Mikael Sköld (@designathought) 's Twitter Profile
Mikael Sköld

@designathought

User Experience strateg och designer @inUse_swe.
Effektkartläggning/Impact mapping specialist.
Lyssnande, läsande långlöpande eklektiker.

ID: 3353351483

linkhttp://DesignAfterThought.net calendar_today01-07-2015 15:55:46

311 Tweet

89 Followers

283 Following

Scott Berkun (@berkun) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We love to do "drive-by designing", where we presume we can do better than designs we see. But we forget that the hardest parts of good design in the real world are the context, the constraints and the stakeholders. #designmtw

We love to do "drive-by designing", where we presume we can do better than designs we see.  

But we forget that the hardest parts of good design in the real world are the context, the constraints and the stakeholders. #designmtw
Mikael Sköld (@designathought) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bra exempel på botten-upp-analys. “The point is not to force your findings into a predefined framework, but rather to look at your findings and see what framework comes naturally.” — Margot Lieblich link.medium.com/j736Q1YXxfb

Mikael Sköld (@designathought) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Product teams should focus on product outcomes instead of business outcomes because: - Business outcomes are lagging indicators - Product outcomes measure human behavior - Product outcomes are within the influence of the team" producttalk.org/2020/05/produc… via Teresa Torres

Mikael Sköld (@designathought) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Några timmar till: repris på 3:e Nortonföreläsningen av Laurie Anderson. Tänkvärt, poetiskt och roligt visualiserat. Passa på! Del 4-6 kommer i höst.

Några timmar till: repris på 3:e Nortonföreläsningen av <a href="/OnlyAnExpert/">Laurie Anderson</a>. Tänkvärt, poetiskt och roligt visualiserat. Passa på!
Del 4-6 kommer i höst.
Mikael Sköld (@designathought) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“You gather data, which lead to patterns, which give you insights, which are probably correct, but which will have exceptions. In turn, these insights help you guide your choices toward a few better directions than what you had before.” — Indi Young (she/her) link.medium.com/MY7t9YNwUhb

Mikael Sköld (@designathought) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bra råd att upptäcka och hantera läpparnas bekännelse: spydergrrl.com/2020/05/ux-the… med bra diskussion med spydergrrl🕷️UX Podcast uxpodcast.com/267-ux-theatre…

Jackie Bavaro (@jackiebo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the most broadly useful PM techniques is giving a range of possible answers instead of a single response. Here are some ways to do it. A thread:

Jeff Gothelf (@jboogie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Want to shift from managing outputs to managing outcomes? Change the question use to kick off your initiatives. Old question: What are we going to build? New question: What will our users do differently when we solve their problem?

Historic Vids (@historyinmemes) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Pale Blue Dot is a photo of Earth that was taken by the Voyager 1 space probe in 1990 from a distance of about 6 billion kilometers (3.7 billion miles) as it was leaving our solar system. This is what Carl Sagan said about the photo: "Look again at that dot. That's here. That's

Pale Blue Dot is a photo of Earth that was taken by the Voyager 1 space probe in 1990 from a distance of about 6 billion kilometers (3.7 billion miles) as it was leaving our solar system. This is what Carl Sagan said about the photo:

"Look again at that dot. That's here. That's
Jonathan Korman 🟣 (@miniver) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Speaking as a professional software user experience designer, you do NOT want to create software systems which compel ideal processes. You want flexible systems which make ideal actions easiest and other actions transparent.