Imagine you are walking in a very thick forest without a guide map. Every step you take feels like a lucky guess, and there are high chances that you might lose your way. Now, think of a product the user will use, but without the user's experience, it is the same as the forest with no guide map.
User mapping has the role of the guide map in the forest, and thus, the designers can easily walk the users through their journey using user mapping.
It is a methodology of visualizing how a person uses a product or service. It helps the designers understand who are the users, what they are doing, and how they feel at each step.
Touchpoints are instances of interaction with your product by the users. App registration or button selection is one of the examples.
Pain Points are the things that users complain about. For example, it may take too long to load a page, or if a button is hard to find.
Think of it like you are going hiking with a guide map that will guide you about the wrong paths and the faster route. Without it, you are wasting your time and feeling frustrated. The user map does the same; it helps designers to find the problems earlier before they become major issues.
For instance, a food delivery app design team during the user mapping process noticed that the user had trouble finding the checkout button. This helped them to quickly identify the pain point and make the necessary changes.
There are different types of User Maps, each with their own goals. It works just like having different maps for different places.
Journey Mapping: It is a road map that shows the entire process that one will go through in order to complete a certain task.
Example: A pizza ordering example found out the following: searching the menu, choosing a pizza, adding it to a cart, and getting the purchase completed.
Empathy Mapping: It is more about what users think, how they feel, and what they would want at various times of the journey.
For example, people who are using the fitness app may experience irritation or confusion during the first phase of using it.
Experience Mapping: It covers everything that includes how users relate to the brand.
Example: A journey of a consumer from the moment of seeing the ad to buying the product online. It shows the bigger picture including the link between the users and the brand. In simple words: The shopper's path from seeing an advertisement to purchasing a product online.
Service Blueprinting: It focuses on the internal mechanisms that create the user experience.
Example: The way a delivery company organizes its kitchen, customer care, and drivers to ensure the process keeps running smoothly.
Let's say you are developing an application for people to order their tasks by the day easily. The next step is what user mapping could give your work:
Consider a typical coffee shop app in which you can pay for your drinks in advance to avoid the hassle.
Rapid user mapping and simplified templates can be accomplished purely by atomic design. Let’s say that you already have a library of buttons, navigation bars, and icons that you can bring in from it. The strategy of reusability allows for the use of the same components which you can tune if you need to fulfil the desired outcome and it will save your time accordingly without a big shift.
For instance, you can tell a user has trouble with checking out simply because they can't find the representative button. You can in this situation modify one single button for the whole product which will save you time and the layout will be consistent.
User mapping is not just a task but its a complete set of strategy. It’s about the user's path, finding their pain points, and making the user experience as smooth as possible. As you need a map to guide you through the forest, you need a user map to visualize and design your project.
The user map is a skill that will help you connect with your users on a deeper level, solving their problems and making the interface of the design more interactive and engaging. Therefore, take your map and start designing the way to achieve success. 🌍