Design Ethics
The principles and guidelines that govern the moral and ethical aspects of design, ensuring that designs are socially responsible and beneficial.
The principles and guidelines that govern the moral and ethical aspects of design, ensuring that designs are socially responsible and beneficial.
A statistical rule stating that nearly all values in a normal distribution (99.7%) lie within three standard deviations (sigma) of the mean.
A decision-making tool that helps prioritize tasks or projects based on specific criteria, such as impact and effort.
A technique used to prioritize product features based on the potential impact on customer satisfaction and business goals.
The practice of guiding and inspiring teams to create effective, user-centered design solutions that align with business goals.
Jobs-To-Be-Done (JTBD) is a framework that focuses on understanding the tasks users are trying to accomplish with a product, emphasizing their goals and motivations over product features.
A tree-like model of decisions and their possible consequences, used in data mining and machine learning for both classification and regression tasks.
Anchoring (also known as Focalism) is a cognitive bias where individuals rely heavily on the first piece of information (the "anchor") when making decisions.
The process of evaluating a product by testing it with real users to gather feedback and identify usability issues.