Ratings12
Average rating4.3
I'll read anything Kathy Sierra writes. I actually ordered this book when I was out of town, having it delivered to a hotel because I was looking forward to it that much. What I got was a book that inspired me to think differently about how I plan features, UX, and everything else for users.
What stuck with me the most was the concept of putting users into different “buckets” of ability on your product – beginners, intermediate and advanced. If you aren't moving users up in their abilities on multiple features at once, then people will leave your product. Thinking about things in this perspective was incredibly helpful for me.
A must read for anyone building a product. It will help you on how to build your product to work for your user and not the other way around. Minus one star because it could have been shorter in term of pages as there's a hell lot of white space and feels like a presentation most of the time (so pricy for the content).
A must-read for anyone in UX/UI. I have zero regrets about purchasing this for my library, despite the fact that's it's an expensive book for what it is (slide presentation in book form). Read slowly and stick with it; 1/3-1/2 of the way in you'll get it.
I'll read anything Kathy Sierra writes. I actually ordered this book when I was out of town, having it delivered to a hotel because I was looking forward to it that much. What I got was a book that inspired me to think differently about how I plan features, UX, and everything else for users.
What stuck with me the most was the concept of putting users into different “buckets” of ability on your product – beginners, intermediate and advanced. If you aren't moving users up in their abilities on multiple features at once, then people will leave your product. Thinking about things in this perspective was incredibly helpful for me.