I am now designing a small and beautiful management tool, so I am struggling to "innovate ". The word "Innovation" has been abused, but I really want to make some innovation.
Web-based enterprise applications, such as CRM, project management, OA, and other software, have developed over the past decade and the so-called theory has developed, but constitute the application UI and Human-Computer Interaction methods, almost unchanged. Do you understand what I mean? Do not understand? I mean, for example, you have to register before using an application (even if it is for trial use) and log on to the application. The logon page elements are also basically fixed (including accounts, passwords, and forgotten passwords ...).
Still not clear? For another example, to close a pop-up page, you need to move the mouse to the close button or icon to exit. What then? Click!
These "take for granted" phenomena and interaction methods are almost unchanged.
Are these taken for granted? When I ask you, you may hesitate and take it for granted. Of course, you need to register first, of course you need to log on, of course you need to click the button, of course...
I will ask you again. Are these taken for granted?
Have you hesitated? Especially if you are here to apply for a product manager, you may think: I cannot answer this question directly, otherwise it seems that I have no innovative thinking.
Some time ago, I saw someone writing new ideas that do not require logon on 36kr. Today I still saw an article translated from abroad on 36kr, the idea is that "registration is required before a user trial" is a poor user experience.
I have thought about all this and made it. The test item is domyPP.com: A small and beautiful project management application.
My product was originally designed just as basecamp revolutionizes traditional project management products in terms of user experience. I want to make some innovations in user experience. Speaking of this, if you try domyPP.com right away, you may say, what are you talking about? How can you make any innovations? This reminds me of the fact that I tried basecamp for a long time, and I don't seem to think it's a big deal.
This is because, at the beginning, you and I did not really understand the product details.
The specific content has been published in the Proceedings magazine December 2013:
Http://www.csdn.net/article/2013-11-26/2817621
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