Designers who research usefulness hope to discover how well a product, service, or system meets people’s needs in a specific time and place. A useful design outcome will be adopted. An outcome that is not useful will be ignored and maybe even ridiculed. Research can reveal if a design outcome is placed at the “right” place and the “right” time for the “right” people. Discoveries like these can reveal why an outcome is effective or underutilized. With knowledge from this research, designers can redesign outcomes or move them to different places and times to make outcomes more useful.

Researching Usefulness

Designers who research usefulness hope to discover how well a product, service, or system meets people’s needs in a specific time and place. A useful design outcome will be adopted. An outcome that is not useful will be ignored and maybe even ridiculed. Research can reveal if a design outcome is placed at the “right” place and the “right” time for the “right” people so designers can redesign the outcome or possibly move it to a different place and time, so it is more useful.

Questions to Ask

  • How well does the design align with a person’s needs and goals?
  • Which of the design’s features are most useful for most people?

Look For…

  • Adoption/use rates
  • Attitudes about the design outcome
  • People talking about the design with others—sharing they like it or perhaps not sharing about it at all
  • How deeply the design outcome is implemented into daily use

Keywords

Sources

Updated: June 19, 2024 7:00 am
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