designing for the customer and the bottom line: costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user- centred design Gitte Lindgaard Carleton University Ottawa, Canada

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Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design. Gitte Lindgaard Carleton University Ottawa, Canada. To convey your …. message you must know what that message is and how to convey it (Chapanis, 1988). Traditional UCD focus. User experience - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and

benefits of user-centred design

Gitte Lindgaard

Carleton University

Ottawa, Canada

Page 2: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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• To convey your …. message you must know what that message is and how to convey it

(Chapanis, 1988)

Page 3: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

3

Traditional UCD focus

• User experience– Who are the application users?– What tasks will the application support?– What other tools do users employ?– What is the environment like?

Page 4: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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UCD cost-benefit analysis

• 10 years ago• Estimated costs of applying usability methods (time

to set up, run tests, analyse data, write up)

• Estimated benefits of finding x number of usability problems

Page 5: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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UCD cost-benefit analysis now

• What are you selling?

• Who are you selling to?

• Can you substantiate your claims?• Hypothetical numbers are low in credibility

• Case studies may not look like they are similar to the current situation

• Is the time right?

Page 6: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Who is our immediate client?

• Marketing: promote snazzy features• But don’t give them ideas that IT can’t deliver

• IT: technical wizardry and miracles• But must be linked to the business case

• Project manager: deliver on time and to budget• Finance: keep costs within budget• Training: cannot increase training costs

• So must know the implications of your great idea

• Corporate ID: must reflect our image

Page 7: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Who owns the user experience?

• Hardware ... Shape, size, weight, labels…• Software … installation procedure Ok?• QA …fault free products• Tech writers … user manuals, instructions• Training … sufficient, efficient, economic• CSRs … cope with customer questions• Marketing … position products• etc. etc.

Page 8: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Different owners & cultures

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Page 9: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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What’s your business?

• Consumer products– Generic hardware/software (PDAs, games,

smart watches)– For a specific target audience (business DSS,

financial planning SW, scheduling SW)

• Customer-specific products– Internal to your organization– For outside customers (EMS, WMS)

Page 10: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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What’s your business?

• Consumer products– Generic hardware/software (PDAs, games,

smart watches)– For a specific target audience (business DSS,

financial planning SW, scheduling SW)

• Customer-specific products– Internal to your organization– For outside customers (EMS, WMS)

Page 11: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Targeted consumer products

• Dental support system• 7 manyears

• > $2million development costs

• Worked with dentists … employed at a Unversity

• Special features:– Multimedia data storage & manipulation

– Video camera … to confirm diagnosis

– Speech I/O … to avoid keyboard

– Excellent scheduling capability … if > 4 dentists

Page 12: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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User instructions

• Problems installing a printer driver• 50,000 calls to help desk

• + send out patch on disk

• Cost > $900,000 + between $600,000 and $12,5 mill

• Evidently no user testing prior to release

• User manual style and template• 50% of $1,68 mill per year

• Cost of style & template $80K

Page 13: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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The Cordis story

1993 •$223m Annual sales•$20 share value•<1% market share of angioplasty balloons•Goal: 5% market share

•$443m annual sales•Stent was born...•$1billion sales in year 1

1995

1996

•Johnson & Johnson acquired Cordis at•$109 share value

Page 14: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Page 15: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Know thy users’ goals

• Cordis focused on desired outcomes• Outcome-based interviews

• Desired outcomes

• Decompose the process

• Organise the outcomes in categories corresponding to each step in the process

• Rate outcomes for importance and satisfaction

• Use outcomes to jump-start innovation (Ulwick, A.W., 2002)

Page 16: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Outcome-based interviews

• Began to define every step underlying usage process

• Inserting catheter into an artery

• Placing the balloon at the lesion or blockage

• Opening the artery by inflating the balloon

• Removing the catheter

Page 17: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Stakeholders, yes but…

