How Can You Get to Know Your User With UX and UI Design?
We learn from Agnes Pyrchla that online UX Design Education teaches you to put yourself in your user’s shoes. Who is your ideal user? Who should you be focusing on? You can use some different tools to get to know your users and focus your energy and attention on those people. The first tool to use is called behavioral archetypes. It’s a broader concept that describes a group of people who share the same characteristics, the same behavioral patterns and the same value systems. It’s different from typical traits like gender or socioeconomic status, and it goes deeper into people’s beliefs and actions.
Behavioral archetypes are helpful when thinking about your UX design strategy. One way to approach this is to set up a spectrum of users who take these behavioral archetypes to the extreme. For example, with social media, you can think about who is a creator and who is a lurker (someone who likes to consume content). When taking this approach to your design strategy, you can really start to form a notion of what types of people you’re designing for.
From there, you can get more technical and create a persona of the ideal person who fits into your behavioral archetype. This persona is what you’re going to base most of your design elements on. So, as you’re painting this picture of your ideal user, imagine yourself as that individual. You’re almost with them on their journey as you’re designing for them. Do a mental check in which you ask yourself, “If I were this person, would I like this product?”
You can get creative and wander in the mind of your imaginary user. That way, you can really embody them and figure out how they will react to the UI product or another product like it. It’s also important to know what function this person would serve. If you’re designing something for a family, are they the parent or the child? If you’re designing something within a school context, are they the teacher, or are they the student? If you’re designing something within an organizational or a business framework, are they the buyer? Are they the user? Are they an engineer? Are they a business person? These details can give you the context of what they’re trying to do.
After creating that persona, you can imagine what is going through that person’s mind and embody them, almost as if you were them. It’s a shortcut for trying to walk a mile in someone’s shoes, to the best of our ability, given that we never will be them.