Measuring Tech Savviness

What is tech savviness? While it might be hard to define, you probably know someone whom you consider tech savvy—they might even be your go-to person for solving tech issues. Or maybe you know people who aren’t tech savvy and struggle with all technology. But why should UX researchers care? The concept of tech savviness

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49 UX Metrics, Methods, and Measurement Articles from 2021

Happy New Year from all of us at MeasuringU®! In 2021 we posted 49 articles and welcomed several new clients to our UX testing platform MUIQ®, where we continue to add new features to reduce the friction in developing studies. We hosted our eighth UX Measurement Bootcamp, again as a virtual event. Going virtual still

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Sliders versus Eleven-Point Numeric Scales on Desktop and Mobile Devices

Adding more points to a scale can increase its reliability and sensitivity. But more points also take up additional screen real-estate space. Imagine twenty or a hundred points displayed on desktop or, even worse, on mobile. One recent digital alternative, allowing for nuanced ratings using the same screen real-estate as a traditional scale, is the

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Select-All-That-Apply versus Yes/No Forced Choice Items

Do you have a Netflix subscription? Do you have a Hulu subscription? Which of the following services do you have a subscription to? Netflix Hulu Disney+ Peacock HBO Max Will you get a different percent of Netflix or Hulu selections if you ask the first form of the question compared to the second one? If

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Sliders versus Five-Point Numeric Scales on Desktop and Mobile Devices

When it comes to collecting numeric ratings in online surveys, there is a definite allure to using sliders rather than the more common numeric scales with radio buttons. It just seems like you should get higher-quality measurements with sliders. Sliders give respondents many more response options, and they appear more engaging than multipoint scales. The

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How to Estimate SUS Using the UX-Lite

If you build it, they will come. That may work for a field of dreams. But when it comes to software and products, if you want people to stay and use the product, it had better be useful and usable. Or, at least, the users should think that it will be useful and usable. That’s

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Evolution of the UX-Lite

What makes a product successful? How does a new technology get adopted? Whether business software, a mobile app, or a physical product, there are plenty of examples of products that had a lot of promise but failed, and others that many consider a success. Plenty of books expound theories on developing a successful product (e.g.,

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Do People Use All Available Response Options?

Researchers love to argue about the “right” number of points to use in a rating scale response option. Is the right number five, seven, three, ten, or eleven? The opinions often exceed the data for helping drive the decisions. When there are data, they are often hard to generalize, or they don’t really support the

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For Statistical Significance, Must p Be < .05?

If you know even just a little about statistics, you know that the value .05 is special. When the p-value obtained from conducting a statistical test falls below .05, it typically gets a special designation we call statistically significant. This is the conventional threshold for publishing findings in academic journals, and consequently, it is ascribed

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The UMUX-Lite Usefulness Item: Assessing a “Useful” Alternate

When Kraig Finstad (2010) developed the Usability Metric for User Experience (UMUX), his goal was to replace the ten-item System Usability Scale (SUS, a popular measure of perceived usability) with a shorter questionnaire that would (1) correlate highly with the SUS and (2) have item content related to the ISO 9241 Part 11 international standard,

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