Information experience helps users learn the software, navigate a website, and find help, so that they have a delightful experience. Or at least one that's not entirely frustrating! User Assistance Developers collaborate with design and development to create a wonderful information experience.
Here are a few examples of types of information that you'd typically find in software, help content, or website design.
This includes buttons, menus, field labels, messages, and on-screen text, like errors, instructions, and more. In this example, the Display settings in Microsoft Word have texts to help you decide which ones to pick.
Interactions are how the user uses or interacts with the software or website - how they navigate, which buttons they select, how they search, etc. In this example, the user is interacting with Microsoft Word to save a file with certain settings. The text on this page guides the user to save the file.
Software can have embedded in-app help, help portal and support content, or on-screen text to help users navigate the software. Interactions can have some built-in help, but when a user needs more information, this comes in the form of user assistance (or what the lay people call "help"). How do I add a delegate for my travel expense report? Here's an example of SAP Help Portal content.
The goal is to design an intuitive and clear user interface to reduce the need for enormous amounts of documentation and frustration. We all know that a certain amount of help is needed for more complex tasks. For example, setting up a server, or setting user permissions. To ensure a good (or even great!) information experience for our users, we use our professional experience to apply known principles of how users read and consume information. This helps to simplify user tasks, increase productivity, and reduce frustration among users.
Imagine you’re driving in your brand-new Acura TL. It’s your first car, and you love how it drives. An icon appears on the dash with a bright orange exclamation mark.
You’re confused, worried, panicked. Is something overheated? Is the engine going to die? Should I pull over? Or should I ignore it and hope for the best?
Maybe if you had a more-detailed icon, like this one, your mind would be more at ease. A minor addition of a text stating that the car requires service at 10,000 miles (or is it kilometers?) adds to the clarity of the message and ensures that the user knows it is important but not urgent.
So what does this mysterious icon actually mean? It's about your tire pressure!! How's this for clarity?
User Assistance Developers collaborate with design and development teams to give users an exceptional and intuitive information experience in the user interface. We apply proven principles of how users read and consume information to simplify user tasks, increase productivity, and reduce frustration. Users rely on this information to complete a task quickly and easily.
Here are a few rules to keep in mind when creating an enjoyable and effective information experience.
Determine the type and amount of information users need, depending on their role and what they need to get done (personas).
Develop and implement information (embedded assistance) into the application as part of the feature, instead of adding it on after the fact. Integrate information in the user interface to help users complete their tasks.
Show users that there's a new feature and tell them how to use it.
Set guidelines for tone, language, terminology, and typography to ensure the information experience is consistent across the application. This improves the user’s ability to scan, read, and understand how to interact with the app.
Focus on providing the right content for an entire workflow and for each single task. Break multi-part procedures into shorter, manageable individual topics so that users don’t get lost in a sea of steps. Three separate 10-step tasks are easier to follow than a single 30-step task.
Don't just give users a well written error. Tell them what to do. Give them a way out of this problem. Amazon's adorable dogs are a clever way to provide a Page Not Found message. But they also give you a link to get back to Amazon's home page.
If you're interested in what's NOT a good information experience, here are a few examples. Can you spot what's wrong in these examples?
Sometimes the interface can’t (or won’t) be fixed and someone needs to come up with a solution to decipher car dashboard or laundry symbols. It’s not the best solution, but seems like it works.
Image Source: GoMechanic website.
Image Source: UX Collective website.
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