ICE Scoring Model
Impact, Confidence, and Ease of implementation (ICE) is a prioritization framework used in product management to evaluate features.
Impact, Confidence, and Ease of implementation (ICE) is a prioritization framework used in product management to evaluate features.
A behavioral economics model that explains decision-making as a conflict between a present-oriented "doer" and a future-oriented "planner".
The process of comparing design metrics to historical performance, competitive standards, or industry best practices to identify areas for improvement.
Location, Alphabet, Time, Category, and Hierarchy (LATCH) is a framework for categorizing information.
A framework for designing habit-forming products that includes four phases: Trigger, Action, Variable Reward, and Investment.
The process of creating representations of how users will interact with a system, including the flow of interactions and the overall experience.
A framework that combines multiple theories to explain and predict behavior, focusing on intention, knowledge, skills, environmental constraints, and habits.
A prioritization framework used in product management to evaluate features based on Reach, Impact, Confidence, and Effort.
Model-View-Controller (MVC) is an architectural pattern that separates an application into three main logical components: the Model (data), the View (user interface), and the Controller (processes that handle input).