User:Lco/Task-Continuity: Difference between revisions

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* [https://firefox-ux.etherpad.mozilla.org/conceptweek2012q4 Concept Week] - includes very early brainstorming about Saving for Later
* [https://firefox-ux.etherpad.mozilla.org/conceptweek2012q4 Concept Week] - includes very early brainstorming about Saving for Later


= Identifying the Current Opportunity Space (Saving Different Types of Content Appropriately) =
= Current Opportunity Space (Saving Different Types of Content) =
Once we had the themes, we started to discuss which opportunity space we wanted to focus on initially. PMs, Engineers, BD, & Marketing was involved in some of these sessions with the UX team. After a few different opportunity mapping and brainstorming sessions, the UX team decided to focus on "Saving Different Types of Content Appropriately" as the main opportunity space to continue exploring.
Once we had the themes, we started to discuss which opportunity space we wanted to focus on initially. PMs, Engineers, BD, & Marketing was involved in some of these sessions with the UX team. After a few different opportunity mapping and brainstorming sessions, the UX team decided to focus on "Saving Different Types of Content Appropriately" as the main opportunity space to continue exploring.



Revision as of 18:08, 18 July 2013

What is Task Continuity?

Task Continuity is the umbrella term the Firefox UX team came up with to try and understand related user behaviors we've seen in last year's user research (Pancake, Save for Later, Hydra, etc.), and trends we've observed around multi-device and Web use. The UX team is currently working on identifying new feature opportunities for Firefox that support Task Continuity user needs.

Note: We'd like to find a better name for this project. If you have any ideas, you can add them to this wiki.

Task Continuity Themes

The Task Continuity Themes were created based on our user research, observations of industry trends, and conversations percolating around Mozilla. It's intended to be a framework for organizing all our ideas about Task Continuity.

Permanent links (You can find the latest version of these links in this folder)

  • Full Document - explains the themes in detail
  • Summary - condensed version of the themes
  • 1-Pager - an even shorter, printable idea sketch about the themes
  • Sample Concepts - some concrete example of how the themes can help us define features

Related Research

Please talk to the User Research team for more information and their reports.

Other References

Current Opportunity Space (Saving Different Types of Content)

Once we had the themes, we started to discuss which opportunity space we wanted to focus on initially. PMs, Engineers, BD, & Marketing was involved in some of these sessions with the UX team. After a few different opportunity mapping and brainstorming sessions, the UX team decided to focus on "Saving Different Types of Content Appropriately" as the main opportunity space to continue exploring.

Opportunity Mapping Workshop

This was a 90-minute long remote workshop with PMs, Engineers, BD, & Marketing to go over the Task Continuity Themes and the competitive landscape. The goal of the workshop was to agree on a theme for the UX team to pursue. While we didn't get settle on a theme in the end, we did learn a lot for moving the project forward. See the link below for detailed insights about the workshop.

  • Activities (For more details about the activities, talk to Larissa)
    • 1: Mapping the competitive landscape
    • 2: Multi-dimensional SWAG
    • 3: Elevator pitch and Ranking
  • Workshop
    • Participants collaborated on this Google Presentation during the workshop
    • Note: you must be signed in to Google Drive with your Mozilla account (not your LDAP) to view this
  • What We Learned - detailed insights about the value we got from the workshop


Brainstorming

Synthesis (Impact vs. Effort Map)

  • Topics that bubbled to the top:
    • Saving different kinds of content appropriately
    • More powerful search
    • Sharing across devices
    • Awareness of the user's context (and in some cases who the user is) and being ready for him or her
  • Pictures
  • List of categories from the map