The Power of Atomic UX Research - Daniel Pidcock at UX Brighton 2018

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • Get your ticket for UX Brighton 2023 👉  uxbri.org/23
    You may have heard of Atomic Design - Now comes Atomic Research, a new way to organise UX knowledge in an infinitely powerful manner.
    Whilst with a FTSE 100 tech company, Daniel Pidcock was tasked with solving how to store and distribute the organisations UX learnings in a way that everyone in the business could use and benefit from them.
    On the way to working this out, he discovered the power of Atomic Research. Not just for storing UX knowledge but as an incredibly useful way to think about research itself.

Комментарии • 13

  • @uxbri
    @uxbri  4 месяца назад

    Buy tickets for UX Brighton 2024: UX & AI today uxbri.org/2024/?DrImGXA&

  • @ErwinPrasetyo
    @ErwinPrasetyo 2 года назад +2

    Yup atomic ux research is so simple, and really easy to use to daily basis...

  • @TimScholten
    @TimScholten 4 года назад +6

    This helped me so much in finally finding the words for an idea/concept that was in my head for a while. In my team we are picking this up and start experimenting with it in the upcoming months.

    • @mokoine5494
      @mokoine5494 3 года назад +1

      Hi Tim, do you have any update, like issues or good thing regarding the implementation on the Atomic Research Framework? have been wondering on trying it at my team but looking for feedback first.

  • @_johnakinola
    @_johnakinola 5 лет назад +2

    Awesome video

  • @zerotoux
    @zerotoux 3 года назад +3

    Atomic UX, AFAIK, is a fancy term for the same thing as tagging individual pieces of datum and affinity mapping through thematic analysis to extract insights.
    New UXer needn't be confused with the jargony trendy stuff if they stick with the fundamentals of qualitative data analysis!!

    • @steveperry6047
      @steveperry6047 3 года назад +5

      agree and disagree respectfully Kevin. I think by the statement 'tagging individual pieces of datum and affinity mapping through thematic analysis to extract insights' doesn't this confuse new ux practitioners, where atomic research in its form mentioned here by Daniel Pidcock does exactly what problem you had framed earlier by alluding to new ux practitioners becoming confused. equally thematic analysis is jargony and trendy, as this technique has multiple other descriptions, which new ux practitioners to the field may benefit from.