
Chris Preimesberger0













Q2: To what extent is the importance of intuitive, user-friendly software and hardware in daily practice when working from home or at a remote location? Are the tools we now have considered user-friendly enough?

David Gewirtz
A2: Sigh. That depends. Power users will always create the environment they need. And some folks will always have a hard time "getting it" and need some form of semi-divine (or at least IT) intervention.
(edited)

David Gewirtz
A2: Zoom also offered a generous free version, so folks can adopt it and get up and running with it fast and without making a big buy decision.

Chris Preimesberger
I think that's why the man at Cisco Systems left to start up Zoom--had to do a lot of with UX!

Gorka Sadowski
A2 -- user expectation will never be the same after the iPhone and Android apps. Users are less and less willing to have big learning curves, convenience is more key... problem is, security has not always been following...

David Gewirtz
A2: Chris, also keep in mind that the cloud (in the form of SaaS apps) has made WFH far more doable. That's kind of UX, because many people just continued to do at home what they did at work. Gmail is Gmail.

Daniel Graves
A2: Modern intuitive consumer experiences set the bar, fairly or not. People acting as employees or customers or partners for any business want the same level of ease of use they experience when ordering an Uber, Venmoing money to a friend, or checking an insurance claim status.

Gorka Sadowski
A2 -- what is kinda new though, is how permeable the frontier is. Meaning, while before it was tolerated that "corporate" tools were a pain to use compared to personal tools, that is not the case anymore

Daniel Graves
A2: And why do enterprises care? Because superior digital experiences that are easy to use translate directly to customer acquisition and customer retention.

David Gewirtz
A2: I'll give you a historical perspective. Back in the dark ages before the cloud, i had a top-performing sales person. She got married and moved across the country.…

David Gewirtz
A2: ...Today, that wouldn't change anything, but then we lost her as a salesperson because our CRM was LAN based and locked on-premise.

Gorka Sadowski
A2 -- this expectation is creating lots of pressure on security. "Security" was not used to having to be user friendly, but now has to get on with the program :)

Vineet Jain
@DavidGewirtz That sounds so ancient :)

David Gewirtz
@CloudNotEnough It was. I have gray hair. :)

Daniel Graves
A2: "user friendly enough" is a rising tide, and successful companies will invest in UX heavily, always raising the bar and using it as a competitive differentiator.


