Users are maxed out. Every day we wade through infinite online product selection, battle poorly designed forms, fail with login attempts, struggle with privacy settings, and are forced to play hide-n-seek with customer service phone numbers. These are just a few of the thousands of ways digital experiences have made life more complicated.
Let’s stop making things so hard.
A few months ago, I flew from D.C. to San Francisco and decided to check-in from my laptop in the hotel. To my frustration, the final confirmation page presented only one option for getting my boarding pass – printing. There was no option to send the boarding pass to my phone.
Obviously, I didn’t have access to a printer in my hotel room, so I checked-in again at the self-service kiosk at the airport. This time, the kiosk failed to print my voucher for the airport lounge.
I went up to the counter to check-in a third time.
This airline forced three check-ins and wasted customer service time by making one fatal UX mistake – designing for the device, not the journey. Companies fail users when they design in functional silos rather than the journey that customers take across devices as part of a task flow or situation.
So, what are some tactics you can do to ensure you’re building for the journey, not the device?
Reducing the learning curve for your digital experience can greatly decrease the cognitive load for consumers while they’re engaging with your brand. Experiences should be designed for how people think about doing the task - not how efficient it is for engineering to execute it.
Start by cultivating Shoshin, a concept in Zen Buddhism meaning "beginner's mind". It requires an attitude of openness, eagerness, and lack of preconceptions when studying a subject, just like a beginner. This mindset drives better decisions when designing experiences for first-time users.
Use Shoshin to:
We all know automation can tackle big problems, like Amazon Go, which has eliminated almost all friction from the traditional brick and mortar shopping experience. But, automation can make a difference on the small scale too.
For example, financial institutions over the past five years have increased their security and fraud prevention measures by putting more and more burden on the customer. They have adopted a mindset of “prove to me who you are” when customers want them to “know who I am!”
Many banks have taken steps to removing the burden of security from their customers. When calling to talk with a financial analyst, many now allow customers to use biometric voice authentication so that customers don’t have to remember and manually insert their PIN or answer security questions.
To automate manual digital interactions:
Micro-Annoyances build up over time and overload customers. Find and weed these out of your digital experience one by one.
Bank of America did this with just the slightest change on their ATM interface – so small that you probably didn’t notice. As we all know, ATM screens load slowly, and waiting for the next step in a transaction can be mind-numbing. At Bank of America, there's a Fast Cash Preference that appears on the home screen. Once set, you enter your password and select your withdrawal amount in the same step, thus waiting for only one screen load. This practice has now become common across many banks and ATMs.
Removing micro-annoyances reduces friction and ensures your brand doesn’t add to the stress of your customers. Consider these tactics:
I mentioned Amazon Go earlier, but let’s revisit. Amazon Go's success comes from Amazon eliminating virtually every pain point in the brick and mortar shopping experience with extreme simplification – no lines, no checkout, no registers. While not strictly a digital experience, but instead a physical one with a digital component, Amazon Go allows you to walk in, pick up what you need, and walk right out. You get a handy receipt on your phone moments later, and it even tells you how long your trip was to emphasize your time saved.
Here are some tactics to simplify your user experience at the scale of Amazon Go:
What other strategies would you add to this list to create friction-free experiences? I’d love to hear your thoughts - connect with me on Twitter.