Workshop #13: Scenario Based Design_handoutsB

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SCENARIO-BASED DESIGN UX Singapore, 2016 - Shane Morris 1 Shane Morris @shanemo [email protected] SCENARIO-BASED DESIGN UX SINGAPORE 2016 WORKSHOP STORIES ELEMENTS OF A SCENARIO EXERCISE: CHARACTER SCENARIO CONTENTS EXERCISE: PLOT SCENARIO RULES EXERCISE: SCENARIO SCENARIO REVIEW EXERCISE: REVIEW NEXT STEPS WRAP-UP AGENDA USABILITY TESTING STORIES

Transcript of Workshop #13: Scenario Based Design_handoutsB

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SCENARIO-BASED DESIGNUX Singapore, 2016 - Shane Morris

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Shane Morris@[email protected]

SCENARIO-BASED DESIGNUX SINGAPORE 2016WORKSHOP

STORIESELEMENTS OF A SCENARIOEXERCISE: CHARACTERSCENARIO CONTENTSEXERCISE: PLOTSCENARIO RULES

EXERCISE: SCENARIOSCENARIO REVIEWEXERCISE: REVIEWNEXT STEPSWRAP-UP

AGENDA

USABILITY TESTING STORIES

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STORIES "Evidence strongly suggests that humans in all cultures come to cast their own identity in some sort of narrative form. We are inveterate storytellers.“Owen Flanagan, Consciousness Reconsidered wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative

ELEMENTS OF A STORY

CHARACTERSETTINGCONFLICTPLOT THEME

ME, AND THE CHILDRENPROJECT OFFICEME VS THE DEVELOPERSHOW I OVERCAME ADVERSITYUSABILITY TESTING

stories and user experienceStories describe people’s behaviour OVER TIMEWhich is exactly what we are in the business of doing… User Experience Designers design behaviour over timeFuture ways for people to behave.

SCENARIOSSCENARIOS ARE “DAY IN THE LIFE OF…” STORIES THAT CAPTURE THE INTENDED EXPERIENCE OF PEOPLE USING A NEW PRODUCT OR SERVICE.Scenarios help project members and stakeholders focus on how the system will be used in the ‘real world’. Scenarios are often used to start imagining how behaviour will change with the introduction of a new product. For this reason, they describe the whole context and environment of use, not just the features and behaviour of the product. TO MAKE SCENARIOS MORE RELEVANT, THEY DESCRIBE A PARTICULAR SITUATION AND CONTEXT. For example, they might describe the way one particular person might solve a problem with the product. This does not imply that all people/situations will be the same.SCENARIOS DO NOT INCLUDE DETAILS OF WHAT THE PRODUCT ACTUALLY LOOKS LIKE. The ‘look and feel’ will be addressed later, once issues of workflow and user behaviour have been addressed.

SO WHAT ARE THEY?

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LET’S SEE ONE!Jason and Grace are a busy working couple living in the inner city. Jason works as a civil engineer and drives a lot to different construction sites for work. Grace works as a lawyer at a big city law firm and is completing an MBA. With less and less time for exercise, Jason and Grace have at least been trying to improve their eating habits. They thought about those home-delivered pre-cooked meals but, as Grace says: "They just seem so sterile!".On Wednesday night, Jason gets home from work around 7pm. He collects the mail on the way in and dumps it on the table. Grace isn't home yet. She messaged him to say she was on her way and asked him to organise dinner. There's no way Jason is going to cook at this hour, so it looks like take away again... That's when Jason notices the flier from a new pizza company called “Virtuous Circle” on the table.Apparently, they offer the convenience of fast food with the nutritional value of home cooked. Intrigued, Jason loads up Virtuous Circle's mobile app.Jason immediately gets to work ordering the pizzas. Interestingly, the app starts by asking how many people he is ordering for.Jason browses the pizza options. Grace is vegetarian, so he filters the list to make things easier. The Black Bean Salsa pizza looks good. He adds one medium to the order. When he does, he sees a running total of calories, carbohydrates, fat and salt for their order -represented as a percentage of the daily recommended intake for 2 people.Hmm, the salt level is a bit higher than the average - and Grace has been told to watch her blood pressure. Jason finds an alternative -Broccoli and Rocket. He adds that and removes the Black Bean Salsa from the order. Cool.He then finds a pizza for himself: Lamb Lahmahjoon. He checks the ingredients. Jason is allergic to onions, so he removes the shallots. He replaces them with baby spinach then adds the second pizza to their order.The nutritional information for the whole order checks out - so he proceeds to pay. When he does, he is alerted to Virtuous Circle's introductory offer of a small Summer Berries dessert pizza for $6. Before Jason adds it he can see how it will affect the scores for the meal. They're still in the green zone, so he goes ahead.Jason enters his payment details and watches while his credit card is validated. Sitting down in front of the TV, he can easily keep an eye on the progress of his order. He watches as their order moves from 'received' to 'preparing' to 'cooking' and finally to 'on its way'. The app alerts him when the order is 5 minutes away. Time to set the table!

