Pratica di Shadowing: The UX Design Process explained step by step with a mobile app project - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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In today's video, I'm going to explain what the UX design process is step-by-step using a mobile app project as an example.
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In today's video, I'm going to explain what the UX design process is step-by-step using a mobile app project as an example.
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Just keep in mind that there is no right or perfect design process because every project and team,
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company are different.
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So you're going to have to tweak the process to do what makes most sense for you and your team.
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But with that said, having a process will give you structure and guidance as to how to drive your project,
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especially when you get stuck and don't know what to do next.
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leaning on a process will be very critical.
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And so to help you visualize how this process can be applied to a real life project,
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we're going to be using an example design prompt.
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Redesign the item detail page for an e-commerce mobile app.
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If you don't know what an item detail page is,
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just open up your phone and go to any e-commerce website or mobile app like Target,
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Sephora, and you'll see a bunch of products being recommended to you and if you click on one product,
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that is what the item detail page is.
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It is packed with a lot of content and features.
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And so this design prompt is very vague and ambiguous
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and broad because there are so many things you could be working on and redesigning on this page alone.
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There are so many components to this page like the product image,
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the minute interactions of the carousel and the zoom functionality.
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You could be working on product details and nutrition facts, reviews, recommended products.
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Whenever I get an ambiguous broad project like this,
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having a process helps me get clarity on how to break down this big design problem
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and also helps me prioritize these smaller tasks based on the impact that our team wants to drive.
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The process that we're going to talk about today is called the double diamond process,
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which I'm going to draw out in my Remarkable 2 tablet,
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which is the sponsor of today's video.
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You've probably heard and seen the diagram of the double diamond process.
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First step is to go wide and explore your problem space a little bit more.
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So this is the discover phase where you'll be asking what the user and business problems are.
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You also want to think about what is working well,
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what isn't working well so you may want to do an audit of your current designs
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and start annotating those things you also want to understand qualitative
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and quantitative data so qualitative data can be any user research
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or maybe you want to do a survey to understand key pain points
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that come up from these customers quantitative data is any metric
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that helps you understand how the current design is performing so
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if we take this item detail page as an example one of the key metrics
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that we want to look at is how many people are actually adding that particular item to their cart.
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Another metric that we could look at is how many people are adding the recommended products from this item detail page.
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What does the conversion rate look like?
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Doing a competitive analysis can also be really insightful.
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This is an example of a competitive analysis that I did for this design prompt.
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I'll block out a few hours,
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I'll screenshot the competitors and start annotating any themes that I'm noticing,
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any strategies that I'm seeing that our team can also apply.
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Now that you went wide and have a better understanding of your problem space,
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you want to narrow down and decide what your team is actually going to fix.
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So this is the define phase and this is where you want to synthesize your findings and insights from the competitive analysis,
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from user research, and start deciding and prioritizing what your team is going to work on.
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So this is where you really want to collaborate with your product manager,
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data scientist, and lead to figure out feature prioritization and product requirements.
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This is an example list of what you can possibly work on for the redesign of the item detail page.
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And so my team will go down the list
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and start prioritizing what has the highest impact
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and also start t-shirt sizing some of these tasks t-shirt sizing
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is just another techie way of saying let's figure out how big this project is going to be
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so if it's a task that's going to take one
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or two weeks we'll call it small
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if it's a larger project is probably going to take a month
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or two then you want to go wide again
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so this is the develop phase you've already scoped out what
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you're going to be working on you know the sandbox in
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which you can play so this is where you want to go wide in your explorations of your design solutions.
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What I like to do before jumping straight into Figma is brainstorm ideas on paper
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because I don't want to spend too much time overthinking it and trying to perfect my initial ideations.
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I've come to love this Remarkable 2 tablet that feels like paper.
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So with Remarkable, you can take notes,
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convert them into text, you can read and review documents without any distractions of social media.
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I'm trying to cut down on my usage of paper
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so this is a perfect digital version of my notebooks where I don't have to have paper lying around on my desk.
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I don't have to carry physical notebooks anymore and I can access all my notes in all my devices.
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The best thing about it for me is that I can share my screen while I'm in meetings.
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So pre-pandemic times, I would just draw on a whiteboard my ideas and have the team give me feedback.
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But now I can do that by screen sharing my Remarkable 2 tablet to my meeting.
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Check out the link in my description box to get your own Remarkable 2 tablet.
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Here's an example of me sketching out different explorations for visualizing the recommended items.
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So normally we use a horizontal scroll to surface these items,
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but maybe we can use a grid so that customers can just vertically scroll.
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The final step is to go narrow and refine your solutions.
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So this is the deliver phase where you're going to figure out what is going to be actually shipped.
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So this requires a lot of user testing.
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I'll usually do two to three rounds of concept testing
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or usability testing to ensure that my design solutions is going to have the impact
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that we initially wanted to have and that is actually solving a real user and business problem.
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And based on that feedback,
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I'll make a bunch of iterations.
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This is where I'll also share my designs to the broader team like the comms team,
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legal team, a lot of cross-functional partners to better understand how my designs are going to impact the business
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and the other aspects of the business.
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To wrap this up, if this is what the current design look like,
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these are the iterations that I'll probably make.
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And then I'll either end up with one or two designs that our team is going to launch.
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I say I spend majority of my time in the last phase
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because I make a lot of iterations based on feedback from my team and UX research sessions.
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I'd love to know what other topics you'd want me to cover.
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Please comment below and give it a thumbs up if you found this video helpful and I will see you later.
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Bye

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Informazioni su Questa Lezione

In questa lezione, esplorerai il processo di design UX attraverso l'esempio di un progetto di app mobile. Imparerai a comprendere l'importanza di avere un processo strutturato per affrontare progetti complessi e come questo possa guidarti nel superare eventuali blocchi creativi. Attraverso il concetto di "double diamond process", imparerai come esplorare e definire i problemi legati all'utente e all'azienda, nonché come raccogliere dati utili per prendere decisioni di design più informate. Questa pratica ti aiuterà a migliorare la pronuncia in inglese mentre esplori linguaggi specifici del settore.

Vocabolario Chiave e Frasi

  • UX design process - processo di design UX
  • item detail page - pagina dei dettagli dell'articolo
  • discover phase - fase di scoperta
  • define phase - fase di definizione
  • competitive analysis - analisi competitiva
  • qualitative data - dati qualitativi
  • quantitative data - dati quantitativi
  • user research - ricerca sugli utenti

Consigli di Pratica

Per migliorare la tua pronuncia inglese e la tua capacità di esprimerti in modo chiaro, ti consigliamo di utilizzare la tecnica del shadowing in inglese. Questa pratica consiste nel ripetere dialoghi o frasi subito dopo averli ascoltati, cercando di imitare la velocità e l'intonazione dell'oratore originale. Nel contesto di questo video, ascolta attentamente il presentatore mentre descrive il processo di design. Prendi nota dei toni e dei ritmi, e pratica le frasi più significative più volte. L'obiettivo è incorporare il tuo shadow speech, per affinare non solo la tua pronuncia, ma anche il tuo modo di pensare in inglese. Utilizza anche risorse come shadowspeaks per trovare materiali di supporto che ti aiuteranno a praticare.

Ricorda, non importa la complessità del progetto che affronti; avere un processo chiaro e utilizzabile renderà le tue pratiche linguistiche meno stressanti e più produttive. Concentrati sui dettagli e non aver paura di chiedere feedback durante la tua pratica di shadowing. Buona fortuna!

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

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