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  • Hi, I'm Gregg Bernstein and today I'll be talking to you about personas and how to create them.

  • A persona is a representation of a type of customer.

  • Personas answer the question, "Who are we designing for?" and they help to align strategy

  • and goals to specific user groups.

  • So how do you conduct a persona analysis?

  • You can begin by compiling everything you know about your customers,

  • and grouping your findings in a spreadsheet.

  • You could use headings relevant to your areas of study, such as industry, device, time, and goals.

  • Or you could create affinity diagrams by organising your findings on post-it notes.

  • You might start to see patternsthe industries in which customers work, and what devices

  • they use, at what time of day, and where.

  • From here, you can form questions about your customers and work out what they have in common

  • and also how they differ.

  • Then find the people who form these clusterseither in your existing customer database or by recruiting

  • themand talk to them.

  • It's a win-win. You get to learn from customers and they get access to the folks who create

  • the software they rely on.

  • Visiting a customer is ideal. But if you can't visit in person, a video-chat is your next

  • best option.

  • A persona has a personalitythe more you observe and capture during these interviews,

  • the more realistic that personality will be.

  • You can then tag and analyze your findings.

  • Return to your spreadsheet or affinity diagram and add more data points: office environment,

  • software in use, collaboration habits and so on.

  • Look for the predominant clusters and shared attributes.

  • You might find that two of your personas share many characteristics.

  • You can combine these personas. Or if there is enough distinction to warrant it,

  • divide the persona into two.

  • Creating personas is an iterative process. What seems right at first glance may not hold

  • up to close scrutiny.

  • Now it's time to come up with names and representations for these personas.

  • Your representation might be a photo, an illustration or an icon.

  • The important part is that these personas be distinct and memorable.

  • You want your colleagues, at the mention of the Alice persona,

  • to picture Alice and recall what she represents.

  • Once you've created your personas, you can use them

  • to design for customers with accuracy and confidence.

  • For example, we can say, "This is a feature that Alice would use, but one that Jim might

  • not discover in his typical use of our app."

  • Finally, share your personas with as many colleagues as possible.

  • Create posters of your personas and hang them throughout your office.

  • Your goal is to create a shared understanding of just who you work for

  • and how everyone can better serve them.

  • Personas can give you real insights into your customers, which will your result in you designing

  • a much better product or service.

  • Just remember that personas change over timecreate them, learn from them, share them, and then

  • don't forgot to revisit them and begin the process anew.

Hi, I'm Gregg Bernstein and today I'll be talking to you about personas and how to create them.

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B2 中上級

UXペルソナの作成方法 (How To Create UX Personas)

  • 55 6
    Jason Tsao に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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