ELEMENTS OF A STORY

CHARACTERSETTINGCONFLICT OR CHALLENGEPLOT THEME

CHARACTERSJason and Grace are a busy working couple living in the inner city. Jason works as a civil engineer and drives a lot to different construction sites for work. Grace works as a lawyer at a big city law firm and is completing an MBA. With less and less time for exercise, Jason and Grace have at least been trying to improve their eating habits. They thought about those home-delivered pre-cooked meals but, as Grace says: "They just seem so sterile!".On Wednesday night, Jason gets home from work around 7pm. He collects the mail on the way in and dumps it on the table. Grace isn't home yet. She messaged him to say she was on her way and asked him to organise dinner. There's no way Jason is going to cook at this hour, so it looks like take away again... That's when Jason notices the flier from a new pizza company called “Virtuous Circle” on the table.Apparently, they offer the convenience of fast food with the nutritional value of home cooked. Intrigued, Jason loads up Virtuous Circle's mobile app.Jason immediately gets to work ordering the pizzas. Interestingly, the app starts by asking how many people he is ordering for.Jason browses the pizza options. Grace is vegetarian, so he filters the list to make things easier. The Black Bean Salsa pizza looks good. He adds one medium to the order. When he does, he sees a running total of calories, carbohydrates, fat and salt for their order -represented as a percentage of the daily recommended intake for 2 people.Hmm, the salt level is a bit higher than the average - and Grace has been told to watch her blood pressure. Jason finds an alternative -Broccoli and Rocket. He adds that and removes the Black Bean Salsa from the order. Cool.He then finds a pizza for himself: Lamb Lahmahjoon. He checks the ingredients. Jason is allergic to onions, so he removes the shallots. He replaces them with baby spinach then adds the second pizza to their order.The nutritional information for the whole order checks out - so he proceeds to pay. When he does, he is alerted to Virtuous Circle's introductory offer of a small Summer Berries dessert pizza for $6. Before Jason adds it he can see how it will affect the scores for the meal. They're still in the green zone, so he goes ahead.Jason enters his payment details and watches while his credit card is validated. Sitting down in front of the TV, he can easily keep an eye on the progress of his order. He watches as their order moves from 'received' to 'preparing' to 'cooking' and finally to 'on its way'. The app alerts him when the order is 5 minutes away. Time to set the table!