• Know precisely who to focus on• Cardiologists who perform the procedure

• Nurses who assist the procedure

• Hospital administrators who sit on the purse strings

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Capture desired outcomes

• Moderator • clarifies and validates customers’ statements

• digs beneath the surface of words

• makes sure every aspect of the process/activity is gone through

• Each statement translates into one desired outcome containing– Type of improvement required (increase minimize)

– Unit of measure (time, n, frequency)

– Outcome statement used later in benchmarking, competitive analysis, concept evaluation

– Rephrases statements until they are free of solutions

– Then confirms statements with participants

Page 19: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Organise the outcomes

• List collected outcomes, remove duplicates• Categorise into groups corresponding to each step

in the process, here• Inserting catheter into an artery

• Placing the balloon at the lesion or blockage

• Opening the artery by inflating the balloon

• Removing the catheter

• With this we can measure value to the customer

Page 20: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Rate and use outcomes

• Rate outcomes for• Importance and satisfaction, i.e. how well is each

outcome currently satisfied?

• Use outcomes to jump-start innovation• Cordis identified several new product opportunities

and set new goals (e.g. 20% reduction in restenosis)

Page 21: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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[Importance + (Importance – Satisfaction) = opportunity]

Desired outcome Importance Satisfaction Opportunity

Minimize restenosis 9.5 3.2 15.8

Minimize force to cross lesion w. balloon

8.3 4.2 12.4

Minimize damage (dissection)

9.5 7.5 11.5

Minimise time to place balloon

9.1 8.4 9.8

Minimise time to complete procedure

5.1 1.0 9.2

Page 22: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Changing UCD focus

• Who are the application stakeholders?– Includes users

• What are their goals?– Includes tasks

• What products compete with this one? – Includes other tools used

Page 23: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Product life cycle

Amount of effort Product 1

Time

Product 2

Page 24: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Now, to the web

Fortune 1000 companies spend on average $1,5 - 2,1 mill/year redesigning their web sites without knowing whether this actually improves them for users

Kalin (1999)

Page 25: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Overall goals1a Business goals

•Customer conversion•Increase retention•Increase transactions

Back-end systemand processes

Engagement and Interaction process, Including content and transactions

3

Customer goals•Easy to learn•Easy to find & buy•Access to help when I need it

1b

Satisfaction of Customer goals leadsTo satisfaction ofBusiness goals

4

from Donahue (2002)

User interface2

Page 26: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Novice Target user zone Early adopter

New user-Tentative-May need proactive help

Early adopter- fast- aggressive- needs little /no help- values fast, efficient user experience

from Donahue (2002)

Page 27: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Web development life cycle

Strategic planningDefine user and businessgoals

ArchitectureInformation and Technology architecture

Visual designLook & feel

Validationusability tests

Execution

Launch

Maintenance

Business evolution8

76

5

4

32

1

from Donahue (2002)

Page 28: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Deliver value to all segmentsBusiness goals User Online experience Directed user behaviours

must driveConvert browsers Prospective customer Relationship Researching firmto customers and (i.e. browser) establishing activity requesting informationIncrease client base and follow-up

Increase Existing customer Relationship- Increasing frequency ofRetention rate retaining engagement, level of

behaviour membership

Deepen existing Existing customer Relationship- Increase number of pointsCustomer deepening activity of contact with customerrelationships

Increase productivity Employee Creation of usable Action based onInside the firm inside the firm data about profitable understanding and analysis

and cost-efficient of transaction and data transactions usage

from Donahue (2002)

Page 29: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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What’s your business?

