User Experience Designer

Have you ever wondered that how is iOS or Android so user friendly? Its not only the hard work of the developers but there is backhand which rarely anyone knows. They are the User Experience Designer.
User experience designers focus on how users interact with the design, rather than focusing on the look and feel of the website. User experience designers focus on usability of the design, making sure that the users face as few issues as possible while using the design. They usually create prototypes and blueprints of the design, to understand how users use the design. They are responsible for all the interactions that take place on a design right from basic interactions like clicking on a button
At their most basic level, any product—be it an iPhone or Website—can be categorized in one of two ways: user-friendly or not so much. It’s the job of the user experience designer to make sure that any product on his or her roster always falls into that former category. This means making sure that a customer’s interaction with a product or technology is always a pleasant—both from an aesthetic and technological standpoint.
For any product to sell there is a USP (Unique Selling Proposition) but except that as a device as a whole GUI is one of the most important aspect. It is one of the most difficult job. To categorize the graphic interface and above all to think like what the consumer or the user will expect from the device or the website.
User experience design (UXD or UED) is the process of enhancing user satisfaction by improving the usability, accessibility, and pleasure provided in the interaction between the user and the product. User experience design encompasses traditional human–computer interaction (HCI) design, and extends it by addressing all aspects of a product or service as perceived by users.
There are many points through which a User Experience Designer has to examine –
  1.  Visual design
  2.  Information
  3.  Structuring, organization, and labeling
  4.  Finding and managing
  5.  Interaction design
  6.  Usability
  7.  Accessibility
  8.  Human–computer interaction

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