Today’s guest writer is Josh Meisels,
Microsoft Office 2007 Key, our intern this summer. He is heading back to school next week but wanted to share information about one of his summer projects.
Access 2007 made a huge push to create useful, ready-to-use database templates that users could download from Office Online and get started with Access. The number of downloads exceeded our expectations (the Access 2007 contacts database is downloaded about 60,000 times a month). We thought the templates were pretty good; however,
Microsoft Office 2007 Pro Plus, in January we linked each template to a feedback survey. From the results we derived a Net Promoter Score that indicated we had plenty of room to improve (see Clint’s post on Provide Feedback).
When I began my internship on the Microsoft Access team 3 months ago, my first assignment was to redesign one of the poorest performing, and yet the most downloaded template, the Contact Management Database. Many people provided email addresses as part of our survey,
Office Pro Plus 2010 Key, so I contacted them and called 10 who ran the gamut from students to professors, receptionists and business professionals. Each had a different, personal story to tell about his or her experience with Access and with the contacts template. The best part was how surprised people were when they learned that Microsoft actually cared what they had to say!
From feedback, I compiled a list of template limitations, including
Inability to group or categorize contacts Too hard to search for people Issues importing addresses from Outlook Availability of help on adding fields
The last one came up repeatedly; and for an Access newbie, just learning how to add a field can be a challenging task.
To bring help into the application, we created a custom “Getting Started” screen that pops up when you first open the template.
It provides links to online help and two custom videos about using and modifying the contacts template. The videos have received rave reviews, not just because they help users learn to work with the Contacts Template,
Windows 7 Home Premium Key, but also because they teach widely applicable Access skills that, unlike traditional help, appeal to visual learners.
In addition to listening to customers, we also watched them. We conducted a usability study with people who were familiar with other Microsoft offerings like Excel, but who had never used Access, and we asked them to perform tasks with the template. For two days we watched and learned how to make the template even easier to use and more visually appealing. Changes that resulted from the study were the addition of a text-based summary of our videos, and clearer video labels. Over the next few weeks we made incremental changes to the template so what we released would be as clear and usable as possible.
Two weeks ago we released an updated version of the Contacts Template. Our satisfaction scores shot up 64%! The team is pretty excited. People especially like the new video help. Here’s what folks are saying about the videos:
I learned the basic steps in Access. Now I can play a little with the program so I can learn much more about it. I have been struggling with how to add to the information but watching the video solved my problems It makes getting started easier Awesome! Short and concise yet detailed enough to give insight as to the functionality capabilities. I think I can do this! Anytime I can visually see how to----it simplifies the learning process. Thanks The hard to find but essential techniques was demonstrated in very good detail. (means, no more hair pulling and stress on my part) Thanks!! Thanks!! I learn better from SEEING something done,
Office Pro 2010 Key, and this was most definitely helpful!!
Don’t take other people’s word for it. Check out the template here and the videos.
Using the Contacts Database Modify the Contacts database
More important than the positive words about the videos and the NPS increase for the template is the overall impact or research has had on the product. The last question we asked in our feedback form was whether users would recommend Access to a friend. This isn’t rating the template anymore, but rather the overall experience with Access after using the template. The NPS score we derived from this improved 35% after releasing the new template!
Here are the three things we took away from our experience redesigning the contacts template:
Listen: Listen to a broad range of customers and ask for feedback.
Iterate: When you think you have a great design, make it even better. Then make it better again. Educate: Remember the Chinese proverb, “give a man a fish and he’ll eat for a day; teach a man to fish and he’ll eat for a lifetime?” It’s true. Help is a feature and should be accessible and comprehensible no matter the user’s skill level. Sometimes making a feature more opaque isn’t the best way to go. Instead, try to teach users how to make the most of your application and be transparent about how things work rather than adding unnecessary layers of abstraction.
If you are looking for ways to apply this to your own applications, consider the addition of a feedback form, an NPS score calculation and connect with people who struggle with your product. Also, before you release a feature, do ad-hoc usability testing. Ask a friend or co-worker to perform a few tasks; and watch where they click, what confuses them and what makes them happy. Finally, make help a part of your application by adding videos – the Office Labs Community Clips recorder is a great tool for this.
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