UX Jiu Jitsu is a talk about how UX can reshape itself in an organization with little UX exposure. Use these tips to increase your ability to deliver UX to your business.
Business sees a high level value in UX because it's where the money is, but something in our process is breaking down. Get some practical advice on UX process with UX Jiu Jitsu.
4. Most businesses want to deliver well designed
experiences, because the market has shown that’s
where the money is.
Getting there is a matter of discipline...especially when
you're a solo designer, or small team within an
organization with little UX exposure.
5.
6. UX Never Stops
As soon as a human interacts with something UX is
happening.
Technically, everyone at your company is already doing
UX. The question is whether they’re doing good UX.
9. ● A lack of design thinking outside UX
● Weak relationships between UX, and other departments
10. ● A lack of design thinking outside UX
● Weak relationships between UX, and other departments
● A hostile to apathetic culture towards change
11. ● A lack of design thinking outside UX
● Weak relationships between UX, and other departments
● A hostile to apathetic culture towards change
● A cumbersome, or non-existent process
12. How does anyone facing limitations create design
thinking in an environment unexposed to UX?
14. You probably deal with stakeholders that think they’re
designers. In some ways they are.
Design is about problem solving in different contexts.
15. We believe that creating an atmosphere of shared
vision for a business will achieve an increase in design
thinking outside the UX department.
We will know we are right when we see the business
team and UX speaking the same language in their
pursuit of common goals.
16.
17. UX often limits itself intentionally, or unintentionally
to design deliverables without applying the same
problem-solving skills to their context.
18. If you limit yourself to deliverables do not be surprised
if your business fails to recognize your value as a UX
professional.
20. “In order to avoid losing its place atop organizations, design
must deliver results. Designers must also accept that if
they don’t, they’re not actually designing well.”
-Mills Baker, Facebook Product Designer
26. We are strategists, but more than strategists, we are
keepers of the story. That story is best told where the
users and the business have common ground.
27. Our purpose is to tell the story in such a way that it is
compelling to the business, and compelling to the
users at the same time.
28. “No story has power, nor will it last, unless we feel in
ourselves that it is true and true of us.”
-John Steinbeck
31. Change what you believe about yourself.
UX is about more than wireframes. It’s about strategy.
32. Change what you believe about yourself.
UX is more than wireframes. It’s about strategy.
See yourself as a strategist and provide value to your
organization by empathizing with your context.
33. How does anyone facing limitations create design
thinking in an environment unexposed to UX?
37. We want to build this culture for an
organization unexposed to UX.
38. We want to build this culture for an
organization unexposed to UX.
The biggest problem is that the
organization doesn't know what's
missing in the detail.
39. We want to build this culture for an
organization unexposed to UX.
The biggest problem is that the
organization doesn't know what's
missing in the detail.
Our organization wants to deliver
quality products as quickly as possible.
40. We want to build this culture for an
organization unexposed to UX.
The biggest problem is that the
organization doesn't know what's
missing in the detail.
Our organization wants to deliver
quality products as quickly as possible.
Currently they rush to deadlines with
little understanding of usability's
impact on revenue, and conversions.
42. We work with the business who is providing the product, or service
to the users.
The product needs to be usable for them as well.
43.
44. Our idea is to build a culture of collaboration across departments. It
has not been done at this organization in this way before.
45. Our idea is to build a culture of collaboration across departments. It
has not been done at this organization in this way before.
If we approach it as a service we need to create value for other
departments, and share our vision by speaking their language before
we can serve them properly.
46. Our idea is to build a culture of collaboration across departments. It
has not been done at this organization in this way before.
If we approach it as a service we need to create value for other
departments, and share our vision by speaking their language before
we can serve them properly.
If we succeed it provides increased design thinking, and better
strategy across departments for our business.
48. We believe that creating an atmosphere of shared
vision for a business will achieve an increase in design
thinking outside the UX department.
We will know we are right when we see the business
team and UX speaking the same language in their
pursuit of common goals.
49. How does anyone facing limitations create design
thinking in an unexposed environment?
54. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu promotes the concept that a
smaller, weaker person can successfully defend
against a bigger, stronger opponent by using the
opponent’s gravity against them, leveraging their own
weight, and most notably, taking the fight
to the ground.
55. Frame design problems in the language of business.
Example:
Instead of saying "this is modern design," frame design decisions with these terms:
● Conversions
● Revenue
● Value proposition
● Engagement
● Retention
● Costs
1. Take it to the ground:
56. The challenge isn’t to overpower the business into UX,
but to use the weight of the system against its own
barriers to innovation.
58. UX Jiu-Jitsu is built on the correct use of gravity, and
momentum.
When these two components are used correctly the
amount of effort you’ll expend to perform your
techniques will be minimized.
60. Your opponent is bigger than an individual.
Example:
Put your opponents off balance. Don't scheme to keep even the sneakiest attackers out of
the discussion. Let them in. They are not the real opponent, the real opponent is culture,
which is changed one step at a time.
Listen for any good questions, and concerns between the lines. You can make useful
adjustments to a plan that is fundamentally sound.
2. Use your opponent’s weight against them:
61. Be dynamic. Make your UX department more like connective tissue
instead of a single organ.
Example:
Deliver value in multiple areas outside your department as often as possible. Lead small
sessions to find quick wins.
Don't waste your time trying to convert a minority that is so emotionally committed to an
ideology that they will never support your idea unless it is changed to fit that ideology.
3. Do not rely on an entrenched position:
73. Research:
“It’s really hard to show the process to clients and
spread some understanding of the importance of
design.”
74. Research:
“It’s really hard to show the process to clients and
spread some understanding of the importance of
design.”
“How do I present the design process to stakeholders
and developers to actually get buy-in?”