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Jul 24, 2024 | 5 Minute Read

What Is User Experience Design: The Ultimate Guide To Get Started

Sucheta Biswas, Marketing Coordinator

Table of Contents

Introduction

In 1956, Gillis Lundgren - IKEA’s catalog manager, was tasked with delivering a new, leaf-shaped table called the Lovet to a nearby photo studio. During the process, he got frustrated trying to fit the table into his small post-war car and started thinking about a potential solution.

This thought process led IKEA to adopt the iconic flat pack design.

It’s amazing how this one simple design change translated into several benefits for the Sweden-based furniture store: 

  • The flat packaging helps IKEA keep furniture prices lower, making them accessible to many customers. 
  • Flatpack furniture is lightweight and easy to transport in Ikea stores and for customers on their way home.
  • The boxes are space-saving for both IKEA stores and customers. 
  • It encourages designers to create functional products that are also clean and minimalist. 

Ikea UX Design

This story of IKEA’s flat-packaged furniture shows how user experience design can revolutionize an entire industry, impacting millions of users worldwide and delivering business value

How Airbnb Aimed To Design Better User Experience For Specially Abled Users

Airbnb known for its user experience, recognized that it wasn’t effectively designing for specially-abled people. After conversing with travelers with disabilities and advocacy groups, the brand started to hear their stories, gain perspective, and learn how to do better.  

The main takeaway was that their previous solution—a “wheelchair accessible” option to filter accessible homes—failed to meet their needs. Guests could not find the apt information to find a suitable accommodation. To address this issue, Airbnb started working on a new “Accessibility Needs” feature with filters for guests.

Airbnb UX Design

Is UX Design The Same As User Interface (UI) Design?

As opposed to UX design, UI design is the interface that the users engage with. It includes components and interactive elements like text, images, button types, typography, and more, all. Here’s a quick take on UI and UX design differences:

Differences Between UI and UX Design

 

UX Design UI Design
  • The overall product experience
  • An approach to product design application
  • Includes the complete journey from a user's first contact to the last
  • Uses design solutions that solve pain points across the user journey
  • The appearance of a product’s interface
  • An approach to designing the aesthetic experience of a product
  • Includes various touchpoints that allow users to interact with a product
  • Uses elements like typography, color palettes, buttons, animations, and imagery

UX vs UI design

What Consists Of A UX Design Process?

Effective UX design is centered around user needs and feedback. The key processes include:

Research And Understanding  

This includes Identifying users’ pain points, goals, and behaviors to inform detailed user personas. It also involves market analysis to better understand the competitive landscape and identify opportunities for differentiation.

Prototyping And Wireframing

Based on research insights, designers create visual representations of the product's structure and flow. Prototyping involves building interactive mockups for user testing, while wireframes focus on the layout and information hierarchy.

Testing And Iteration 

Continuous testing is crucial for refining the design and includes user testing such as A/B testing to gather user feedback along with analytics (heatmaps and session recordings). Post this, iterative refinement takes place, leading to products that truly meet user needs and drive business success.

Implementation

Once the product is ready, it's launched, often in stages to gather additional feedback. Close monitoring of user behavior and performance metrics is essential.

Note: UX design is an ongoing process. Post-launch, teams should continue to gather user feedback, analyze data, and make iterative improvements to enhance the user experience.

UX Design Process

What Are The Key Components of User Experience Design?

The key components of user experience design are:

Information Architecture (IA)

IA is the structural design that organizes information to support usability, findability, and understanding, and enhances the user experience.

Interaction Design (IxD)

Interaction design focuses on designing interactive experiences between humans and products. It involves creating intuitive and engaging interfaces that guide users through tasks efficiently. Designers achieve this by applying various user-centered principles and cognitive psychology.

Visual Design

Visual design enhances user experience by creating visually appealing and engaging interfaces. Effective use of color evokes emotions, creates visual hierarchy, and reinforces brand identity, while the right typography contributes to the interface’s overall visual hierarchy and aesthetic appeal.

What Are The Common Principles Of UX?

Covered by the website of the same name, the common laws of user experience include the following:

 

Fitts’s Law

The time to acquire a target is a function of the distance to and size of the target.

Aesthetic-Usability Effect

Users often perceive aesthetically pleasing design as design that’s more usable.

Doherty Threshold

Productivity soars when a computer and its users interact at a pace (<400ms) that ensures that neither has to wait on the other.

Goal-Gradient Effect

The tendency to approach a goal increases with proximity to the goal.

Jakob’s Law

Users spend most of their time on other sites. This means that users prefer your site to work the same way as all the other sites they already know.