• Consumer products– Generic hardware/software (PDAs, games,

smart watches)– For a specific target audience (business DSS,

financial planning SW, scheduling SW)

• Customer-specific products– Internal to your organization– For outside customers (EMS, WMS)

Page 30: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Hidden costs

• In the U.S. 31% large development projects (budget > $100,000) cancelled before completion

• Of those that were completed, 52.7% were 189% over budget on average and cost an additional $59billion in 1995 (Ewusi-Mensah, 1997)

• A 6-month delay in release adds 33% after-tax profits (House & Price, 1991)

Page 31: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Creeping costs

• Fixing a problem worth $1 during project definition costs

• $10 if fixed during development, and

• $100+ if fixed after product release

Page 32: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Creeping costs

Requirement Development DeploymentPhase Phase Phase

N possible design alternatives

Cost of changes

Page 33: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Creeping costs

• Total maintenance costs $20-30billion/year• Backlog maintenance minimum 167% of

this (Martin & McClune, 1998)

• … 80% of all problems are identified during maintenance, and it is estimated that 80% of these could be saved with a thorough UNA!

Page 34: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Calculating costs and benefits

• 2 parameters are important:– Cost/benefit ratio

• Relationship between projected use of resources and post-implementation/post-sale value of the investment (and savings during development)

– Payback period• The amount of time it will take before the product

starts to outweigh the cost of the investment

Page 35: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Costs and benefits

– Cost/benefit ratio• Relationship between projected use of resources and

post-implementation/post-sale value of the investment (and savings during development)

– Cost• Team of 4, 2 hours @ $60 = $480

– Saving • 4 person days = 32 hours @ $60/hour = $1,920

– Cost/benefit ratio = 1:4

Page 36: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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An example

• Core system - customer records– customer requests– services & equipment for every telephone

number (n lines, n sockets, cables, exchanges)– linked with other systems (billing, cables,

faults, WP/YP, service orders, scheduling)

Page 37: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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OEO50I INIT ENTRY:ANDREW MEDICI

I11489 SERV#: _______ EXT#: _________ EE#: _____

*** TPIS/2 ORDER S&E ENTRY ***

EXCH ACT: J EXCH CODE: ______ INPLACE: _________ IP DATE: ______EXCH RMK: ____________________________________________________________________SERVICE NAME: ________________________________________________________________ADD ADDR INFO: _______________________________________________________________SUB ADDR TYPE: ______________________________ SUB ADDR#: ____________________STREET#SFX: _______ ________ NAME: ____________________ TP/SFX: ______________LOCALITY: __________________________ POSTCODE: ________FLT CLR PTY: ___ TEMPORARY: _ AL CONN: _______ ROT CONN: ___ PEXT? __LINE TYPE: _____ NEXT FAC: _ LN SEL: __ ARE CODE:REM/CCN(R/N): __ - SERV STATUS: ___ DISC TYPE: PAL#: _______RENTAL RATE: ___ METER RATE: ___ CONC AUTH: _________ CAB#: ______ASIC: _________DIRECTORY ACTION REQ (Y/N): _ DIRECTORIES#=-> WH: __ YE: _ COM: ___

COMMAND: ______

Page 38: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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OEO50I INIT ENTRY:ANDREW MEDICI

I11489 SERV#: _______ EXT#: _________ EE#: _____

*** TPIS/2 ORDER S&E ENTRY ***

EXCH ACT: J EXCH CODE: PBX334 INPLACE: 3374606 IP DATE: 04089996EXCH RMK: N/A QREMMSERVICE NAME:PETER JAMES HOUSTONADD ADDR INFO: ROWANVILLE MELASUB ADDR TYPE: SEMI-ATT. DUAL H/H DWELLING SUB ADDR#: 337ASTREET#SFX: CRESCENT NAME: ST BARTHOLOMEW TP/SFX: PMT/YYLOCALITY: ROWANVILLE WEST POSTCODE: 3957FLT CLR PTY: ROP TEMPORARY: N AL CONN: P/T ROT CONN: 3F PEXT? YLINE TYPE: PBX NEXT FAC: N LN SEL: PR ARE CODE:TTYP-MREM/CCN(R/N): 2X - SERV STATUS: INP DISC TYPE: PAL#: POTT/PRENTAL RATE: RES METER RATE: PM1 CONC AUTH: MELA CAB#: 228FS/476PWASIC: 338PYDIRECTORY ACTION REQ (Y/N): N DIRECTORIES#=-> WH: N YE: N COM: PB

