Archivo de la categoría "Lo dijo"

Ray Poynter say:

Thursday, 25 de August de 2011

    Comillas 2.0 In the early days of online data collection there were no reliable methods of obtaining respondents for surveys. By comparison with other modalities, researchers were suddenly faced with a medium where there were no directories, no lists, and no RDD (random digit dialling). There were no simple options for identifying the population and no suitable methods for defining a sample.

    The most frequent approaches, in those earliest days of online data collection, were to use advertising tools and client databases (for the small number of clients who had usable lists of customers‚ email addresses). The advertising route consisted of using invitations to surveys implemented via advertising mechanisms such as banner ads and pop-ups.

    However, online data collection only took off as a major force when online access panels became widely available. Readers should note that as online access panels have become more central to research they are increasingly being referred to as, simply, online panels, or just panels.

    Before the mid-1990s, panels had been fairly rare outside the USA, and they were usually reserved for specific purposes, such as retail audits. In the USA there had been a history of mail (postal) panels and this, to an extent, explained the more rapid development of online access panels in the USA. It has also been suggested that the more conservative nature of European research buyers and providers slowed down the development of online research in Europe.

    The development of large scale online access panels became the key to unlocking the use of the internet for quantitative research. However, by adopting the widespread use of online access panels, market research has moved away from the ability to claim that it uses random probability sampling and that it can “scientifically” project its findings onto the wider population‚ a fact and consequence that are covered later in this book.

    There is a traditional saying in marketing that buyers tend to want things to be better, cheaper, quicker, but organizations can, at best, only offer two of these at any one time. By accepting the methodological limitations of panels, market research was able to make research both quicker and cheaper.Comillas 2.0

    In “The Hardback of Online and Social Media Research

    Esko Kurvinen say:

    Friday, 27 de May de 2011

      Comillas 2.0 … the activity of industrial design is a hard nut to crack. Design work is creative, innovative – artistic even – and often goes hand in hand with cutting-edge technological developments. Like any future-oriented activity, the process itself and especially the quality and commercial success of the outcome are highly unpredictable. At best, organizations can create favorable conditions and construct processes for design activities, but the creative process – as we often want to call it – has largely remained a black box.
      Article 1 contributes to our understanding of design work by looking at what designers do as part of a development team. This means studying design as a particular type of problem-solving involving an interdisciplinary team of experts. In addition to the academic discussion on industrial design, the study also has local implications for the parties involved. This approach is in line with the general philosophy of organization development; using the best ethnographic practices to describe and make work visible to the participants, who are then themselves better equipped to adjust their work processes…Comillas 2.0

      in Prototyping social action

      Jenn+ Ken Visocky O´Grady say:

      Wednesday, 19 de January de 2011

        Comillas 2.0 User-centered design, or human-centered design, places the end use at the centre of design process. User-centered design is driven by research. Research during the developmental process provides valuable insight into the needs, behaviours, and expectations of the target audience.Comillas 2.0

        in The information Design Handbook

        Alastair Campbell say:

        Thursday, 16 de December de 2010

          Comillas 2.0 User research is often neglected in web project, sitting pretty somewhere between usability and market research. But it can be invaluable tool in defining and structuring a site. Comillas 2.0

          In .Net Magazine

          Peter Merholz say:

          Sunday, 26 de September de 2010

            Comillas 2.0 Wireframes are no longer sufficient. They don´t communicate the desired experience.Comillas 2.0

            In .Net Magazine

            Katja Battarbee say:

            Monday, 9 de August de 2010

              Comillas 2.0 How did user experience as a design term come about? Why is the literature on user experience so diverse? This can be attributed to how design as a group of disciplines has evolved in response to new technologies and changes in consumer markets. The world of science has faced increasing specialisation of skills, knowledge and technologies. Technologies become increasingly smaller and more efficient while computation capacity increases, which makes technological solutions cheaper and more widely applicable in consumer products. Production cycles are short and the stakes for success in the marketplace are high.Comillas 2.0

              In Co-experience: understanding user experiences in social interaction

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