LET’S SEE ONE SETTINGJason and Grace are a busy working couple living in the inner city. Jason works as a civil engineer and drives a lot to different construction sites for work. Grace works as a lawyer at a big city law firm and is completing an MBA. With less and less time for exercise, Jason and Grace have at least been trying to improve their eating habits. They thought about those home-delivered pre-cooked meals but, as Grace says: "They just seem so sterile!".On Wednesday night, Jason gets home from work around 7pm. He collects the mail on the way in and dumps it on the table. Grace isn't home yet. She messaged him to say she was on her way and asked him to organise dinner. There's no way Jason is going to cook at this hour, so it looks like take away again... That's when Jason notices the flier from a new pizza company called “Virtuous Circle” on the table.Apparently, they offer the convenience of fast food with the nutritional value of home cooked. Intrigued, Jason loads up Virtuous Circle's mobile app.Jason immediately gets to work ordering the pizzas. Interestingly, the app starts by asking how many people he is ordering for.Jason browses the pizza options. Grace is vegetarian, so he filters the list to make things easier. The Black Bean Salsa pizza looks good. He adds one medium to the order. When he does, he sees a running total of calories, carbohydrates, fat and salt for their order -represented as a percentage of the daily recommended intake for 2 people.Hmm, the salt level is a bit higher than the average - and Grace has been told to watch her blood pressure. Jason finds an alternative -Broccoli and Rocket. He adds that and removes the Black Bean Salsa from the order. Cool.He then finds a pizza for himself: Lamb Lahmahjoon. He checks the ingredients. Jason is allergic to onions, so he removes the shallots. He replaces them with baby spinach then adds the second pizza to their order.The nutritional information for the whole order checks out - so he proceeds to pay. When he does, he is alerted to Virtuous Circle's introductory offer of a small Summer Berries dessert pizza for $6. Before Jason adds it he can see how it will affect the scores for the meal. They're still in the green zone, so he goes ahead.Jason enters his payment details and watches while his credit card is validated. Sitting down in front of the TV, he can easily keep an eye on the progress of his order. He watches as their order moves from 'received' to 'preparing' to 'cooking' and finally to 'on its way'. The app alerts him when the order is 5 minutes away. Time to set the table!

LET’S SEE ONE

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CONFLICT OR CHALLENGEJason and Grace are a busy working couple living in the inner city. Jason works as a civil engineer and drives a lot to different construction sites for work. Grace works as a lawyer at a big city law firm and is completing an MBA. With less and less time for exercise, Jason and Grace have at least been trying to improve their eating habits. They thought about those home-delivered pre-cooked meals but, as Grace says: "They just seem so sterile!".On Wednesday night, Jason gets home from work around 7pm. He collects the mail on the way in and dumps it on the table. Grace isn't home yet. She messaged him to say she was on her way and asked him to organise dinner. There's no way Jason is going to cook at this hour, so it looks like take away again... That's when Jason notices the flier from a new pizza company called “Virtuous Circle” on the table.Apparently, they offer the convenience of fast food with the nutritional value of home cooked. Intrigued, Jason loads up Virtuous Circle's mobile app.Jason immediately gets to work ordering the pizzas. Interestingly, the app starts by asking how many people he is ordering for.Jason browses the pizza options. Grace is vegetarian, so he filters the list to make things easier. The Black Bean Salsa pizza looks good. He adds one medium to the order. When he does, he sees a running total of calories, carbohydrates, fat and salt for their order -represented as a percentage of the daily recommended intake for 2 people.Hmm, the salt level is a bit higher than the average - and Grace has been told to watch her blood pressure. Jason finds an alternative -Broccoli and Rocket. He adds that and removes the Black Bean Salsa from the order. Cool.He then finds a pizza for himself: Lamb Lahmahjoon. He checks the ingredients. Jason is allergic to onions, so he removes the shallots. He replaces them with baby spinach then adds the second pizza to their order.The nutritional information for the whole order checks out - so he proceeds to pay. When he does, he is alerted to Virtuous Circle's introductory offer of a small Summer Berries dessert pizza for $6. Before Jason adds it he can see how it will affect the scores for the meal. They're still in the green zone, so he goes ahead.Jason enters his payment details and watches while his credit card is validated. Sitting down in front of the TV, he can easily keep an eye on the progress of his order. He watches as their order moves from 'received' to 'preparing' to 'cooking' and finally to 'on its way'. The app alerts him when the order is 5 minutes away. Time to set the table!

