šµļø It Invites Curiosity & Fact-Finding
I do a lot of site planning for new websites that come into the agency. Creating logical paths is one of my joyful work tasks--blending my research skills with my love for organization.
Iām not fun at parties, but I can design a beeeeautiful site architecture for you.
I study the audiences, do the homework, and then hand my recommendations to a UI/UX or growth strategist to review them together.
And thatās when they mercilessly attack my work.
- Who are the site audiences?
- How much insight do you really have?
- What is the problem we solve for each audience?
- What are they scared of? What do they want?
- How does this let them do it faster?
- Did you consider doing it this complete opposite way?
My teammates arenāt jerks; theyāre on a fact-finding mission. They ask the questions a user would ask to make sense of what theyāre looking at.
That process reminds me a lot of Markās singular KPI. And it's what happens when the customer's primary goal becomes your primary goal. You get new permission to be curious on their behalf. To dig deeper and to understand what, why, and how they want what they want.
If you've ever worked with Overit, you know what's how we approach our projects. And it's just fun.
š It Opens the Wacky KPI Door
The thing I'm most appreciative of about Mark's comment? It got me thinking about all the other missing metrics I wish I could get my hands on. Some of these I could work with my growth marketing team to make happen, but others are, well, they're more complicated.
Like what, you ask?
- # of times a website has been screenshot and sent to someone in either amusement or disdain
- # of times our content appears printed and taped to someoneās office wall for easy reference
- # of times our brand name appears next to a string of heart emojis in someoneās text history
- The odds someone would recognize our brand voice in a dark room
- # of times interacting with us has improved someone's mood or helped them feel more in control
- # of times someone emailed our stuff to a colleague with the phrase āhey, you might find this helpfulā
What would this tell me? It might establish some new Happiness KPIs.
Not for your happiness. Your customerās happiness.
It might reveal whether my customers are doing more than just walking the path I've laid out, but if they feel better for having made the trip.
Happier people buy and use our produces and services more often. That's not clever. It's obvious.
* * * *
What trackable or untrackable thing do you wish you knew?
It can be kinda fun to plot them out.
Thanks for getting this far. I'll be back in two weeks.