Recently at CiscoLive!, we spent a full week with customersandpartners doing in-detail usability tests of Cisco.com and some of our mobile sites and apps. This is one of the main methods we use to make our web and mobile easier.
What's a usability test? Something different than you might think. While you've probably heard of other research techniques like focus groups and surveys,usability tests and listening labsare a way for us to learn through observing how people use our sites: We have someone sit down in front of the screen and ask them to do a task that they would in their real work day. This could be solving a support question, researching a new product, finding the right download, investigating a new API, or any number of other things.
Here's the difference between a usability test vs. a focus group or survey: In a focus group, a facilitator often throws out an idea or scenario and gets a group of people to comment on it. The people in the room will tell you what they might like... they will build on others comments... they may give you some great ideas! But, you won't really be learning by observing. You won't understand the kinds of things they willactuallydo in real life, because you're asking them whatthey thinkthey would do. You aren'tobserving.
But when we observe people using our mobile apps or web sites, we can see lots of things. For instance:
We recommend running usability tests or listening labs at multiple stages for major projects:
Even though this sounds like a lot of testing, there are some new techniques you can use to get real user feedback very quickly -within hours or days. I'll talk about that in a future post.
Meanwhile, keep testing. And, remember baseball legend Yogi Berra, who said:
"You can observe a lot by watching!"