LET’S SEE ONE PLOTJason and Grace are a busy working couple living in the inner city. Jason works as a civil engineer and drives a lot to different construction sites for work. Grace works as a lawyer at a big city law firm and is completing an MBA. With less and less time for exercise, Jason and Grace have at least been trying to improve their eating habits. They thought about those home-delivered pre-cooked meals but, as Grace says: "They just seem so sterile!".On Wednesday night, Jason gets home from work around 7pm. He collects the mail on the way in and dumps it on the table. Grace isn't home yet. She messaged him to say she was on her way and asked him to organise dinner. There's no way Jason is going to cook at this hour, so it looks like take away again... That's when Jason notices the flier from a new pizza company called “Virtuous Circle” on the table.Apparently, they offer the convenience of fast food with the nutritional value of home cooked. Intrigued, Jason loads up Virtuous Circle's mobile app.Jason immediately gets to work ordering the pizzas. Interestingly, the app starts by asking how many people he is ordering for.Jason browses the pizza options. Grace is vegetarian, so he filters the list to make things easier. The Black Bean Salsa pizza looks good. He adds one medium to the order. When he does, he sees a running total of calories, carbohydrates, fat and salt for their order -represented as a percentage of the daily recommended intake for 2 people.Hmm, the salt level is a bit higher than the average - and Grace has been told to watch her blood pressure. Jason finds an alternative -Broccoli and Rocket. He adds that and removes the Black Bean Salsa from the order. Cool.He then finds a pizza for himself: Lamb Lahmahjoon. He checks the ingredients. Jason is allergic to onions, so he removes the shallots. He replaces them with baby spinach then adds the second pizza to their order.The nutritional information for the whole order checks out - so he proceeds to pay. When he does, he is alerted to Virtuous Circle's introductory offer of a small Summer Berries dessert pizza for $6. Before Jason adds it he can see how it will affect the scores for the meal. They're still in the green zone, so he goes ahead.Jason enters his payment details and watches while his credit card is validated. Sitting down in front of the TV, he can easily keep an eye on the progress of his order. He watches as their order moves from 'received' to 'preparing' to 'cooking' and finally to 'on its way'. The app alerts him when the order is 5 minutes away. Time to set the table!

LET’S SEE ONE

THEME (THE PRODUCT AS SOLUTION)Jason and Grace are a busy working couple living in the inner city. Jason works as a civil engineer and drives a lot to different construction sites for work. Grace works as a lawyer at a big city law firm and is completing an MBA. With less and less time for exercise, Jason and Grace have at least been trying to improve their eating habits. They thought about those home-delivered pre-cooked meals but, as Grace says: "They just seem so sterile!".On Wednesday night, Jason gets home from work around 7pm. He collects the mail on the way in and dumps it on the table. Grace isn't home yet. She messaged him to say she was on her way and asked him to organise dinner. There's no way Jason is going to cook at this hour, so it looks like take away again... That's when Jason notices the flier from a new pizza company called “Virtuous Circle” on the table.Apparently, they offer the convenience of fast food with the nutritional value of home cooked. Intrigued, Jason loads up Virtuous Circle's mobile app.Jason immediately gets to work ordering the pizzas. Interestingly, the app starts by asking how many people he is ordering for.Jason browses the pizza options. Grace is vegetarian, so he filters the list to make things easier. The Black Bean Salsa pizza looks good. He adds one medium to the order. When he does, he sees a running total of calories, carbohydrates, fat and salt for their order -represented as a percentage of the daily recommended intake for 2 people.Hmm, the salt level is a bit higher than the average - and Grace has been told to watch her blood pressure. Jason finds an alternative -Broccoli and Rocket. He adds that and removes the Black Bean Salsa from the order. Cool.He then finds a pizza for himself: Lamb Lahmahjoon. He checks the ingredients. Jason is allergic to onions, so he removes the shallots. He replaces them with baby spinach then adds the second pizza to their order.The nutritional information for the whole order checks out - so he proceeds to pay. When he does, he is alerted to Virtuous Circle's introductory offer of a small Summer Berries dessert pizza for $6. Before Jason adds it he can see how it will affect the scores for the meal. They're still in the green zone, so he goes ahead.Jason enters his payment details and watches while his credit card is validated. Sitting down in front of the TV, he can easily keep an eye on the progress of his order. He watches as their order moves from 'received' to 'preparing' to 'cooking' and finally to 'on its way'. The app alerts him when the order is 5 minutes away. Time to set the table!

