You Have to Feel It
11 days ago
- #User Experience
- #Emotional Design
- #Work Quality
- Meeting schedules and requirements is not enough; the emotional impact of work matters.
- Every interaction with work evokes feelings like joy or frustration, which are part of the user experience.
- A successful feature should make users smile, feel natural, and encourage reuse and sharing.
- Metrics and specifications often miss capturing the emotional response, which is crucial for daily user experience.
- To truly understand the impact of your work, you must use it and feel it yourself.