Summary: Understanding and getting the right tasks represented in your design is critical to all UX. Usability and ease of use are measured by successful task completion. Supporting context of use is equally as critical because tasks live within user contexts of use. Task-centered design is an essential approach that all good UX must follow. Why? Because Task is King! But remember that tasks live within contexts. That’s why Context is Queen!
In UX ‘Task is King’ and ‘Context is Queen’- Frank Spillers, CEO Experience Dynamics, pictured below
Tasks, or “jobs to be done” (JTBD), are those aspects of use that dictate how users interact with systems. They are behaviors, actions, and interactions ultimately. Discovering the right task for your user is the priority in UX Design. It is critical because, without solving the right problem (task), you will be stuck in a feature frenzy. Without user motivation and needs represented in your interface or experience– you end up trying to educate, train or coax a user into your model of the world, not theirs.
It is important to understand your user’s mental model, what problems they are trying to solve, and what makes sense to them. These are their tasks.
Tasks are also how we measure success with product or serviceusability. Usability testing (“user testing”) is the most common way to assess system usability. The primary metric is, you guessed it, successful task completion. Can users complete their tasks? (Capture: Yes, No, Partial success)
So it is for these reasons that Task is King! The next logical question is, how do you discover that you represent the right task in your user interface (UI)?
Context shows us where all those tasks occur and under what conditions. Conditions include time or temporal constraints, social constraints (called sociability) and emotional value. Time may be embedded in any of these contextual scenarios.
How do we discover what the task and context is in UX?
Tasks and context are interlinked. To understand user tasks, we explore the Context of Use. This is also called the ‘problem space’ instead of the solution space, where tasks get translated into UI solutions.
All good UX Designers know: Stop and define the right tasks before designing anything
Context of use means understanding where, how, why, when, and under what conditions (environmental, physical, social, temporal, emotional) your product, service, or interface will be experienced or used. The following analogy of a suggestion, “Work from anywhere,” does not match the focus required for productivity or its opposite relaxation.
The popular “work remotely from the beach” meme (used for years in the early mobile smartphone advertising industry) was just plain misleading and wrong. Sand in your laptop? Salt, sand, and water damage to your phone? Stress while trying to take in the beach view? On your phone solving work tasks while your child tries to play with you? The context does not support the task! Beaches are for relaxing and enjoying yourself, your family, or nature– they are not for working, especially with a laptop. p.s. I should know I have tried ‘beach productivity’ many times—Trust me, don’t do it, or even pretend to do it!
The ‘beach productivity’ meme is a good reminder that understanding the context of your task dictates how you understand the experience. Only then can you model it properly with Interaction Design.
So, context is critical to understand because it shapes experience. Context is the container that lives around your tasks. Try to support a user task without supporting its rightful context, and you may end up missing the “supporting cast” or features that make the task a complete solution for the user.
Context research (field studies, ethnography, contextual inquiry) is where innovation in UX comes from. The grandfather of Human Centered Design, Don Norman, once said, ‘Ease of use is the easy part; it’s desirability that really matters’. Desirability refers to getting the right tasks–user motivational and needs— then making those tasks easy to use.
Understanding desirability comes from understanding context of use. What does somebody need, under what contextual conditions, to support the task?
Ask these 12 Questions to tease out Tasks and Context
But first, get evidence-based answers via User Research (real-world insights, observations, and data). That’s Ethnography first, user testing later.
Next, measure your success based on how well your design supports and satisfies the tasks and context. Again user testing can determine this easily.
Ask:
What is the user’s task?
Is this the right task?
What about other users? (And: Who are those users or personas?)
Do we know if the tasks we are designing for are based on actual user motivations/pain points/ needs?
How do users do this today?
When do they perform this task? (In the flow or at a time/place)
Where do users perform this task?
With whom do users perform this task?
What are users trying to do, when they perform this task?
What do they need while they are performing this task?
How do users currently problem-solve this task?
Why are users doing things one way or another?
Conclusion
First, tasks or JTBD are very important in UX decisions, including evaluating the experience of a product or service. Tasks are those behaviors we are supporting, designing for, and influencing with UI elements, features, and functionality. Tasks rule UX. Good UX means user tasks were understood by designers, product managers, and developers and represented with an appropriate and easy-to-use interface. Next, context is equally vital and dictates the proper direction of task-oriented design. A task must support its context of use.
Frank Spillers, MS, is founder of Experience Dynamics, a leading UX and Service Design consultancy. Frank is one of the world’s most in-demand UX consultants. He’s an Inclusive Design evangelist, and expert in Accessibility, Emotion Design, VR/AR, Cross-cultural Design and UX Management. Frank brings 25 years experience as a Sr UX Director and Service Design leader. He has lifted conversion rates by 88% and enhanced revenue by 300% for firms like Nike, Intel, Microsoft, City of New York, Johnson and Johnson, Global Disability Rights Now!, Four Seasons, Capital One, World Bank, Women Enabled International, and many more.
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