LET’S SEE ONE THINGS TO NOTICECHARACTERSETTINGCONFLICT OR CHALLENGEPLOTTHEME

JASON AND GRACE, AND A LITTLE BIT ABOUT THEM AS PEOPLEAT HOME, AFTER WORKTRYING TO IMPROVE EATING HABITS, BUT BUSYBEGINNING (PROBLEM), MIDDLE (ACTION) AND END (RESOLUTION) OUR PRODUCT

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SCENARIOSWE USE SCENARIOS TO ENVISAGE HOW A NEW PRODUCT OR SERVICE WILL BE USED IN PEOPLE’S LIVES Does the product fit with the way people need to work? Are new behaviours implied by the scenario realistic? Are the product features described actually desirable and feasible?SCENARIOS ARE OUR FIRST DESIGNSSCENARIOS CAN ALSO DESCRIBE THE STATUS QUO (“CURRENT STATE SCENARIO”)Capturing the opportunity in a compelling, contextualised way

scenarios are our first designs

A STORY, NOT AN EPICYOUR SCENARIO DOESN’T NEED MAJOR PLOT TWISTS OR EPIC BATTLES It probably does need a happy ending, though, and… it certainly does have a protagonist.

BUT… SOMETHING THAT MAKES A COMPELLING STORY MAKES A COMPELLING PRODUCT OR PRODUCT FEATURE So don't be afraid to look for a little drama or emotion.

CURRENT STATE SCENARIOBARBARA – THE “DESIGNATED SEARCHER”Barbara has always liked looking things up. Her job as a writer and editor for a technical magazine lets her explore new topics for articles. In addition to the Web, she has access to news sources, legal and medical databases, and online publication archives. Recently, a friend was diagnosed with colon cancer. She helped him identify the best hospitals for this cancer and read up on the latest treatments. She looked for clinical trials that might help him, and even read up on some alternative treatments being offered in Mexico and Switzerland. She was glad to be able to find articles in journals she trusted to give her depth that more popular medical sites lacked.

Storytelling for User Experience: Crafting Stories for Better DesignWhitney Quesenbery, Kevin Brooks. 2010

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ELEMENTS OF A SCENARIO A specific person (or people) in a specific situation A challenge or opportunity A resolution Describe the information in and out Include people’s inner dialogue and emotional state No user interface!

SCENARIOS THROUGHOUT THE PROJECT LIFECYCLEBUT ALSO Capture current experience Sell the concept Get everyone on the same pageBy externalising thoughts and stipulating the end result (not HOW it will work) Script for design (divide the design space) Script for testing Primer for marketing, training, documentation…

Envision the new experience

AUDIENCE

Storytelling for User Experience: Crafting Stories for Better DesignWhitney Quesenbery, Kevin Brooks. 2010

WHERE DO SCENARIOS COME FROM?IDEALLY, USER RESEARCHA real story that resonated with youOR, PERSONAS MAY BE THE INSPIRATIONOR, USER GOALS AND BUSINESS GOALSLook for interesting relationships between themOR, COMBINE USER STORIES/USE CASESIf they exist already.

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PERSONAS AND SCENARIOSSCENARIOS NEED CHARACTERS, AND PERSONAS ARE THE PERFECT SOURCE…"JUST AS PERSONAS MAKE USERS COME ALIVE FOR USER EXPERIENCE DESIGNERS, STORIES MAKE USERS’ LIVES REAL".

Ginny Riddish, foreword to"Storytelling for User Experience ", Whitney Quesenbery & Kevin Brooks, 2010

PEOPLE WITH A PROBLEM

LET’S GET STARTED!

SCENARIO STEPS1. IDENTIFY A PRODUCT/SERVICE2. CHARACTER(S)3. PLOT4. DRAFT SCENARIO5. REVIEW

EXERCISES

ASCENARIO PRODUCT/SERVICE

GROUP AAN AIRLINE WANTS TO MAKE MORE USE OF ITS IN-SEAT ENTERTAINMENT SCREENS BY ALLOWING FREQUENT FLIERS TO LOGIN AND PERFORM A RANGE OF ACTIVITIES.IS THAT A GOOD IDEA?

STEP 1

GROUP BA NEW RESTAURANT HOPES TO ATTRACT A YOUNG TECH-SAVVY CROWD BY INSTALLING LARGE-FORMAT MULTI-TOUCH SCREENS IN ALL ITS TABLES. BUT WHAT SHOULD IT DO WITH THEM?

