Articles

Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox articles about interface usability and website design.

Research Methods

Strength of User Research Evidence

April 14, 2013

Usability findings derived from a broad base of diverse studies have higher credibility than those based on many users with a single stimulus.

Traveling Usability Lab

September 10, 2012

User testing can be done anywhere; witness our international studies, carried out with equipment that fit in a carry-on bag.

The Most Important Usability Activity

July 16, 2012

What's worth the most: field studies or user tests? Depends on your company's usability maturity, but user testing is the safe bet if you can do only one thing.

Interviewing Users

July 26, 2010

Despite many weaknesses, interviews are a valuable method for exploratory user research.

Testing Expert Users

January 25, 2010

It's more difficult to conduct usability studies with experienced users than with novices, and the improvements are usually smaller. Still, improving expert performance is often worth the effort.

Building Respect for Usability Expertise

July 6, 2009

Enemies of usability claim that because 'the experts disagree,' they can safely ignore user advocates' expertise and run with whatever design they personally prefer.

When to Use Which User Experience Research Methods

October 6, 2008

User experience research methods can answer a wide range of questions. Know when to use each method by mapping them in 3 key dimensions and across typical product development phases.

Traffic Log Patterns

July 10, 2006

The relative popularity of a site's pages, the number of visitors referred by other sites, and the traffic from search queries continue to follow a Zipf distribution.

Enterprise Usability

November 7, 2005

Usability goes beyond the level of individual users interacting with screens. It's also a question of how easy or cumbersome it is for the entire organization to use a system.

Putting A/B Testing in Its Place

August 15, 2005

Measuring the live impact of design changes on key business metrics is valuable, but often creates a focus on short-term improvements. This near-term view neglects bigger issues that only qualitative studies can find.

Authentic Behavior in User Testing

February 14, 2005

Despite being an artificial situation, user testing generates realistic findings because people engage strongly with the tasks and suspend their disbelief.

Acting on User Research

November 8, 2004

User research offers a learning opportunity that can help you build an understanding of user behavior, but you must resolve discrepancies between research findings and your own beliefs.

Card Sorting: How Many Users to Test

July 19, 2004

Testing ever-more users in card sorting has diminishing returns, but you should still use three times more participants than you would in traditional usability tests.

Keep Online Surveys Short

February 2, 2004

To ensure high response rates and avoid misleading survey results, keep your surveys short and ensure that your questions are well written and easy to answer.

User Empowerment and the Fun Factor

July 7, 2002

Designs that engage and empower users increase their enjoyment and encourage them to explore websites in-depth. Once we achieve ease of use, we'll need additional usability methods to further strengthen joy of use.

Field Studies Done Right: Fast and Observational

January 20, 2002

Field studies should emphasize the observation of real user behavior. Simple field studies are fast and easy to conduct, and do not require a posse of anthropologists: All members of a design team should go on customer visits.

Usability Metrics

January 21, 2001

Although measuring usability can cost four times as much as conducting qualitative studies (which often generate better insight), metrics are sometimes worth the expense. Among other things, metrics can help managers track design progress and support decisions about when to release a product.

Voodoo Usability

December 12, 1999

Focus groups and surveys study users' opinions - not actual behavior - so they are misleading for the design of interactive systems like websites. Automated usability measures are just as misleading.

Tracking the Growth of a Site

February 22, 1998

Website usage must be tracked to plan server capacity needs and future business models. Examples show use of regression statistics to predict future traffic patterns.

The Use and Misuse of Focus Groups

January 1, 1997

Focus groups can be a powerful tool in system development, but they should not be the only source of information about user behavior. In interactive systems development, the proper role of focus groups is not to assess interaction styles or design usability, but to discover what users want from the system.

Discount Usability for the Web

January 1, 1997

Discount usability engineering is our only hope. We must evangelize methods simple enough that departments can do their own usability work, fast enough that people will take the time, and cheap enough that it's still worth doing. The methods that can accomplish this are simplified user testing with one or two users per design and heuristic evaluation.

Seductive User Interfaces

January 1, 1996

Because computers are no longer used exclusively for utilitarian tasks, we should use systematic methods to design products that are not just efficient but also attractive to users.

Characteristics of Usability Problems Found by Heuristic Evaluation

January 1, 1995

Heuristic evaluation is a good method of identifying both major and minor problems with an interface, but the lists of usability problems found by heuristic evaluation will tend to be dominated by minor problems, which is one reason severity ratings form a useful supplement to the method.

Severity Ratings for Usability Problems

January 1, 1995

Rating usability problems according to their severity facilitates the allocation of resources to fix the most serious problems. Severity ratings are a combination of frequency, impact, and persistence.

Summary of Usability Inspection Methods

January 1, 1995

Usability inspection is the generic name for a set of methods that are all based on having evaluators inspect a user interface. Typically, usability inspection is aimed at finding usability problems in the design, though some methods also address issues like the severity of the usability problems and the overall usability of an entire system.

How to Conduct a Heuristic Evaluation

January 1, 1995

Heuristic evaluation involves having a small set of evaluators examine the interface and judge its compliance with recognized usability principles (the "heuristics"). Adherence to specific methods can improve the outcome of an heuristic evaluation.

Usability Laboratories: A 1994 Survey

January 1, 1995

A summary of statistics for the thirteen usability laboratories in 1994, an introduction to the main uses of usability laboratories in usability engineering, and survey of some of the issues related to practical use of user testing and CAUSE tools for computer-aided usability engineering. Nielsen, J. (1994). Usability laboratories. Behaviour & Information Technology 13, 1&2, 3-8.

Goal Composition: Extending Task Analysis to Predict Things People May Want to Do

January 1, 1994

This essay describes a technique for extending a task analysis based on the principle of goal composition. Basically, goal composition starts by considering each primary goal that the user may have when using the system. A list of possible additional features is then generated by combining each of these goals with a set of general meta-goals that extend the primary goals.

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