This application idea culminates several other potential design solutions and fulfills the stakeholder need of incentivizing alumni to remain active with the GlobalTIES organization. It features a rewards program feature within the app providing active Global TIES discounts at local businesses, and incremental tiers encourage alumni to become more active to earn more rewards while also allowing users to remain up to date on GlobalTIES news and information.
user research, user interview, market research, persona, wireframing, prototyping, wizard of oz mock-up
Global TIES is an organization that seeks to provides students with the opportunity to work together with local organizations in San Diego and those around the world, providing solutions for problems immediately relevant to those in need. However once students in the Global TIES program leave and/or graduate, the Global TIES program loses contact with them because they only can reach them via their UC San Diego email, which is deactivated upon graduation. Thus having a solution to allow former students to remain in contact with the program will provide Global TIES with the potential of a vast alumni network which could be used as potential resource for incoming students. Through interviews with the Global TIES staff and former and current students in the Global TIES program we believe that the user needs some sort of way to connect with the Global TIES program as an alumni that is easy to use and incentives that are compelling enough that they would remain active as a Global TIES member.
In order to hit the ground running we created a Gantt Chart that organizes our key tasks and sets concrete goals and checkpoints to help us plan out the design process over a 10 week period.
We also generated a Network Chart to visualize and map out critical paths in our design plan.
Global TIES alumni needs a network of post-graduation support because the current Global TIES community lacks sufficient resources to with current students in the program and with other alumni.
From the information gained through the research with our stakeholders I put together the following personas to aid us in further defining our target user group.
In conjunction with the personas we formed I developed an empathy map to further understand the target user group from a generalized perspective as and also created a list of need and insights that we must address.
In order to best serve our stakeholders in addressing their problem, we needed to gain insight into existing designs through market analysis.
I compiled a list of contact information for alumni of the GlobalTIES program as well as current participants of the program and attempted to contact them in order to conduct interviews which would grant us further understanding of the user needs. I followed the guidelines we put together on the User Reserch Plan shown earlier.
Example Interview
From our conversations with stakeholders, what we learned through market analysis, and the user interviews we performed we were able to establish the following design requirements.
Core Needs: Alumni are not up to date with Global TIES news.
Core Needs: Alumni need a place to access news and information in order to stay engaged with Global TIES.
Core Needs: Alumni need a way to receive frequent updates on Global TIES news through convenient means.
Core Needs: Alumni are too busy to stay connected with Global TIES. They need a quick and convenient way to stay updated on news and events, so they can figure out how to contribute to the organization.
Core Needs: Alumni lack incentive for staying engaged with the Global TIES program. They need something to represent their contributions.
We established a list of criteria using the information we gained from user research and mettings with our stakeholders. Using these criteria we evaluated each of our design concepts in order to narrow down the top concepts to expand on.
After evaluating our concepts we culminated several features into the application concept which rated most highly. Notably the rewards program, newsletter and an option to connect through social media.
We established that the application would use a tab format where users can switch between pages, similar to Facebook or Twitter, with the following screens.
With the user flow that we established I created the following wireframes so that we could better visualize our design solution.
Together with stakeholders we compiled a breakdown estimating the implementation cost of our solution in order to gauge feasibility. It was determined to be a realistic solution by the GlobalTIES staff.
A higher fidelity prototype was created in order to help us gain a better sense of how the application would look on a phone screen and work on a mock-up that can be tested and shown to stakeholders.
Using InVision we created a Wizard of Oz mockup to simulate the finished application which can be accessed below.
Our design solution, because it is in the form of a mobile app, requires the expertise of software developers and Global TIES administrators in order to form an effective, robust, and maintainable solution. We estimate that it will take about two weeks to produce a minimum viable product if a team of developers is working about twenty hours a week, which comes out to forty hours total. They will need proper development environments and server space to host their app. Because the solution is a mobile app, teams will create the Alumni Engagement App for both Android and iOS phones. For Android phones, the main development environment will be Android Studio, while for iOS it will be XCode. Databases will be stored using mySQL, because it is maintainable and widely used by engineers. This app will have to be hosted on a server space, such as Amazon Web Services. These servers will be priced depending on the number of the users on the app, most likely less than $30/month (https://calculator.s3.amazonaws.com/index.html). The architecture of the application should be implemented as follows. Users will have the same set of front-end page templates, which will then be populated with the personal information of each Global TIES Alumni member. Each user will have their own account, whose information should be stored on a database on an encrypted server. The application will then pull data from that server any time the member’s account is updated. In addition to personal information, the Global TIES Alumni app will have a feed of updates where users will be updated of new events, such as a new project being started by alumni, newsletter features, or a new vendor in the rewards program. The algorithms to produce this information will be stored on the back-end servers as well, which will responsible for generating content, tracking app usage metrics, and generating codes for the rewards program.
For the name of the application we settled upon the name Engagineers for the application due to the mission of the GlobalTIES program encouraging "engineers" to "engage" with communities.
After experimenting with several designs I settled upon the following logo design, resenbling a shape with a wrench subtracted which symbolizes the "engineering" aspect. It is designed to be reminiscent of the letters "E" and "G".
I designed an alternate logo should our stakeholders want to simply use the name of their organization, GlobalTIES.
Out team worked together with the Global TIES staff team in order to tackle the issue regarding lack of alumni connections with former Global TIES students after their graduation. We believe that our final solution, a Global TIES mobile phone application, will allow Global TIES to remain a somewhat relevant part of the alumni’s life even as they leave the Global TIES program and UC San Diego. While this solution may not be the ultimate panacea to improving the Global TIES network, we believe that this will at least build up the trust between alumni and the program, which is key if the program wants to continue to reach out to these former students. Through interviews with Global TIES staff, current and former Global TIES students, we believe the key user needs for a solution include that some form of incentive system to reward the alumni for remaining involved with the Global TIES program, a way to build a network of current and former Global TIES staff and students, and a way to keep alumni up to date with current Global TIES projects. Our proposed solution, a mobile phone application was the culmination of several concept ideas originally proposed separately. This final application idea fulfills the user need of incentivizing users to remain active, as the included rewards program feature within the app provides active Global TIES discounts at local businesses, and several tiers encourage alumni to become more active to earn more rewards. The home page feed on the home tab of the app provides access to articles regarding current Global TIES projects so that users can stay up to date with the projects current Global TIES members are involved in. Lastly, the My Network tab in the application allows users to build their professional Global TIES network with current staff and alumni. The phone application is simple and its interface matches the interface of many other well known applications and should be relatively simple to use. Going forward, we believe that in order for the application to work towards improving alumni relations, alumni have to actually install the app on their phones in order for these relationships between alumni and the Global TIES program to form. One such way of doing this would be to heavily promote the app, through social media channels such as Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Global TIES could also consider encouraging current Global TIES students to install and log in to the application to ensure that when current students become alumni, Global TIES will already have these students’ contact information. We stress patience when rolling out the application to alumni and future students, as the Global TIES will have to build their alumni network from scratch.