1 / 11

Word of Mouth wordofmouth.algomorph

Word of Mouth wordofmouth.algomorph.com. Steven Dobek, Gregory Kramida , Jason Corekin. The Problem. Find a better solution for business networking. Create a better way for businesses to find, partner, and communicate with each other.

wilton
Download Presentation

Word of Mouth wordofmouth.algomorph

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Word of Mouthwordofmouth.algomorph.com Steven Dobek, Gregory Kramida, Jason Corekin

  2. The Problem Find a better solution for business networking. Create a better way for businesses to find, partner, and communicate with each other. Focus purely on business to business interaction, with no outside influence. Eventually create a way to rate and review businesses. Would only come from other businesses.

  3. Current Solutions • Angie’s List: • What it does: Lets users to post reviews for contracts, small businesses, and doctors. • Where it fails: Users must create an account and log in to view. • Yelp: • What it does: Users can review restaurants with ratings and written reviews. • Where it fails: Focus is only on restaurants.

  4. Current Solutions • Google Maps • What it does: helps consumers locate and rate places of interest. • Where it fails: More of a customer tool than a business tool (i.e. no logos, product listings…). • Ryze • What it does: allows the businesses to join or form “groups” (forum-like) • Where it fails: no individual networking – just groups.

  5. Our Approach • Let users make a profile for their business, including schedules, location, and product pricing. • Find other businesses using a Google Maps interface. • Partner with the business, and communicate by sending updates and messages.

  6. Demo • All yours, Greg!

  7. User Test • 8 tasks to perform: 1. Create an account (make up a business if you don’t have one)2. Login with account (sign out if needed).3. Edit user information.4. Create a schedule (leave at least one field closed).5. Add an update.6. View the schedule information and update.7. Go to the map and locate the search option.8. Sign-off.

  8. Test Results • 4 users. • Likert Questions: • Asked how the overall experience was. • Average Rating: 4.5 • Asked how useful they thought it was. • Average Rating: 4.5 • Also asked for their thoughts on the features and where they found difficulties.

  9. Test Results

  10. Test Results – Main Issues • Visibility – Users found it difficult to locate their schedule, update box, and save button. • Mapping – When asked to create an update, most users went to click on the “View Updates” tab, instead of the edit button in their profile. • When creating an account, an icon appeared saying “Bad Address” if the address was only partially entered. • Also, user could not login by hitting the enter key. Had to click the button.

  11. Lessons Learned • Bad things happen, and you must adapt (i.e. one of our key members became too ill to work). • Things that seem obvious to us may not be obvious to users. • Trying to work in the same room can make things distracting. • Code reuse is essential. • Coders code in different ways. This can make things challenging when working with each other’s code.

More Related