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Who to Test - Participants
The idea of finding individual participants to test your site can be overwhelming and a stumbling block to routine user testing. However you do not need hundreds of testers to obtain good information.
The Nielson Norman group indicates that 5 users can uncover 85% of the major usability issues, and 15 users can find 100%.*
Site Goals
To meet each goal, users may need to engage in different tasks, such as navigating different paths. By articulating your goals in concrete terms, you can focus your site’s design and what to test.
Example Site Goals
Receive donations and present mission
Provide legal information
Reach out to potential donors
User Tasks
Once you articulate your site’s goals and the steps users must take to complete these goals, you must articulate specific questions or tasks. Frame your questions to ensure users can accomplish realistic tasks that reflect concrete goals.
Some questions that you could ask include:
Can a first time user find my agency’s mission?
Can a return user remember how to find my agency’s contact information?
Testing Metrics
Once you have identified what you are testing, you must determine what metrics to collect. Your metrics will impact the type of test you conduct. Below are metrics you can collect, broken down by quality components which were introduced earlier.
Learnability: How easily a user can accomplish a basic task the first time on the site.
Self Test/Self Audit
Scenario: You want to test your site's usability, but you have limited time and resources.
What/Why: A self-audit can help you find usability problems. By looking at your site objectively, using the Heuristic Evaluation form to find potential problems, writing questions and testing yourself you can easily surface issues that impact your site. See tech tips in rectangular boxes throughout this guide for additional resources.
This session focuses on how to create tech training for staff. Guest speakers Ellen Samuel, Michael Hernandez, and Terry Lawson discuss how to decide what training is needed, how to meet the learning style needs of staff, where to find resources, and more.
Please note that although the material are focused on tech training, much of the material is applicable to creating any kind of training.
A/B Testing or Comparison Testing
Scenario: You have a few options in design layout or navigation.
Validation Test or Verification
Scenario: You are about to launch your new website!
What/Why: Validation tests ensure your website meets certain standards. Set benchmarks for how long tasks should take and evaluate your users against these benchmarks. This quantitative data is measured and can help identify any problem areas.
LSNTAP has created a Google Group for Project Managers working in the legal aid and legal services market. Whether you have formal project management credentials or were thrust into the role, this group is meant to support you in the work you do every day.
The group is listed within the Google Group listings as LS Project Managers (the LS stands for legal services). You may request to join within Google Groups or by submitting a request using the form below.
Join us for the next session in our Skill Builder Series as we learn how to get started using Airtable. Our guest speaker Julian E. Post is an independent consultant and accredited Airtable Service Provider who has developed quite a following as a TikTok and YouTube personality. His YouTube videos break down low-code technologies so that even beginners can understand how to get started. Julian will be teaching us the basics of airtable, but even experienced Airtable users may pick up some tricks.
The webinar was held on May 2, 2024 from 3-4 pm EDT.
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