Since inception in 2018, we have delivered innovative IT solutions to clients across a range of industries. Our innovative IT solutions encompass everything from business digital transformation to digital marketing and branding, cloud services, and more, all with a unique, out-of-the-box approach. We work on premise or remotely with enterprises, startups and entrepreneurs around the world from the USA, India and other countries.
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UX strategy – To have in the most effective way
A UX strategy is a plan that helps you get from the UX. You have to the UX you want to have in the most effective way. It involves knowing your current stance, your future goals, and the steps in between. Key Performance Indicators (or KPIs) are an indispensable part of a UX strategy and deal with your goals in more specifics. For instance, they give the exact number to the revenue increase you want or name the bounce rate you are ready to tolerate. Apart from KPIs, any UX strategy relies on and requires gathering the following data:
A good UX strategy also implies a definite set of priorities, individual for each business. It is important to concentrate on achieving UX goals with the highest impact on their business first. Thus, it has to be prepared to make sacrifices. Such as, put some features in the backlog or narrow down the target audience.
How mobile-first design helps create a quality mobile experience
Mobile-first design is a strategy that helps create a quality mobile experience. It involves designing the mobile UI first, which allows for a quality mobile experience without being limited by the constraints of finished desktop design. The key rationale behind the mobile-first design strategy is that limited space and specific interaction patterns. Those make designing content for mobile a lot more difficult than for desktop devices.
Designers can focus on the essential features for mobile devices by creating the mobile UI first. And can add more nuanced layers of functionality and content on larger screens. This approach supports ‘progressive enhancement’ – the strategy of introducing essential features for mobile devices. It adds more nuanced layers of functionality and content on larger screens. The biggest advantage of the mobile-first strategy is that it helps avoid ‘graceful degradation’ – stripping a full-screen UI of its elements in order to fit it in the mobile screen.