Lean UX: Faster, Better UX (User Experience) Design
Design better and faster user experiences (UX) with Lean UX
Description
Learn the Lean UX way to design better, faster user experiences.
You'll learn everything you need to know to use a Lean UX process on your next project. Lean UX applies the Lean Startup ideas to the design of user experiences. When you do Lean UX you come up with hypotheses about design, create minimum viable products/prototypes, then test the hypotheses with your users. At that point you make a decision about whether your hypotheses were true or not, and what idea to try next. It's a radical approach to designing user experiences. The result is that you design better and you design faster.
What's included:
What Lean UX is, and how it is different from other UX processes and methodologies
How to come up with hypotheses for your projects
How to plan experiments to test the hypotheses
What a minimum viable product is
What a pivot point is and how to use that for decision making
How to do Lean UX even if no one around you knows what Lean is about
How to get started
Quizzes throughout the course to test your knowledge
Exercises throughout the course to practice what you are learning
and much, much more!
Get started right away. You don't want to delay learning how to design user experiences using Lean UX ideas, concepts, and methods.
Over 50,000 students have taken our online video courses.
What You Will Learn!
- Describe the principles of Lean UX
- Describe the myths and truths of Lean UX compared to other user experience processes
- Describe the benefits of using Lean UX principles and processes
- Come up with hypotheses to test
- Make decisions about experiments and minimum viable products
- Test hypotheses and make pivot decisions
- Apply Lean UX to a variety of projects
- Implement Lean UX even if no one else in your organization is doing it
Who Should Attend!
- This course is for user experience professionals who want to learn some new ideas about how principles and processes for designing user experiences.