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How to Create Digital Products That Customers Love

When it comes to building digital relationships with your customers--whether it's through a mobile app, a portal, or a new device--what matters is the user experience. Customers' loyalty (and the share of their wallets they devote to you) depends in large part on how they feel about your digital product or channel. Bad experiences hurt the brand and leave money on the table.

Today, CIOs are getting involved in building products for external customers, but unfortunately, creating great user experiences continues to be a struggle for many big IT shops. I see many companies that still believe that pairing a business analyst with overloaded business stakeholders will yield compelling digital products. Instead, the result is typically a laundry list of confused and confusing "business requirements" that yields a system that costs a lot and fails to excite (or even meet the expectations of) customers.

Creating Passionate Users

Good user experience (UX) designers have been tackling this problem for the last decade. To be clear, I don't mean doing more usability testing to make systems more "intuitive." This old-school approach grew up in the 1980s and '90s when computers were utilitarian data-entry and processing tools. "Usability" meant increasing task efficiency and reducing data-entry errors.

I mean embracing the strategic value of UX design. UX strategists focus on creating passionate users (engagement), getting them to come back again and again (repeat visits) and making products fun (gamification is all the rage). A strategically oriented UX designer is a complex problem-solver who can blend business objectives, technology capabilities and a rich understanding of users into innovative and compelling digital products and services.

How can CIOs use UX strategy to create digital products and services that are fun and easy to use, and that deliver all the business value they can? The challenges lie in today's requirements-gathering and budgeting processes.

This is what I see quite often: Business requirements and scope are defined, budgets and time lines are set. A contractor is hired to turn requirements into wireframes (low-fidelity screen designs). The UX designer presents the wireframes, and stakeholders suddenly start remembering things that didn't come out during the requirements-gathering stage. The CIO now faces a dilemma: miss time lines or plow forward knowing that what you release may not meet objectives.

A savvy UX designer will take a different approach to gathering requirements for a new project, or can breathe new life into an underperforming one. The strategic UX designer will get out of the office and talk to customers. For example, she may create a "user journey" that shows how your PC-based channel is not available to users when they need it. Perhaps there's an opportunity for a mobile app?

She may create personas and scenarios that go deeper than marketing-driven demographics and segmentation to shed light on customer goals and motivations that are missed by your channel. Perhaps there's an opportunity to use game mechanics to improve engagement?

Done right, UX strategy shows stakeholders how to deliver value to target customers. This is a much better basis for determining business requirements and project scope. Focusing on the customer experience also allows the team to make the proper trade-offs when desirable features run up against the realities of time and budget.

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How to Create Digital Products That Customers Love

Twoonies, loonies litter the highway after Brinks crash on Highway 11

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Twoonies, loonies litter the highway after Brinks crash on Highway 11

Insert Coin: Soundlazer speaker plays music with extreme focus

In Insert Coin, we look at an exciting new tech project that requires funding before it can hit production. If you'd like to pitch a project, please send us a tip with "Insert Coin" as the subject line. Here's a neat little project -- a parametric speaker that can only really be heard from the front. According to its inventor, the Soundlazer utilizes ultrasonic carrier waves, focusing its output in a single direction. The Soundlazer has a 20 to 30 foot range. You can hear it from head-on, but if you move to the side or shift the direction of the speaker a bit, the output drops off. The project has 52 days to go, to reach its goal of $48,000. Interested parties who pledge $175 or more will get a fully assembled speaker kit. To see the device in action, check out the video after the break. Previous project update: Well, lookee here -- it seems the public can't wait to get its hands on one of those cool Galileo iPhone platforms. The device has gone well passed its funding goal of $100,000, with 24 days left to contribute.

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Insert Coin: Soundlazer speaker plays music with extreme focus

Generous Prize Winner Donates Rail Tickets to The Children’s Centre

by Olivia Rawlinson

The winner of an Isle of Man Railways competition has generously donated their prize to The Childrens Centre. Free tickets were offered as a prize in a competition in which entrants were invited to suggest names for the Isle of Man Railways mascot.

The competition winner, who wishes to remain anonymous, came up with the name Cushag. The name is that of the Islands national flower which, like the railways cuddly mascot, is bright yellow. The competition winner asked that their prize be donated to the Islands leading charity for children and families, and Isle of Man Transport has kindly presented two season tickets that can be used by any child in residential care.

Susie Cox, Community Fundraiser at The Childrens Centre, said:

The tickets were originally donated anonymously to The Childrens Centre by the winner, and then Isle of Man Railways kindly offered to let the tickets be used by any child in residential care with The Childrens Centre, which is a lovely gesture. A trip on the railway is a real treat and these tickets will be greatly appreciated by the children who use them. On their behalf I would like to say a big thank you to the competition winner and Isle of Man Railways for such wonderful generosity.

Tim Crookall MHK, Minister for Community, Culture and Leisure, commented:

We are all very happy that the winner of our mascot naming competition chose to donate the prize to charity. I am especially looking forward to seeing the children enjoying great days out on the Islands heritage railways and am sure that they will give Cushag a wave as they set off from the station.

- ENDS -

a big thank you to the competition winner and Isle of Man Railways for such wonderful generosity.

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Generous Prize Winner Donates Rail Tickets to The Children’s Centre

Titanic: Behind the Legend

by Jade Foster

Tickets are now on sale for the lecture Titanic: Behind the Legend. William Blair Chief Curator of the blockbuster exhibition TITANICa at National Museums Northern Ireland has been invited to the Isle of Man by Manx National Heritage to mark the centenary of the tragedy. On April 20th William will talk at the Manx Museum about the ambitions behind the design and build of Titanic and what drove the White Star Line to create the worlds largest vessel of its time at a staggering cost of c. 1.5m. He will explore life in the gritty Harland and Wolff Belfast shipyard, where Titanic was built, and reveal some of the stories of life on board the ship. Few dramas have caught and held the public imagination quite like Titanic. However, it is the small details, the personal objects and the experiences of private individuals that give the story its human dimension. From passengers in first class enjoying the glamour of a transatlantic journey to travellers in third class pursuing the American dream, this talk will reveal stories of human endeavour, ambition and courage. Not surprisingly for a sea-faring nation, the Isle of Man was intrigued by the Titanic story from the outset. The Manx press frequently reported on the design and build of the ship. The Ramsey Courier ran a story on 12th May 1911 telling of the arrival of the sixteen ton anchor at Belfast and in June The Monas Herald reported in great detail on the successful launch of the ship.

Inevitably news of the tragedy struck a chord with the Manx who had only recently endured the loss of the Ellan Vannin in December 1909. The population joined together once again to raise money for widows and orphans and held a memorial service at The Palace which drew a crowd of more than 5,000. To find out more about the captivating story of Titanic and its place in myth and memory, join us at the Manx Museum on Friday 20th April, 7.30pm (doors open 7pm). Tickets are 6 for adults and 5 to FMNH members and children, available now from the Manx Museum Shop or online at http://www.manxheritageshop.com. Pre-booking is recommended.

- ENDS -

If you'd like to send any information or news releases to us then please feel free to do so and we would be more than happy to consider sharing your news with the Isle of Man!

Send your Isle of Man news to:webmaster@manx.net

Manx Telecom Ltd 2012

Manx Telecom Ltd, Isle of Man Business Park, Cooil Road, Braddan, Isle of Man IM99 1HX Registered in the Isle of Man Reg no.5629V Vat Reg no GB 003-2919-12

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Titanic: Behind the Legend