Autor: sajolida Data: A: Public mailing list about the Tails project Assumpte: Re: [Tails-project] Learning from users
intrigeri: > sajolida:
>> intrigeri:
>>> In square brackets I'll add some comments of mine wrt.
>>> how we're doing.
>>>
>>> 1. It's important to have communication channels with users, and to
>>> process their feedback [I miss the reports from help desk to -dev@
>>> that were meant to help developers understand what the user experience
>>> looks like.] Some feedback could be prioritized, e.g. what comes
>>> from trainers.
>>
>> It's part of the objectives of the ticketing system for our help desk to
>> improve on the feedback loop with developers, be able to inspect better
>> singular problems and also aggregate data on which issues are the most
>> common, the most painful, etc.
>
> Cool. Indeed, it would be amazing if frontdesk could flag each report
> with the relevant ticket IDs, FAQ entries, doc pages that the user
> didn't find, etc.; this would help us *a lot* focusing our work on
> what matters most (keeping in mind the next topic, i.e. not putting
> 100% of our efforts to satisfy the needs of the most verbose members
> of our *current* user base).
+1
>>> 3. It's useful to *also* gather general, non-bug feedback. [Do we
>>> advertise any way to do that?] One way to gather this would be a blog
>>> post about the state of the project that says we are looking for
>>> feedback and asks very few questions (with an end date):
>>>
>>> * what's the most painful aspect of Tails for you?
>>> * what's the part of Tails you love most?
>>
>> See "Intercept Interviews" in the Needfinding framwork of Second Muse
>> [2]. Practicing this and gathering some first feedback is part of my big
>> objectives for my next conference (IFF probably). I'm sure yet but I'll
>> try to have a way of making these public, after anonymizing and getting
>> consent from the interviewees.
>
> Excellent! (although this doesn't address the need to get non-bug
> feedback from our broader user base, that I don't expect will be
> fairly represented at IFF)
Right and I think that's complementary. Talking face-to-face with people
would give a better idea of what kind of people they are and allow
asking for clarification or complementary information.
I mentioned IFF but I want to get used to doing that everywhere (at
conferences but also when meeting users elsewhere).
Another idea I had was to survey about the usage of our main features or
embedded software together with bits of demographics. Anyway, all of
this is somehow complementary and should be considered background UX
work. I'm glad to see you're interested in this :)