23 min

How To UX Audit Like a Pro UI Narrative: UX, UI, IxD, Design and Research

    • Design

Episode 58 Show Notes:
Who should use a UX Audit?
Suppose you have little to no budget for user research and need a quick yet efficient way to help clients understand digital product problems affecting business goals. It also works well if you are the only UX Designer or Researcher on the team. 
Those on an in-house team are most likely evaluating the product and tweaking the experience continually. If you’re on an in-house team and trying to convince management for a buy-in, you could use this method too.
Take a listen and tag @uinarrativeco on Twitter with your questions or comments.
 
Mentions:
 
Course: Getting Started in UX: Design and Research
Very limited spots for beta with one-time only discounts
uinarrative.com/uxcareer



So What? How To Do a UX Audit
How To Conduct UX Audits
The UX Audit: A Beginner’s Guide
10 Usability Heuristics for User Experience
How To Conduct a UX Audit: Step-By-Step Guide
 
Need help organizing your usability findings?
250 best practices for usability
Word template for measurable usability goals
 
When looking for trends
Try insight incubation
 
------
Today’s sponsor, Google Design, produces original content like articles and videos to show how Google’s products come to life—and to inspire designers everywhere. Head over to goo.gle/UINarrative to get inspired.



Podcast Info:
 
Transcripts available on episode web page.
 
Listen on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Stitcher, and Spotify.
 
RSS feed: https://uinarrative.libsyn.com/rss
 
Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review if you like what you hear.



Announcements:
Join the UI Narrative Email Club to be the first to hear about weekly blog posts and exclusive podcast recaps. You can sign up at uinarrative.com/emailclub.
 
Want to become a Product Designer? Or need a portfolio review? Learn more at uinarrative.com/workwithme.
 
Let’s Connect:
Have a question for me? Email me at hello@uinarrative.com.
 
Let’s connect! #uinarrative
Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn @uinarrative
Twitter @uinarrativeco

Episode 58 Show Notes:
Who should use a UX Audit?
Suppose you have little to no budget for user research and need a quick yet efficient way to help clients understand digital product problems affecting business goals. It also works well if you are the only UX Designer or Researcher on the team. 
Those on an in-house team are most likely evaluating the product and tweaking the experience continually. If you’re on an in-house team and trying to convince management for a buy-in, you could use this method too.
Take a listen and tag @uinarrativeco on Twitter with your questions or comments.
 
Mentions:
 
Course: Getting Started in UX: Design and Research
Very limited spots for beta with one-time only discounts
uinarrative.com/uxcareer



So What? How To Do a UX Audit
How To Conduct UX Audits
The UX Audit: A Beginner’s Guide
10 Usability Heuristics for User Experience
How To Conduct a UX Audit: Step-By-Step Guide
 
Need help organizing your usability findings?
250 best practices for usability
Word template for measurable usability goals
 
When looking for trends
Try insight incubation
 
------
Today’s sponsor, Google Design, produces original content like articles and videos to show how Google’s products come to life—and to inspire designers everywhere. Head over to goo.gle/UINarrative to get inspired.



Podcast Info:
 
Transcripts available on episode web page.
 
Listen on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Stitcher, and Spotify.
 
RSS feed: https://uinarrative.libsyn.com/rss
 
Don’t forget to subscribe and leave a review if you like what you hear.



Announcements:
Join the UI Narrative Email Club to be the first to hear about weekly blog posts and exclusive podcast recaps. You can sign up at uinarrative.com/emailclub.
 
Want to become a Product Designer? Or need a portfolio review? Learn more at uinarrative.com/workwithme.
 
Let’s Connect:
Have a question for me? Email me at hello@uinarrative.com.
 
Let’s connect! #uinarrative
Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn @uinarrative
Twitter @uinarrativeco

23 min