Data-centric Design: The New-age Phenomenon!

Sameer Dixit
3 min readJul 4, 2021

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It’s tempting to ask whether all the investment done for a good UI/UX design is worth the money. A nice app or a portal doubtless has a positive impact on a company’s bottom lines. There is nothing like an esthetically presented interface or a landing page that attracts eyeballs. But, to do more than that, a design must meet some key functions. It must address the practical needs of users. It must have strategy and purpose hard-wired into every nook and cranny of the layout.

Therefore, it is crucial for businesses investing money and time in developing a good UX to consider how it is likely to fulfill the needs of customers and prospects, offer them value, reduce their problems, and augment their happiness.

Design backed by Analysis

If every penny spent on developing a good UX must attract suitable returns, leadership must take the reins into its hands. UX development is a senior management function. Leaders who have the ability to read, interpret, and infer from datasheets can do wonders for the output. Evidence-based criteria bring out matchless results and prove cost-effective in the long run. Gut feel has no place in the process.

Keep testing

Rigorous testing is the way forward. Analytics is the constant source of feedback and learning. Every time a customer visits your page, you have the data that indicates his or her behavior, motivation, desire, and habit. It yields valuable insights regarding everything that’s visible or latent about your digital platform. For instance, improving the font style or weight or a call-to-action button can open more actionable possibilities. Testing is the way to let users dictate what they want; it’s not what you want them to consume!

Experiment, observe, apply!

Taking a series of small corrective steps either prevents a complete overhaul or makes it significantly better. Before you decide to dismantle the whole structure, run experiments on every individual feature of the website or an app. Change background, introduce icons, cut the clutter. Notice the change these small actions have on visitor traffic, bounce rates, etc. You will have a goldmine of user-centric information that will make redesigning quicker and more profitable.

Make mistakes and learn from them

The blind truths fall by the wayside every time you expose a design to stringent testing. The harshest feature of testing is also its strongest: Testing helps you learn and grow. Research may seem unnecessary at first, but it keeps you on track. Keep questioning. As long as you are nurturing this spirit of inquiry, you are discovering ways to improve. Making mistakes, learn, apply your learning, and grow. UX design is one of the fields where respecting evidence and its correct application will take you places.

Hard work is never wasted

Even if the output is seemingly perfect, there is no room for complacency. Nothing can justify lazy instinct when concrete evidence should lead the efforts. Even approved designs must be exposed to stringent testing and analysis to facilitate further improvements. The inputs gained from such an exercise can hold powerful lessons in other products! Hard work will pay you in the future if it doesn’t add up in the present.

Continuous testing, analysis, and performance tracking are the buzzwords. Consumer tastes are forever evolving. It pays to stay ahead of time and preempt actions necessary for improving performance.

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Sameer Dixit
Sameer Dixit

Written by Sameer Dixit

Advertising copywriter, blogger, ideator. Absolutely thrilled to share the space graced by a global community of writers and thinkers. Love walking and reading.

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