7 user experience principles for online self service

Post on 07-Nov-2014

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Presented at the 2012 Healthcare Experience Design conference in Boston. Walgreens has been in the business of selling medications for over 100 years. Along the way, many service-oriented innovations have emerged—including some that we now take for granted, such as the drive-through pharmacy window. Fast forward to today, where online tools empower our customers to help themselves at an unprecedented level. Functionality like mobile refill-by-scan and Web access to medical records bring home interactions that used to require a trip to the pharmacy and/or doctor’s office. As our User Experience team conceptualizes and designs these tools, our job is to make them at the same time powerful and simple to use. In order to succeed, our solutions need to be better than the existing off-line model. This presentation focuses on seven core fundamentals that we live by when designing interactive experiences. They address issues like: Balancing the user’s primary task completion with up-sell Communicating transparently with customers—even when it’s bad news The critical importance of words—in labeling, instructive text, and marketing How brick-and-mortar and online experiences impact each other and a lot more! The presentation is richly illustrated with visual UX design examples, as well as data from real customers—their own words, behaviors, and outcomes. We’ll talk about how we monitor and measure the customer experience—through customer satisfaction tools, clickstream analysis, and user research—and how that insight translates to design.

TRANSCRIPT

User Experience Principlesfor Online Self Service7John Yesko

Director of User Experience

@jyesko

Our customers inspire us

Why we do it

I have complained about this for a long time now. 1. Quit screwing with the website. Every time I log on, I have to look someplace

else to locate how to refill my prescriptions. Once there, I have to hunt through ANOTHER new screen to order my scripts. Your website is a pain in the ass to use. You have no idea how frustrating your site is.

2. Find a solution to changing all this stuff on your site. It is not rocket science. If I am going to order my scripts, I want it simple and easy.

3. I don't have time to do all this. However, if I don't take the time to type my frustration out to you, then surely NOTHING will get done.

4. I HATE using your website. It takes so much energy to order prescriptions, that sometimes I just call the pharmacy instead of taking time to order them online.

5. Have I said your website is a real pain in the ass to use? 6. My web designer for my 4 businesses uses your website to understand what

I want our websites to look NOTHING like. Love, [Name].

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To succeed, the online experience has to be better than the alternative

How is it better?

Online > alternative

4

I truly appreciated that it took less than 3 minutes to order the prescription, faster than ordering by phone!

A few clicks and I am done. Fast and easy! Ordering via telephone is much more time consuming and I have to juggle Rx bottles to enter the correct Rx numbers. 

Because you keep a history of my orders and it is just danged easy. And I like the staff in the pharmacy.

Walgreen reminded me that prescription was due for refill. 

Because I am disabled and can't drive and shipping them to my home is a hole lot easier for me plus I like the free shipping. That sure helps.

Convenience, love 24-hour service for ordering, also pickup at my store is 24 hours.

I only went online to order a product that I know you sell, but it is seldom available in the store. This is an item for my Mother-in-law and she needs it about every 2 months. I will keep buying it through your website as it is very convenient.

I don't like waiting in lines at the store. The people are not my people.

Prescription refills

Online > alternative

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Call Pick up in store

Refill online

Online > alternative

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Pick up in store

Email reminder (sometimes)

Refill by text reply

Online > alternative

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Opt-in Reminder

Ready

Refill by email reply

Online > alternative

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No login

Never leave the email program (eliminates “I’ll do this later”)

Online > alternative

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Video removed. See it at:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POc2MQYHYjc

Refill by scan

Online > alternative

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Refill by scan

Online > alternative

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Web Pickup

Great idea, but how is it better?

Online > alternative

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Web Pickup

Online > alternative

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Video removed. See it at:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UnDAIYTawE

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Is it better than the current model?

Online > alternative

Usable and useful aren’t the same thing

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Trouble at any point in a multi-channel experience reflects poorly on the online portion

Customer satisfaction

Multi-channel trouble

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The customer may not know or care which link of the chain broke

Multi-channel trouble

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…always hoping "this" time it will be effortless. The pharmacy rarely, NEVER, has the prescription on time as stated. The last four or five months we have had nothing but difficulty getting one of our prescriptions....of course it is insurance fault???? Not buying that excuse since the pharmacy has a bad track record with us. Very much considering switching to Safeway pharmacy. So, to be specific... you should know that the pharmacy is not on the "same page" when it comes to getting the orders done as promised.

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Task completion is the top priority

Top tasks

Task completion

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~70% of Clicks

Rx refill purchase funnel

Task completion

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Reminder

Direct

visit

Cart CheckoutOrder

confirmationPrescription

refill(s)

No-distraction zone

In-context upsell OK

In-context cross-sell OK

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In-context up-sell

Rx refill purchase funnel

Task completion

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Reminder

Direct

visit

Cart CheckoutOrder

confirmationPrescription

refill(s)

No-distraction zone

In-context upsell OK

In-context cross-sell OK

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In-context cross-sell

Top tasks

Task completion

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25

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A book

“I gave it to my boss. He read it–because it’s short–and finally ‘got’ what I’ve been trying to tell him for years about usability. Then he bought copies for our whole team.”

Task completion

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Communicate proactively with customers—even bad news

Something went wrong

Communicate proactively

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Something went wrong

Communicate proactively

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Something went wrong

Communicate proactively

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Another book

• Improved error messages• Understandable instructions• Politeness online (not blaming)• Better forms • Customized "Page Not Found" errors• Easy-to-use help content• Human fallback plan• Answer emails quickly• …and much more

Communicate proactively

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Free shipping?

Communicate proactively

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Words are very important

Ambiguity

Words

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Transfer where?

Words

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Product taxonomy

Words

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Before

After

Subtle messaging

Words

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Context is important too

Words

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What did I do wrong?

Words

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What did I do wrong?

Words

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Copy guidelines—incomplete list

• Clarity trumps cuteness

• Refer to things consistently throughout the site—and across channels

• Use the customer’s language, not ours

• “Click here” is banned

Words

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Data is our friend

Two big buckets of data collection

Data

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Observe and measure the customer experience

• Clickstream measurement• Business intelligence• Customer experience monitoring• Consumer research• Customer satisfaction measurement

Proactively solicit customer feedback

• Usability testing• Contextual inquiry• Participatory design• Online surveys

Tools for observation and measurement

Data

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Customer Experience Monitoring

Customer Satisfaction Measurement

Business Intelligence

Clickstream Measurement

Consumer Research

What customers do

What customers say

User research

Data

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ResponsibilitiesMethods Outputs

• Usability testing (Web, mobile, kiosk)

• Directional concept testing

• In-context and ethnographic methods

• Surveys

• Focus groups, diads, and triads

• Card sorting

• Advocacy for the end-user

• Knowledge management and distribution of insights

• Collaborative research with Customer Intelligence and Market Research

• Facilitating engagement between end-users and business partners

• Customer pain points and unmet needs

• Customer context, attitudes, and drivers

• Quotes, anecdotes and video clips

• Implications and recommendations for design and experience improvement

Qualitative research tactics meant to understand and advocate for our online customers.

In-house usability lab

Data

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Concept validation

“3D” card sorting

Usability testing

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There usually is not a single right answer

Finding the balance

No single right answer

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User Needs

BusinessGoals

TechnicalConstraints

“As consumers we are incredibly discerning. We sense where there has been great care in the design, and when there is cynicism and greed.”

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Jonathan Ive

SVP Industrial Design

Apple

Thank you!

John Yesko

www.yesko.com

Twitter: @jyesko

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