I gave a short talk on what makes Lean UX Lean. Since I’m a blogger at heart, I wrote down pretty much everything I was going to say first, which means I can now publish a draft of the talk here! If you didn’t get to hear the panel, or if you did and want a quick refresher, please enjoy!
I’ve been a user experience designer for a lot of years, and I’ve worked with a lot of lean startups, which is part of the reason why I got a call last year from Manuel Rosso, the CEO of Food on the Table.
Now, Food on the Table is a very lean startup here in Austin. Because they’re a lean startup, they measure absolutely everything. And because they measure everything, Manuel knew immediately when the product developed an activation problem.
The whole project has been written up in a post for Eric’s Startup Lessons Learned blog, and I strongly recommend that you go read it if you haven’t already. It has a lot of tips about how to incorporate design into your startup that you’ll hopefully find helpful.
But today, I want to go a little deeper into what made that project a good example of Lean UX. Because, during that project, we did a lot of things that you might do in any sort of a UX project for any sort of a company.
For example, we did qualitative user research to understand why users were having a problem. We made sketches and built interactive prototypes, and we tested and iterated on them.
These are wonderful, helpful things to do, but they’re not unique to Lean User Experience Design. They’re part of User Centered Design, which I’m a huge fan of, and I’ve done all of those things in waterfall projects at giant companies that were anything but lean.
So, what are a few things that made this a lean ux project and not just a regular old redesign?
Integrating Quantitative Research
I think the first hallmark of Lean UX is using quantitative metrics to both drive and validate design changes. What does that mean? Well, it means that the reason we were working on the first time user experience was because a specific metric, activation, wasn’t as high as the team wanted it to be.Quantitative metrics didn’t tell us exactly why we had a problem - we needed to do our qualitative research to understand that - but it did tell us what our most immediate problem was, which helped us to understand where we should start improving our user experience.
In that way, the metric drove the product decision.
Quantitative metrics also meant that we knew, at the end of the project, we’d be validating our work with an a/b test against the original design. That quantitative validation of design really helps improve the design process over the long run, because we can see what sorts of changes have the biggest positive impact on our end user experience. That lets us improve the ROI on future design projects.