Four questions every software user interface designer and usability professional should be thinking about
1) What is the best way for user interface design and usability to integrate with software engineering processes, specifically Agile processes?
Design and engineering must work well together if we want design cemented in the overall software development process. Many perceive design as being oriented towards a waterfall approach, costly, and a “nice to have, but not necessary”. We must change these perceptions by repeatedly producing better results through close work with software engineers. Agile processes, whether strictly or loosely followed are the most promising framework for design and engineering to come together and pave the way for future software products and superior user experiences.
And since there are often fewer design resources than engineering resources, it is easy to develop a design-engineering bottleneck. The best way I have found to avoid/remedy this is to develop design artifacts (standards, templates, and best practices) for common scenarios so that many situations requiring design input can be solved without designers. It’s not as simple as developing the artifacts and giving engineers a link to them; it is up to the designers to educate engineering when and why the artifacts should be used.
2) How can we better quantify the value of design and usability (ROI)?
There are several books on the subject and countless online resources, and yet most designers stumble when asked this question. If we can’t speak the language of executives, i.e. “dollars”, then we will remain “less important”. And we need more than examples of value delivered from a particular case study: we need standardized quantifiable metrics that pass the executive litmus test. If we have these already, then we all need to learn how to track and measure them and how to start communicating our value with them. In addition to asking “how can we measure the value we deliver?” we also need to ask “how can we deliver the most value?”
3) Where does design and usability belong within an organization?
In some software organizations user interface design resides in the engineering or development department. In others it sits in marketing along with product management. In some it is actually its own department in parallel to development and marketing. While organizational structures do vary from company to company, design seems to be all over the place with even less of a standard structure. Regardless of detailed top-level structure, I would strongly argue that design be parallel to engineering and product management, otherwise design becomes less strategic and mostly tactical, and that is very dangerous.
4) What’s next for software user interfaces? (CLI comeback? Gestures?)
If you are a designer, you should always be on the lookout for new and better ways to improve user experiences. I read online blogs, journals, the results of user interface studies, and attend conferences searching for the stepping stones that lead to the next creative and innovative solution. I’m particularly interested in new software interaction paradigms – designs that leverage the power and uniqueness of our digital medium rather than rely solely on mental models of physical objects mapped to the digital world. For example, is clicking a button the best solution for the physical and digital world? Maybe…
If there are any other core issues you feel I have missed, please add a comment for the rest of the readers.

[...] professional should be thinking about These aren’t my questions – it is the title of an interesting little article I was reading this [...]
I'd really like to hear more about your ideas for quantifying ROI – it's a conversation that I'm still having with some execs, and if other folks have discovered a great way to handle that, I'd love to know more.
Thanks for a great post
0) How do we make sure every solution is usability tested on at least 3 persons. (almost any person will do)
Steve Krug's lecture. Author of “Don't make me THINK” – on “The least you can do about usability” suggests a monthly usability morning in your organization – http://twurl.nl/brlyz1
I was once thinking if it make sense to have a tool for mocking up command line interface. CLI are definitely a UI to consider since some companies consider it first, before going ahead to implement a full blown GUI.
Very nice article indeed!
[...] very nice and pertinent blog post from Russell Wilson about the place of usability and user interface design within company and [...]
Answer to No.1: Don't. I've tried to "integrate" with agile on numerous occasions and you can't (at least not without ending up with a pile of crud at the end). When it comes to design, keep it all up front.
Answer to No.2: Multi-variate testing platforms. Design several, build several, put them out in front of real paying customers. See which one wins. Don't work anywhere that can't do MVT.
Answer to No.3: At least one person with UX in their job title needs to be at board level.
Answer to No.4. Wrong question. We don't invent the tech, we make it usable. Two very separate things. Musing about "the next thing" distracts you from concentrating on what's here now, today – which, mysteriously, is always crap. I *wonder* why…?
[...] 4 Questions for UI and UX profressionals to consider http://www.dexodesign.com/2009/03/30/four-questions-every-software-user-interface-designer-and-usability-professional-should-be-thinking-about/ [...]
RT @russwilson Four questions every software user interface designer and usability professional should be think… http://tinyurl.com/d7zb49
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