COMMAND: EXT

Page 39: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Through the operator’s eyes

• Activity analysis of 2,000+ calls (Wilson, 1995)

– Typical call activities:Interacting with computer 190 sec Interacting with customer 148 secWalkabouts 33 sec 33 min/dMaking phone calls 28 sec 28 min/dPaperwork 24 sec 24 min/dOther behaviour 12 sec Total time wasted 85 min/d

Page 40: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Other problems

• Data accuracy rate (for accepted transactions only) = 70%

• Database not in place at cutover

• On-the-spot system rejections = ?%

• Absenteeism increased >200% during study– 2 suicide attempts, 2 nervous breakdowns, numerous staff

on long term stress-leave

• Staff turnover rates ~120% in 3 months

Page 41: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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CostCommunication

$M1.6

Tech time $M3.7CSR Training

$M10.4

Help, support$M0.5

Enhancements$M.8

CSR time $M13

Total $M30!!!

Page 42: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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• Cost-benefit ratio:– Total costs of waste year 1$ 30 million

– Total cost of study $ 90K

At least 50% could be fixed easily at a cost of $1million and within 1 year

– Waste after 1 year $15 million

– Cost-benefit ratio 1:1.38

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Another example

• HR processing applicants– Current process time 4hours/applicant– Data entry costs $25/applicant $100/applicant– HR processes 1,000/year $100,000– Programming time 40 hrs @ $60/hr $ 2,400

• Usability work shows 50% user time saved, but say 25%– Cost/applicant now $75 or $75,000/year– Benefit per applicant $25 or $25,000/year– Benefit in year 1($25,000-$2,400) $22,600– Benefit in year 2 $25,000– Benefit in year 3 $25,000– Total benefit (year 1 + 2 + 3) $72,600– Cost-benefit ratio 72,600:2,400 1:30.25

Page 44: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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What’s your business?

• Consumer products– Generic hardware/software (PDAs, games,

smart watches)– For a specific target audience (business DSS,

financial planning SW, scheduling SW)

• Customer-specific products– Internal to your organization– For outside customers (EMS, WMS)

Page 45: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Warehouse Management System

• Bottlenecks: Assemblers• Handheld devices sometimes miss an entry

• Voice Recognition System freezes

• …Assemblers work to standards

• ….they can’t offload orders in bay specified

• Bottlenecks: Loaders• Can’t find orders

• Loads are too tall for trucks

• Loads must be dismantled and reassembled

• …2/3 of loaders’ job spent re-doing assemblers’ work

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Subject Object OutcomeOutcome

Tools

Rules CommunityDivision of Labour

Transformation

Page 47: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Changing UCD focus

• Who are the application stakeholders?– Includes users

• What are their goals?– Includes tasks

• What products compete with this one? – Includes other tools used

• What is the context like?– Includes community of work, division of labour, rules

Page 48: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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UCD opportunities

• Strategic planning (web)

• Product definition stage (Cordis)

• User Requirements capture stage (dental support system)

• Outside of development cycle (Customer records system)

• During SDLC (traditional usability studies)

Page 49: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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UCD methods

• Social/behavioural science methods– Opinion-based (interviews, surveys, reviews,

focus groups)– Performance based (activity analyses, user

tests, observations)

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UCD challenges

• Must expand– User focus to business focus– Single product to product range focus – Understanding of business goals, processes– Notion of “team” beyond project team

• Must move outside the usability box

Page 51: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Lindgaard’sBackyard

November 2002

Page 52: Designing for the customer and the bottom line: Costs and benefits of user-centred design

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Lindgaard’s BackyardMay 2003