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Intuitive Design

Eight Steps to an Intuitive UI

Everett McKay Rob Nance (UX Design Edge) Devon Musgrave

$76.95   $65.39

Paperback

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English
Black Watch Publishing
07 February 2018
"Make your designs immediately self-explanatory and easy to use, and never ""agree to disagree"" again about whether they are intuitive!

Your mission: To design an intuitive UI for your next project. Your problem: You're not sure what ""intuitive UI"" really means. Worst problem: Your team isn't sure either, so your discussions about intuitive design are unproductive and opinion-driven. If this sounds familiar, Intuitive Design: Eight Steps to an Intuitive UI will give you the insight, principles, and guidelines you need to get the job done. You'll learn the objective and actionable steps for designing intuitive UIs--for mobile, web, and desktop apps. Mission accomplished!"

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Imprint:   Black Watch Publishing
Dimensions:   Height: 235mm,  Width: 191mm,  Spine: 12mm
Weight:   381g
ISBN:   9780999612507
ISBN 10:   0999612506
Pages:   216
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

"Everett McKay is Principal of UX Design Edge and a UX design trainer and consultant with global clientele. Everett's specialty is finding practical, intuitive, simple, highly usable solutions quickly for web, mobile, and desktop applications. Everett has over 30 years' experience in user interface design and has delivered UX design workshops to an international audience that includes Europe, Asia, South America, and Africa. Everett is author of ""Intuitive Design: Eight Steps to an Intuitive Design"", the definitive guide to designing intuitive interactions, and ""UI Is Communication: How to Design Intuitive, User Centered Interfaces by Focusing on Effective Communication"", a groundbreaking approach to UI design using human communication-based principles and techniques. While at Microsoft, Everett wrote the Windows UX Guidelines for Windows 7 and Windows Vista. Everett holds a Masters Degree in Computer Science from MIT."

Reviews for Intuitive Design: Eight Steps to an Intuitive UI

Whether you're new to UI design or an established veteran, Everett McKay's practical yet conclusive Intuitive Design deserves a prominent place on your bookshelf. But keep it within easy reach, as you'll revisit often to use the actionable UI tips it presents. Jon Walter, UX Architect at Rockwell Automation Intuitive Design precisely summarizes the most important lessons from The Design of Everyday Things in a way that makes them easy to apply. If you're a fan of Don't Make Me Think, you'll love how Everett gets to the point with practical ideas and examples. The evaluation method offered in the book makes it simple to identify what makes UIs unintuitive and what you need to do to fix them. I highly recommend this book to anyone responsible for make the user's interactions intuitive. Mike Donahue, UX Architect at Citrix Systems Having adopted Everett's approach to design, I can attest that my team experienced a significant and immediate improvement in our designs. We felt equipped to effectively evaluate designs and, most important, comfortably explain to stakeholders and users the merits of our design decisions. Our user satisfaction scores skyrocketed! If you're looking for an easy-to-follow, lightweight, common-sense approach to intuitive software design, I can't recommend Intuitive Design highly enough! William Shellenberger, Business Systems Analyst at Bayada Home Health Care What do people mean by an unintuitive UI? Design problems are hard to fix when you don't know what's wrong. Put an end to subjective arguments over good and bad design. In Intuitive Design, Everett gives you the tools to understand what makes designs intuitive and how to evaluate them on an objective basis. As a college student, it has help me tremendously in evaluating my own projects. Noah Patullo, student at University of Vermont


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