Today, we’re discussing the findings of Martin Porcheron’s study, ‘Voice interfaces in everyday life’. We uncover insights into how people actually use Amazon Alexa in the home. We find unique user behaviour, new technology challenges and understand what it all means for voice UX designers, developers and brands.
Voice interfaces in everyday life
Imagine if you could eaves drop into someone's house and listen to how they interact with their Amazon Echo. Imagine, whenever someone said “Alexa”, you were there. Imagine being able to hear everything thing that was said for an entire minute before the word “Alexa” was uttered, and then stick around for a whole 60 seconds after the interaction with Alexa was over.
Well, that’s exactly what today’s guest and his associates did, and his findings offer some unique lessons for VUX designers, developers and brands that’ll help you create more natural voice user experiences that work.
In this episode, we’re discussing:
How people use digital assistants in public
The background of Voice interfaces in everyday life
The challenge of what you call your Alexa skill
The issue of recall
How Amazon can improve skill usage
The inherent problem of discoverability in voice
How Echo use is finely integrated into other activities
The implications of treating an Echo as a single user device
The challenge of speech recognition in the ‘hurly burly’ of moderns life
How people collaboratively attempt to solve interaction problems
What is ‘political’ control and how does it apply to voice first devices?
Pranking people’s Alexa and the effect on future Amazon advertising
Designing for device control
Why these devices aren’t actually conversational
The importance of responses
Key takeaways for designers and developers
Give your skill a name that’s easy for recall
Make your responses succinct, fit within a busy and crowded environment
Make sure your responses are a resource for further action - how will the user do the next thing?
Consider designing for multiple users
Don’t use long intros and tutorials, get straight to the point
Don’t design for a conversation, design to get things done
Our Guest
Martin Porcheron is a Research Associate in the Mixed Reality Lab at the University of Nottingham and has a PhD in Ubiquitous Computing, a sub-set of Computer Science. Martin has conducted several studies in the field of human-computer interaction, including looking at how people make use of mobile phones in conversations i.e. how people use something like Siri mid-conversation and how those interactions unfold.
Martin’s angle isn’t to look at these things as critical or problematic, but to approach them as an opportunity to learn about how people make use of technology currently. He believe this enables us to make more informed design decisions.
The study we discuss today has won many plaudits including Best Paper Award at the CHI 2018 conference.
Links
Follow Martin on Twitter
Read Martin's colleague, Stuart Reeves' post on the study on Medium
Where you can listen:
Any other podcast player you use or ask Any Pod to play V.U.X. World on Alexa
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