Jalan Pintas? User Experience?
Jalan pintas (atau short cut) ini adalah satu topik yang
saya sering sentuh dalam kelas OSH saya. Malah saya juga mencadangkan akan
disahkan penggunaannya (halalkan yang haram). Boleh rujuk dalam blog OSH The
Jurney dan FB saya.
Terbaru Roger James Hamilton menulis berkaitan jalan
pintas ini. Bukan dari segi OSH tetapi dari segi “use experiences vs design”.
Artikel penuh seperti berikut.
Best advice if you're just
starting or growing a business:
FB Roger James Hamilton
Focus at your customer more than your product. Get
fixed on your customer experience, and your product will keep changing to serve
them best. But fix your product, and customers will find a path that fits them,
with or without you.
If you're waiting on the street corner, wondering
where all your customers are, this post is for you.
We've moved from the
industrial age where it was all about the product and productization to the
technological age where it's all about the customer and customization.
Instead of focusing at
product development and production lines (which we learned about and were a
part of at school), focus at customer experiences and customization lines.
Your business doesn't
start when you have a product. It starts when you have a customer. So who is
your perfect customer? Start from there and ask yourself (and them):
Problem - What's the
problem they need solved?
Promise -
What's the benefit you deliver to them by solving it?
Product -
How will you solve it better than others?
Proof -
Why should they trust you?
Keep upgrading your
answers (and your products) regularly. Because what your customers need, their
expectations and how they are being served will keep changing fast. And once
you get into flow, you'll begin to know what they need before them, and they'll
begin pre-buying your next product.
"Get closer than
ever to your customer. So close that you tell them what they need well before
they realize it themselves." ~ Steve Jobs
The easiest way to
future proof your business is to have customers that love you. The easiest way
to fail is to love your idea or product more than you love your customers. So
find your soul-market and fall in love all over again.
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