You just know that an improvement of the user interface will reap rewards, but how do you justify the expense and the labor and the time-guarantee a robust ROI!-ahead of time? How do you decide how much of an investment should be funded? And what is the best way to sell usability to others?
In this completely revised and new edition of Cost-Justifying Usability, Randolph G. Bias (University of Texas at Austin, with 25 years' experience as a usability practitioner and manager) and Deborah J. Mayhew (internationally recognized usability consultant and author of two other seminal books including The Usability Engineering Lifecycle) tackle these and many other problems. It has been updated to cover cost-justifying usability for Web sites and intranets, for the complex applications we have today, and for a host of products-offering techniques, examples, and cases that are unavailable elsewhere. No matter what type of product you build, whether or not you are a cost-benefit expert or a born salesperson, this book has the tools that will enable you to cost-justify the appropriate usability investment.
- Includes contributions by a host of experts involved in this work, including Aaron Marcus, Janice Rohn, Chauncey Wilson, Nigel Bevan, Dennis Wixon, Clare-Marie Karat, Susan Dray, Charles Mauro, and many others
- Includes actionable ideas for every phase of the software development process
- Includes case studies from inside a variety of companies
- Includes ideas from "the other side of the table," software executives who hold the purse strings, who offer thoughts on which proposals for usability support they've funded, and which ones they've declined
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Elsevier Science & Techn.
ISBN-13
978-0-08-045545-7 (9780080455457)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Introduction1. Justifying cost-justifying usability2. Return on investment for usable user-interface design: Examples and statistics
Framework3. A basic framework for cost-justifying usability engineering on Web development projects4. A business case approach to usability5.Marketing usability6. Dot coms
Organizational and Design Context7. Cost-justification of usability engineering: A vendor's perspective8. Practical ROI issues for UCD teams: Considering the impact of social, internal, and external ROI on team credibility, team longevity, and product success9. Usability science as an independent research service10. ROI in Human Factors for Web Applications11. The business case for international user centered design12. Cost-justification of usability engineering for international Web sites13. The ROI of accessibility
Methods and Approaches 14. Ethnography/Field research at Microsoft15. Out of the box: Approaches to good initial interface designs; 16. Keystroke level modeling as a cost-justification tool 17. The RITE method18. Sample size and user testing - how much is enough?19. Cost-justifying online surveys 20.Cost benefits framework and case studies21. Want respect? Respect the shareholder: Usability at Sprint22. Conclusion, wrap-up, next steps