Originally published by
UXmas. Please note this was a deliberately controversial post (I think some of the commenters didn’t quite get that).
5 Popular UX Techniques I Rarely Use
5. Sketching
I
rarely sketch. I don’t own a pencil case with different weights and shades of grey. I have to hunt when I need a pencil. For me, sketching is a slow, inefficient way of working through ideas.
Don’t get me wrong—I do consider alternatives to a design, and I do iterate. I just happen to do it in my head, then draw it on the computer when I’m done.
4. Designing in a group
Whenever I see photos of people standing around a whiteboard, markers in hand, all sketching ideas together, I wonder how that works. When I’ve tried it feels like a big mess—thinking, sketching and talking all at the same time don’t work for me. It’s too fast and there’s too much happening. And when I’ve had to do it, I end up coming back the next day with a whole lot of reasons the design isn’t going to work for actual data, constraints or users.
3. Personas
Most of my projects are small projects with small teams who know the users well. We don’t need to create personas so two of us can remember what it is important to the users—they’re just not necessary. Scenarios, however, I use on *every* project.
2. Up-front user research
In many situations, especially for redesigns, we already have a ton of solid information about the users, and up-front research doesn’t tell us anything we don’t already know. Instead, I create an initial design based on what we know, and take that to people instead. It’s much easier for them to reflect on something semi-concrete, and we get better insight into how they may use it.
1. Card sorting
Honestly, these days I only do card sorts when I’m mentoring new clients or new UX folks. Instead, I create a draft structure and test it—usually at least twice. This provides much better value for the users’ time than doing a generative card sort.
Now, before you yell at me to tell me how useful these techniques are, just remember that we all work in different contexts. I mainly work on small projects with small teams for small amounts of time. I never need to sell them the value of user-centred design. And I’ve been designing experiences for quite a long time now.