Or… A product or service of your choice.

B

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SCENARIO STEPS1. IDENTIFY A PRODUCT/SERVICE2. CHARACTER(S)3. PLOT4. DRAFT SCENARIO5. REVIEW

EXERCISES CHARACTER(S)IN YOUR GROUPS, BRAINSTORM POSSIBLE CUSTOMERS/USERS FOR YOUR PRODUCT OR SERVICE. What types of people would find the product/service useful What problems or opportunities do they have? (“Jobs”) What motivates them? (“Gains”) What frustrates them? (“Pains”)YOU HAVE 5 MINUTES

STEP 2.

CHOOSE ONE MAIN CHARACTER AND COMPLETE THE “CUSTOMER SEGMENT” HALF OF A “VALUE PROPOSITION CANVAS”. When you are ready, draw the Customer Segment diagram for your main character as a group.

Large enough for others to see, please.

YOU HAVE 5 MINUTES

CHARACTERSCUSTOMER JOBSGoalsProblemsOpportunitiesGAINSMotivatorsDelightersPAINSFrustrationsFearsFailure

STEP 2. 5 MINUTES

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SHOW AND TELLCHARACTERS

SCENARIO STEPS1. IDENTIFY A PRODUCT/SERVICE2. CHARACTER(S)3. PLOT4. DRAFT SCENARIO5. REVIEW

EXERCISES

PLOTSCENARIO PLOTS SHOULD FOCUS ON THE KEY BENEFITS OF THE PRODUCT, AND HOW PEOPLE WILL REALISE THAT BENEFIT.

STEP 3

What is the setting in which the product will be used? Will it be used for extended amounts of time? Is the persona frequently interrupted? Are there multiple users? What other products is it used with? How much complexity is reasonable? What primary activities does the persona need to accomplish to meet her goals? What is the expected end result of using the product?Adapted from Kim Goodwin in About Face, Cooper et al.

DON’T MAKE THINGS TOO EASYADD SOME (MANAGEABLE) CHALLENGES ALONG THE WAY…It's 11am and Elizabeth is just returning from her coffee break. She turns the corner into the hospital receiving dock and immediately notices a 7 foot tall patient lifting machine has been left on the dock! There's no-one in sight. "Here we go, what am I supposed to with this?!?!", she thinks.She can tell the machine is not new, so it presumably belongs to the hospital. She starts by looking for a barcode. The good news is, she finds one. The bad news is the barcode scanner won't reach from her desk against the wall. So she memorises the last 4 digits and walks over to the laptop…

STEP 3 - PLOT

ADD SOME (MANAGEABLE) CHALLENGES ALONG THE WAY…It's 11am and Elizabeth is just returning from her coffee break. She turns the corner into the hospital receiving dock and immediately notices a 7 foot tall patient lifting machine has been left on the dock! There's no-one in sight. "Here we go, what am I supposed to with this?!?!", she thinks.She can tell the machine is not new, so it presumably belongs to the hospital. She starts by looking for a barcode. The good news is, she finds one. The bad news is the barcode scanner won't reach from her desk against the wall. So she memorises the last 4 digits and walks over to the laptop…

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TASK SCENARIOSONCE YOU’VE IDENTIFIED YOUR CHARACTERS, YOU CAN START TO THINK ABOUT PLOTS.

‘TASK SCENARIOS’* ARE ONE SENTENCE DESCRIPTIONS OF A USER TASK OR GOAL“Mark needs to schedule pump maintenance for this weekend.”“Alka’s friends split the dinner bill.”“Shane researches a trip to India.”“Arvid buys his first family car.”

*My term

STEP 3 PLOT PLOT – TASK SCENARIOSIN YOUR GROUPQuickly Brainstorm 5 task scenarios (One sentence each)

STEP 3 – PART 1

YOU HAVE 5 MINUTES

EXAMPLE“Mark needs to schedule pump maintenance for this weekend.”

PLOTWHAT IS YOUR CHARACTER’S: Situation?

Context, Location Problem?

Job, Challenge, OpportunityWHAT WILL HAPPEN? What are the basic steps?WHAT IS THE RESOLUTION? How did your product or service help?

