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Using UX research to improve our discovery interface Tim Graves, Systems Librarian Suzanne Tatham, Academic Services Manager

Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

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Page 1: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Using UX research to improveour discovery interface

Tim Graves, Systems LibrarianSuzanne Tatham, Academic Services Manager

Page 2: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

What we did and how

•UX research – collaborative project between the University of Sussex Library and Semantico, digital publishing company •Set up working group – representation from across the Library•Implementation of new interface – Primo upgrade

http://www.slideshare.net/UKSG/uksg-conference-2016-breakout-session-search-and-discovery-defining-user-behaviour-suzanne-tatham-and-andrea-fallas

Page 3: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

User testing

•1st round – exploratory interviews• understanding of search behaviours• task-based approach

•2nd round - Paper usability testing• lean approach• forces participants to break down their interactions

https://youtu.be/adyli4xnPMk

Page 4: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Semantico - UX design team, www.semantico.com

Page 5: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Cluttered interface

“I don’t know why I don’t use Library Search for articles ... I think it stresses me out”

(Maria, 3rd year Psychology student)

Rick Poynor, 2012 Used bookstore, Nice, France. http://designobserver.com/article.php?id=35748

Page 6: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Underused functionality

• Search scopes• Header links

Page 7: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Signing-in“You’re usually signed in because you have to be signed in to

perform a search – don’t you? I don’t know, maybe you don’t.”(Lenart, 3rd yr UG)

“I can’t remember what I do to sign in”(Hannah, 2nd yr UG)

“I always forget to sign in”(Tom, 1st yr UG)

Page 8: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Items level tabs

Page 9: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Icons

• Star icon – connotations of rating not saving• Book jackets identified as very important• Item type icons - greyed out so not noticed• Icons fairly indistinguishable – not aiding

item type recognition

Page 10: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Can you identify these icons?

?

? ??

??

Page 11: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Answers:

Book

Legal doc Conference proceedingJournal

ReviewArticle

Page 12: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Facets/filters

• Left-hand filters – minimal use – some filtering by book item type and by author

• Creation date not used but when prompted, thought to be useful

• Confusion around selection/deselection process in ‘More options’

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Prototype design

Semantico - UX design team, www.semantico.com

Page 14: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Semantico - UX design team, www.semantico.com

Page 15: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Conclusions drawn from UX results

Keep it simpleImagery mattersMost used functionality → prime positionUnderused functionality → hidden or removedFocus on purpose of a discovery tool → avoid duplication/replication

Get it right for the novice = get it right for the researcher

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August 2016 - from first contact to launch

• Advance planning of other Library Systems projects

• Gathering priorities from the UX project

• Small, cross-library working group

• Basecamp site with Ex Libris for the implementation

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How far did Ex Libris coincide with the Sussex UX findings?

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Rendering on mobile devices

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Integrated item level information

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Improved sign-in

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Less cluttered results page

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(Some) Improvement with iconography

• Pin better than the star• Item level icons bring useful functionality to the fore

Page 23: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Further changes based on UX findings

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Facets moved from right to left

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Facets reordered based on user testing

Item type gets top billing

Page 26: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Removed underused functionality

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Icons• Give a visual identity without giving too much prominence

ar

rticle ook

ournal

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Resist the temptation to fill up space just because it is there

Page 29: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Feedback so far

• Soothing lack of complaint• Mobile rendering great for teaching

Page 30: Using UX research to improve our discovery interface

Conclusion

http://www.sussex.ac.uk/library/search