing?

Are there any elements your friends, family, or colleagues would have trouble understanding?

Sample Questions

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Notablehttp://www.notableapp.com

flickr http://www.flickr.comTo give people “Add a note” option, go to You > Your Account > Privacy & Permissions

Online Options

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You want to get reactions to your mobile app design. Think about how you’ll set up a quick check test.1.Define your goals, what you want to learn.

2.Consider: Participants & advertising (how will participants learn about this) Where you can set up the test (online, in-person location; timing, duration) Context, background participants might need Questions you want answered How you will collect results (email, suggestion box, post-it notes) Format or Supplies you will need (online - website, file type, etc.; in-person - paper, post-it notes, pens)

3.Use the next slides to plan out your first quick check test.

Group Exercise

Plan a Quick Check Test

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Goals

Participants & Recruiting

Location (online, in-person...)

Duration

Background / Context participants will need

Materials needed

Questions you want answered

How you will collect results

Group Exercise

Plan a Quick Check Test

+Case Study

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Howto.gov/firstfridays

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+Video

SAVE YouTube VIDEO LOCALLY JUST IN CASE WE DON’T HAVE ACCESS TO WEB FROM ROOM!

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Moderated Unmoderated

10th Floor 6th Floor

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Permissions

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+Publications Test: Success rate by task

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Moderated Unmoderated

10th Floor 6th Floor

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+Quick Test steps

1. Pick site / document to test

2. Develop tasks (even “First Clicks are OK)

3. Determine # testers needed to succeed (10)

4. Timed dry run of the test

5. Select location

6. Set up materials 45 min before test begins

7. Test people for 5-15 min max each

8. Record the successes / failures and feedback

9. Debrief problems and solutions

+Wrap-up

+To Learn More…

Kate Walser kwalser@cxinsights.com @kwalser +1 (571) 281-2626

Jon Rubin jonathan.rubin@gsa.gov @govnewmedia +1 (202) 501-0855

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Quick Check TestWhitney Quesenbery, Open University open hallway usability test

Photo Credits

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