Edit
Contact us
Salocin Group Leaders in data and AI-enabled connected customer experiences
Edit Engineers of connected customer experiences
Join the Dots Independent, data-led media thinking for sustainable growth
Wood for Trees Optimisers of future fundraising performance
  • Home
  • Our services
    • Cloud solutions
    • Data science
    • Modern Data Platform
    • Privacy and AI compliance
  • Our partners
    • Apteco
    • Creatio
    • Microsoft
    • Salesforce
  • Our insights
    • Blog
    • Case studies
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • Whitepapers
  • About Salocin Group
    • Careers
  • Contact Salocin Group
  • Home
  • Who we are
    • B Corp
    • Careers
  • Our work
  • What we do
    • Intelligent data
    • Marketing technology
    • Transformational CRM
    • Our technology partners
    • Privacy review
  • Our insights
    • Blog
    • Case studies
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • Whitepapers
  • Contact Edit
  • Home
  • Broadcast media
  • Digital media
  • Print
    • Direct mail
  • Data
    • Our work with Herdify
    • EPiC
  • Media agency
  • Our insights
    • Blog
    • Case studies
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • Whitepapers
  • About Join the Dots
    • Careers
  • Contact Join the Dots
  • Home
  • Services
    • Actionable insight
    • Data discovery
    • Data engineering
    • Data hygiene
    • Privacy review
  • Products
    • InsightHub
    • Apteco
    • Microsoft
    • Data management
    • Consent and preference management
  • Our insights
    • Blog
    • Case studies
    • Reports
    • Webinars
    • Whitepapers
  • About Wood for Trees
    • Operating principles
    • Careers
  • Contact Wood for Trees
Blog

A quickfire introduction to UX

By Edit | 22 Mar 2019

We hear the term UX thrown around a lot these days – but what exactly is it?

According to Don Norman and Jackob Nielson’s definition of UX: “User Experience encompasses all aspects of the end-user’s interaction with the company, its services, and its products.”

That sounds tidy, but what does it actually mean? When you begin to explore UX in more detail, it quickly reveals itself to be a complex field that has its own specialist areas.

There are different UX processes across different companies and industries. In the marketing world, UX is how somebody feels at the point in which they interact with your system, product, service or company.

Putting UX in context

When looking at UX through the lens of websites and digital marketing, you might ask

  • How does it look? (Is it trustworthy, credible, harmonious?)
  • How does it feel? (Was it a joy to use? Did it react to your interaction?)
  • Did it prevent you from making errors? (Was it functional, did it meet your individual needs, how predictable was it?)

If you look at your website and are receiving negative answers to these questions, you probably need to reconsider the overall user experience, in order to better service your existing and new customers. The impact of this goes way beyond basic interactions with your website.

These seemingly insignificant experiences play a vital role in the user’s perception of your brand, product, or service. You need to look at your UX holistically and design with your users in mind, considering their wants and needs at each touchpoint.

Why is this important?

A positive user experience promotes trust and loyalty to your brand and ultimately allows you to achieve your business goals.

How do we achieve a better UX?

Depending on your brand and your website, aspects of user experience can be subjective, making it almost impossible to define what a ‘good’ user experience is. However, adhering to some basics can go a long way in helping you define a better user experience for your customers.

  • Competitor analysis: A review of the competitor landscape will highlight the positive and negative elements of their products and services.
  • Heuristic analysis: A heuristic evaluation of the current product or service, focusing on its usability.
  • User testing: Capturing what your users are doing using video, audio, and screen recording can give you priceless insight of actual users using your product or service.
  • Personas: A representation of the different users who will be using your product or service, understanding their motivations, technical limitations, and pain points (to name a few).
  • User surveys: Ask users for their feedback about engaging with your site, such as how they felt carrying out a specific task or what elements they might have found to be confusing.
  • Wireframes: Help you define the structure of your pages in terms of layout and hierarchy of content, allowing you to iterate and develop the pages early on.
  • Prototyping: Interactive prototypes allow your product come to life, meaning you can test how well users respond to the system and make iterations as you go.
  • Testing: However you choose to test, one of the most important things to is test your solution with its intended audience – what seems obvious to you and your team might be missed by the people that matter.
  • Visual design: The visual design helps define the user experience and should consider many principles such as unity, space, hierarchy, contrast, similarity etc.
  • You’ve most likely heard of several of these processes but perhaps never made the connection to UX, and therefore you’ve probably already made a start!
  • This is just the tip of the iceberg – there are many more UX tasks you can execute, depending what’s required for your specific project. It might be the case that one individual is responsible, or there might be several specialists involved.
  • The most important thing to remember is that it all feeds into a common goal of creating a better experience for your customers. This can only be achieved by working with them and continually improving your offering by creating intuitive, engaging, and memorable experiences for your users, which will set you apart from your competitors.

If you need help defining your UX, find out how our media team can help you or check out our blogs for more expert insight and tips about design.

Share this

  • Email
  • WhatsApp
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X (Twitter)

More insights

AI isn’t going to take your job (unless you really want it to) 
Blog

AI isn’t going to take your job (unless you really want it to) 

By Edit | 18 Jun 2024
Customer relationship marketing: How generative AI is revolutionising engagement  
Blog

Customer relationship marketing: How generative AI is revolutionising engagement  

By Edit | 4 Apr 2024
Personalisation as a process
Blog

Personalisation as a process

By Edit | 8 Mar 2024
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookie policy
  • Ts&Cs
  • Report a concern

© 2025 Edit, part of Salocin Group Ltd. All rights reserved. Company no.: 0362​4881. VAT no.: 4208​34911.

Salocin Group Certified B Corporation | Cyber Essentials Certified | British Assessment Bureau, ISO 27001 Information Security Management
Salocin Group
Your cookie preferences

We use cookies to ensure this website functions properly, to analyse website traffic and for marketing purposes.

Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}