The Best UX Design Storyboarding Technique (Design Sprint Hack) |

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 20

  • @LuvOfLalaland
    @LuvOfLalaland Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you so much for the demo. Its so helpful for a beginner.

  • @Polassumit
    @Polassumit Před 2 lety +2

    That what exactly I was looking for.... ❤

  • @chukkaemmanuel
    @chukkaemmanuel Před 3 lety +3

    The best I've seen so far. Thanks a lot

  • @user-my2nw6tv5g
    @user-my2nw6tv5g Před 7 měsíci

    I'm definitely inviting in team members to subscribe.
    Thank you very much for explaining everything so well.

  • @basitbaso5678
    @basitbaso5678 Před 2 lety +1

    thank you sir it was so helpful.

  • @elikorgh
    @elikorgh Před 2 lety +1

    Understanding video

  • @arnoldoalvarez6057
    @arnoldoalvarez6057 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi Relab. Great content BTW like always. My question today is...what's the difference between 'the winner concept' (from the sketching exercise) and the storyboard? I mean, I made my first DS days ago I noticed that the final concept from the sketching exercise that we got was a little empty, a lot of screens like 'login' and other middle processes weren't there and then we had to like came up with new ideas for filling that absence. I felt a little confuse, can you help me with that?

    • @relabstudios
      @relabstudios  Před 3 lety +2

      Hey there Arnoldo! Hope you’ve been well.
      Great question. In a Design Sprint process, the purpose of the 4 step sketch is to ideate a raw idea. Usually at that point, team members are still vague about what the solution should be... And the sketching exercises allows you and the team to be able to explore your wildest imaginations and vision. The “best” would get voted based on the fact that it’s the most valuable and relevant idea TO START WITH as the foundation. It’s very important to understand that the winning idea/solution was a primer... it’s to set a direction, a vision if you will... For the team to expand on it and explore further details.
      Which leads us to the Storyboarding session. This is where you expand on that voted winning solution and map out details further... We always do it in a form of a UI flow, because it helps us think of relations between pages and also be more efficient in the whole process leading up to prototyping.
      So, think about the Design Sprint process as a step by step method coming from a broad, abstract idea (Goal, Questions, Journey Mapping)... Into a somewhat visual vision (Solutions Sketches)... Then into a more detailed and thorough sketches of wireframe (Storyboard)... And finally a tangible concept (Prototype).
      On each stage of the process, there will be things discovered or even shifted here and there, it’s part of the process and embrace it! A good facilitator’s job is to allow for this healthy process to happen, while making sure that the vision is intact and the goal will be achieved.
      Hope that helps!

    • @GabrielCosta-rq7ti
      @GabrielCosta-rq7ti Před 2 lety

      @@relabstudios great question and great answer! Thank you very much!

  • @NayoSays
    @NayoSays Před rokem +1

    Hi,
    In the User Test Flow:
    How much time do you give the team members to write the 6 action steps?
    How much time do you give the team members to put it on the board and explain it?
    How much time do you give the team members and the decider to vote?

    • @relabstudios
      @relabstudios  Před rokem

      Hi Nayo, thanks for the question, sorry for the very delayed response.
      6 action steps : 2-3mins
      Put on board & explain : 1-2mins each person (we don't usually time this process, because casually it tends to be a quick one)
      Vote : same as point 2, this happens on the go so we do not time it.
      Hope this answers your question👍

  • @dantecardines
    @dantecardines Před 4 lety +2

    Really hope you could answer my question, what would the case be if there are more than one end point and more than one user? Would there be two sessions of user test flow creation or would they just be stitched in one test flow? For example an associate account and an admin account would have different goals out of the system, both endpoints are vital and would need to be solved. Hoping you could help! :)

    • @relabstudios
      @relabstudios  Před 4 lety +2

      Hi Dante! If we're talking Design Sprint scenario, you'd be typically focusing on one Proto-Persona and a very specific User Goal Focus. So rather than having multiple, you'd prioritise and focus on the one most important subject/user to deal with... Having said that if there are more than one (Let's say two) user persona to focus on, then you're right - you'll need to do 2x User Journey Map (video here: czcams.com/video/MOKqb5_62Ws/video.html) and 2x User Test Flow - that will eventually cover both User Experiences and Goals within the one Prototype/Product. Hope we're answering your questions Dante! Feel free to follow up with more questions if it's still unclear.

    • @yutikashindolkar9547
      @yutikashindolkar9547 Před 4 lety

      Hey, check out this video. It might help. The title is different but the process is the same. Watch it through till the second example he explains. The first one just covers the basic.
      czcams.com/video/JTqCR84fzeg/video.html

  • @cobarbie2649
    @cobarbie2649 Před 6 měsíci

    Is there a study group of ux design,can we study together?