Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Junior Padel Cup

Junior Padel Cup is a competition for the young padel players.


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Hencework

Hencework is a UI design & development agency from India. We create Premium Bootstrap Web Templates. We also help enterprises in designing innovative & intuitive custom dashboard interfaces. UI/UX design solutions tailored to your business.


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Honcho

Not just pretty websites


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How Analytics Helped Solve a UX Issue

How Analytics Helped Solve a UX Issue

UX and analytics make a great team. Your website analytics can give you insights enabling you to learn about your users, track their journeys, and find potential problem areas. You can use the quantitative data to inform your qualitative UX approach. Remember, your analytics tell you what’s happening on your website, while UX techniques such as usability testing will help uncover why things are happening.

There are various ways that Google Analytics can be used to uncover how your users are navigating your website. Within the Pages report you can drill down to see how users are navigating to, and from, a selected page in your website. But the User Flow and Behavior Flow reports give more information on multi-step journeys from your most popular landing pages onwards.

user/behavior flow in google analytics

These reports can be hard to analyze, particularly for large websites, due to the fact that there are unlikely to be a series of clear pathways through your website. You’ll find that there are huge numbers of paths that different users can take, which makes finding insights from these reports quite challenging. However, they can be useful for getting a good top-level overview and showing the most dominant pathways through a site. While they suffer from grouping multiple pages, you can often get a good idea of the most common journeys taken by users.

One example of how I’ve used these reports in the past to inform my UX work has been looking out for pogo sticking.

Pogo Sticking

Pogo sticking describes where users bounce between two pages on a website instead of progressing their journey through the site. It can be a sign of confusion on the users’ part and is unlikely to help you convert those users.

The Nielson/Norman group wrote this guide to pogo sticking, which explains it in more detail. It covers some possible reasons behind pogo sticking behavior, and also gives some potential solutions to these problems.

The post How Analytics Helped Solve a UX Issue appeared first on SitePoint.


by Daniel Schwarz via SitePoint

People Do Not Trust Internet Because of Facebook and Twitter, Revealed a Study

Many Internet users are not comfortable sharing their personal information on social media platforms, revealed a new study by CIGI and Ipsos, based on over 25,000 users from all over the world. 81 percent of the participants in the survey are not a fan of the internet, as they do not trust it and...

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by Aqsa Rasool via Digital Information World

How to Add a Slider to WordPress With a Free Plugin

The Future Of WiFi Is Here (infographic)

Ninety years ago, Nicola Tesla predicted that one day soon people would be walking around with devices in their vest pockets that would allow them to communicate wirelessly with other people across the world. Just about the only thing his prediction got wrong was that vests aren’t terribly popular...

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by Web Desk via Digital Information World