Hick’s Law

The time it takes to make a decision increases with the number and complexity of choices.

Law Of Common Region

Elements tend to be perceived into groups if they are sharing an area with a clearly defined boundary.

Law Of Proximity

Objects that are near, or proximate to each other, tend to be grouped together.

Law Of Prägnanz

People will perceive and interpret ambiguous or complex images as the simplest form possible, because it is the interpretation that requires the least cognitive effort of us.

Law Of Similarity

The human eye tends to perceive similar elements in a design as a complete picture, shape, or group, even if those elements are separated.

Law Of Uniform Connectedness

Elements that are visually connected are perceived as more related than elements with no connection.

Miller’s Law

The average person can only keep 7 (plus or minus 2) items in their working memory.

Occam’s Razor


Among competing hypotheses that predict equally well, the one with the fewest assumptions should be selected.

Pareto Principle

The Pareto principle states that, for many events, roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes.

Parkinson’s Law

Any task will inflate until all of the available time is spent.

Peak-End Rule

People judge an experience largely based on how they felt at its peak and at its end, rather than the total sum or average of every moment of the experience.

Postel’s Law

Be liberal in what you accept, and conservative in what you send.

Serial Position Effect

Users tend to best remember the first and last items in a series.

Tesler’s Law

Tesler's Law, also known as The Law of Conservation of Complexity, states that for any system there is a certain amount of complexity which cannot be reduced.

Von Restorff Effect

The Von Restorff effect, also known as The Isolation Effect, predicts that when multiple similar objects are present, the one that differs from the rest is most likely to be remembered.

Zeigarnik Effect

People remember uncompleted or interrupted tasks better than completed tasks.

How Axelerant Enhanced User Experience On The Red Hat Developer Portal 

Red Hat Developer Portal UX UI Design

Axelerant partnered with Red Hat to redesign their developer portal with the goal of providing an experience-based outlook and a brand new learning experience for developers. The challenge was in:

  • Restructuring Information Architecture: Revamp the website's information architecture to support desired user journeys.
  • Creating a Roadmap: Align the portal’s design with its business objectives.
  • Changing Perception: Shift the "free-software" outlook that Red Hat had among its developer audience.

Our Approach

Our approach was grounded in the Design Thinking and How Might We frameworks, ensuring that the portal would effectively address user problems. We divided our strategy into three key segments:

  1. Information Architecture & Navigation Redesign
  2. Website Redesign
  3. Usability Audit
Results

The implementation of a new information architecture and navigation model has transformed the Red Hat Developer portal. The key outcomes included:

  • Enhanced Learning Experience: The portal now offers a streamlined learning experience, enabling developers to track and understand their learning journeys more effectively.
  • Personalized Touchpoints: The portal provides a more personalized user experience, keeping users engaged by reducing the cognitive load from unstructured learning resources.
  • Improved User Engagement: With a more organized and intuitive design, the developer portal keeps users engaged and focused on their learning paths.

The collaboration has successfully revamped the Red Hat Developer portal, aligning it with business goals and significantly improving the user experience.

Learn more about the impact of user experience design by connecting with our team.

FAQ'S

Does UX Design Require Coding?

Generally, advanced coding skills aren't typically required for most UX designers, having a basic understanding of coding can be an added advantage. Understanding the kind of challenges developers face helps UX designers better communicate their ideas and work more effectively with the development teams.

 

What Is A UX Design Service?

A UX Design Service involves creating a customer-focused design strategy. UX service designers dive into user research, develop detailed user personas, design wireframes, and prototypes, and conduct usability testing. Their goal is to ensure the final product provides a seamless and exceptional user experience.

What Is The Difference Between UX, CX, And Service Design?

UX (User Experience) design caters to optimizing a single customer interaction or touchpoint. CX (Customer Experience) design takes a broader view, managing the overall customer journey across all touchpoints and channels. Service Design encompasses both UX and CX, but also incorporates an organizational perspective, focusing on how all elements of service delivery work together to improve the overall experience.

About the Author
Dheeraj Khindri, Director of Experience Design
About the Author

Dheeraj Khindri, Director of Experience Design

A pragmatic soul and cinema enthusiast who enjoys larger-than-life films—that’s Dheeraj. In his free time, he explores all things poetry, solo guitar sessions, and binge-worthy web series. His life’s essential values? Empathy, autonomy, and pragmatism.


Sucheta-Biswas

Sucheta Biswas, Marketing Coordinator

Nicknamed “Monica” for her culinary prowess and tidiness, Sucheta is an intriguing omnivert. Books are her cherished companions, complemented by nature walks and wildlife photography. She’s also a practicing Yogi who loves all things art.

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