STEP 3 – PART 2

YOUR TASKAS A GROUP Select one task scenario to flesh out from the last step Brainstorm the plot Write out the main steps of your plot in bullet points*YOU HAVE 10 MINUTES

* This is not your scenario! We are just preparing…

SHOW AND TELLPLOT

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SCENARIO STEPS1. IDENTIFY A PRODUCT/SERVICE2. CHARACTER(S)3. PLOT4. DRAFT SCENARIO5. REVIEW

EXERCISES

BREAK

SCENARIO TEMPLATEINTRODUCTION<Character> is…They need to…They start by…BODYGoal, Action, Response, Assess(Repeat)RESOLUTION<Character> feels <emotion> that…

STEP 4

Action

ResponseAssess

Goal

SCENARIO TEMPLATEKylie Crisp has been working in the education sales team for 6 months and is comfortable with most sales calls. Every morning she comes in to work and opens her activity centre, which shows her list of pending tasks.It’s Monday morning, so she needs to take care of all the training enrolments that came in over the web on the weekend She starts by sorting her tasks by type so she can see all the enrolments first.Kylie reads the first training request. It’s from Susan Armstrong, who has requested a quote for enrolling 3 people for the MegaPlan Software Fundamentals course on November 2-3 in Melbourne. Kylie recognises Susan as a regular customer. It’s important to keep priority customers happy, so she immediately brings up the course availability. Fortunately, there are 4 places left, so she places 3 on hold……With her first request for the day done, Susan feels confident she’ll get through them all by lunchtime.

STEP 4 - EXAMPLE

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SCENARIO TEMPLATEKylie Crisp has been working in the education sales team for 6 months and is comfortable with most sales calls. Every morning she comes in to work and opens her activity centre, which shows her list of pending tasks.It’s Monday morning, so she needs to take care of all the training enrolments that came in over the web on the weekend She starts by sorting her tasks by type so she can see all the enrolments first.Kylie reads the first training request. It’s from Susan Armstrong, who has requested a quote for enrolling 3 people for the MegaPlan Software Fundamentals course on November 2-3 in Melbourne. Kylie recognises Susan as a regular customer. It’s important to keep priority customers happy, so she immediately brings up the course availability. Fortunately, there are 4 places left, so she places 3 on hold……With her first request for the day done, Susan feels confident she’ll get through them all by lunchtime.

STEP 4 - EXAMPLE

Character is…

They need to…They start by… Response

AssessGoal ActionResponseCharacter feels…

SCENARIO RULES BE SPECIFICDon’t describe every possible situation INCLUDE A CHALLENGEA reasonable roadblock to overcome WRITE IN PROSESentences, not bullet points INCLUDE INTERNAL DIALOGReactions, plans DESCRIBE EMOTIONHow does the character feel? DESCRIBE THE INFORMATION IN AND OUTWhat information or actions does the user provide, what information is provided in response? DON’T DESCRIBE THE USER INTERFACEDesign the experience, not the controls or presentation

STEP 4

WHY WRITE IN PROSE?• Forces you to think about context• Forces you to think about flow

DRAFT SCENARIOINTRODUCTION<Character> is…They need to…They start by…BODY

RESOLUTION<Character> feels <emotion> that…

STEP 4

RULES BE SPECIFIC INCLUDE A CHALLENGE WRITE IN PROSE INCLUDE INTERNAL DIALOG DESCRIBE EMOTION DESCRIBE THE INFORMATION IN AND OUT DON’T DESCRIBE THE USER INTERFACE

YOU HAVE 20 MINUTES

Action

ResponseAssess

Goal SHOW AND TELLDRAFT SCENARIO

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SCENARIO STEPS1. IDENTIFY A PRODUCT/SERVICE2. CHARACTER(S)3. PLOT4. DRAFT SCENARIO5. REVIEW

EXERCISES ReviewReview by• Product owners• Marketing• Sales• Support and training• Technical staff• And users

STEP 5

Because they are stories, Scenarios are ideal for review• They reveal how new products will integrate into people’s larger lives• They capture the interplay with other products and services• They focus on workflowThe sequence of user activity is one of the most important things to get right• They reveal feature priorities• They are easy to relate to

