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Understanding Mobile User Experience is the next macro-challenge


Source: Rethink Wireless, 24 March 2009
Submitted by Joanna Bawa

by Marek Pawlowski


User experience. It is a broad and sometimes ambiguous term. To-date, the mobile industry has typically employed it to describe the graphical user interface (UI) of an application or device. However, despite the increasing frequency with which it is cited by the mobile business, user experience is something rather more complex than the way a product looks.

To genuinely enhance the mobile user experience, we must look beyond simplifying the UI of an application or employing an industrial designer to make a handset look more attractive. Instead, we must focus our attention on understanding the nuanced behavioural patterns of individual customers across the many touch points which form an overall impression of a product or service. It is in this way that user experience issues can affect everyone in the value chain. Whether you are a chipset manufacturer several layers removed from the end user or an application developer selling direct to consumers, the approach you take has some sort of impact on the end customer.

You can employ a designer to create the most beautiful of UIs, but no amount of colourful icons is enough to compensate for a slow processor or an application which crashes. The mobile industry has been slow to wake up to the reality that mobile user experience is not a set of technologies you can buy in or a UI layer which can be skinned onto a product at the end of the development process. For years, the mobile business has expanded successfully using a model of iterating new technologies and then searching around for customers prepared to buy them. We've become accustomed to a development cycle built around ticking boxes on a specification sheet. 5 megapixel camera...check; touchscreen...check; Wi-Fi...check. Such days, however, are coming to an end. The industry is maturing rapidly and the battleground for competitive advantage is shifting from pure technology to a more subtle art.

Companies are even creating entirely new wireless product categories by focusing on the small things which matter to customers. Online retailer Amazon is enjoying an unlikely success with its Kindle e-book reader, a mobile device using Verizon's CDMA network in the US. At first glance the Kindle has a basic, aesthetically difficult design lacking the sophistication of other mobile products. However, by combining Amazon's extensive e-book library, e-ink screen technology and an almost invisible integration of the wireless network, the product succeeds in delivering a compelling user experience.

Building better mobile experiences requires the industry to think seriously about strategic change. It demands a collaborative approach, bringing together companies from across the value chain and job functions throughout the corporate spectrum, from board level to individual engineers.

 


External link to another web site Associated Link:
Marek Pawlowski in Rethink Wireless


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