There are now lots of ways to gain insight into the user experience:
Watching real users interacting with a site or app (both in development and live) is the only way to understand what the issues are that interfere with a good user experience; it also forces those with responsibility for the site or app to ‘walk in the users’ shoes’ – often an unsettling experience.
Usability testing is still the best method for understanding, in detail, users’ behaviours because you can observe these.
Simply put it is the process of testing how easy or difficult a website is to use with a representative group of users. It comes in three main ‘flavours’:
Unmoderated research is usually cheaper; however, it requires questions to be pre-defined – whereas often the most insightful questions are prompted by testers’ behaviours during a research session and are not anticipated in advance. Furthermore, online research relies on self reporting – and, as pointed out earlier, what users say they do is often different to what they actually do.
So what do we recommend? If you want to find out why problems happen on websites and apps, then bespoke moderated usability testing (yes our type!) is still the best approach.