REVIEWPAIR UP WITH A TEAM FROM THE OTHER PRODUCT GROUP Each team presents their scenario The other team provides feedback Make edits to your scenario

YOU HAVE 10 MINUTES (5 MINUTES PER TEAM)

STEP 5

THINGS TO LOOK FOR BE SPECIFIC INCLUDE A CHALLENGE WRITE IN PROSE INCLUDE INTERNAL DIALOG DESCRIBE EMOTION DESCRIBE THE INFORMATION IN AND OUT DON’T DESCRIBE THE USER INTERFACE

SCENARIO STEPS1. IDENTIFY A PRODUCT/SERVICE2. CHARACTER(S)3. PLOT4. DRAFT SCENARIO5. REVIEW

EXERCISES

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NEXT STEPS

NEXT STEPS FOR YOUR SCENARIOSILLUSTRATED SCENARIOSSketches to flesh out the scenario screensSTORYBOARDIllustrations of the context of useJOURNEY MAPSSTORY MAPSBreak down scenario and identify UI and technical details (in text)USER STORIES / USE CASESWIREFRAMES

WRAP UP

SCENARIOS MAKE DESIGN APPROACHABLESCENARIOS HELP AVOID ’BLANK PAGE’ SYNDROME You don’t have to design the whole product, only this flowCOMBINE ILLUSTRATED SCENARIOS TO FORM AN OVERALL INTERACTION MODEL Making adjustments as necessary

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HOW MANY SCENARIOS?DON’T USE SCENARIOS TO DESCRIBE EVERY POSSIBLE FLOW AND FUNCTIONFOR A TYPICAL PHONE APPLICATION, I MIGHT CONSIDER UP TO 6 SCENARIOS

FOCUS ON THE MAIN END-TO-END FLOWS THAT SUPPORT THE VALUE PROPOSITION We need to get these rightYOU MIGHT ALSO ADD 1-2 ‘CRITICAL SCENARIOS’ Scenarios that don’t happen often, but you need to get right.

SCENARIOS THROUGHOUT THE PROJECT LIFECYCLEBUT ALSO Capture current experience Sell the concept Get everyone on the same pageBy externalising thoughts and stipulating the end result (not HOW it will work) Script for design (divide the design space) Script for testing Primer for marketing, training, documentation…

Envision the new experience

SCENARIOS IN PRACTICEYOU DON’T HAVE TO FOLLOW TODAY’S PROCESS EXACTLY We’ve followed a very structured process today You don’t need to break scenario creation up in to as many steps.SCENARIOS ARE MOST USEFUL FOR TRANSACTIONAL PRODUCTS But still have a place for ‘browsing’ products.

TIPS

DESIGN WORKSHOPS Scenario writing is useful early in the project to introduce the role (and importance) of user experience Team members, stakeholders and users can contribute to scenarios. Don’t get too caught up with feasibility.

Technical discussions can quickly shut down the scenario process.Allow the team to maintain their creativity

SCENARIOS USE ‘STORY’ TO HELP THE READER RELATE TO THE USER FOCUS ON END TO END FLOW TAKE CONTEXT INTO ACCOUNT CAPTURE EMOTION AND INTERNAL DIALOG

ARE EASY TO WRITE ARE ACCESSIBLE TO EVERYONE ARE YOUR FIRST DESIGN

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SCENARIOS ARE YOUR FIRST DESIGNEVEN THOUGH THEY DON’T DESCRIBE THE USER INTERFACE

Shane Morris@[email protected]

SCENARIO-BASED DESIGNTHANK YOU

DESIGNING WITH SCENARIOS: PUTTING PERSONAS TO WORKKIM GOODWINarticles.uie.com/designing_scenarios/STORYTELLING FOR USER EXPERIENCEWHITNEY QUESENBERY & KEVIN BROOKSRosenfeld Media

USING STORIES FOR A BETTER USER EXPERIENCEWHITNEY QUESENBERY & KEVIN BROOKSwww.writersua.com/articles/stories/USING SCENARIOSUX THINKuxthink.wordpress.com/2010/11/30/using_scenarios/

RESOURCES