This is an experiment.
If you haven’t come here from my own website, Medium, Smashing Magazine, HackerNoon, or any other legit publication where I publish, then you’ve most probably just read a stolen article.
To support me and my writing, please consider
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Thanks a Million!
Through WordPress’s automatic pingback function, I’ll try to compile a list of shameless thieves in this post’s comments section, and also record any others I come across manually in the following.
- arvrtise.com

[…] needed to prioritize them to ensure we focused on the most important and impactful ones first. For this, we used a very traditional impact/urgency matrix (Mathenge, 2020) to categorize […]
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[…] should not be confused with “value stories” in the context of product or service development, which, according to Alvarez (2022), “[help] provide intent and vision in the process of building […]
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[…] needed to prioritize them to ensure we focused on the most important and impactful ones first. For this, we used a very traditional impact/urgency matrix (Mathenge, 2020) to categorize […]
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[…] “Inside Design” blog (Ta, 2016) that recommended creating posters for each team value. Each team member could choose one or two values and create a poster to remind everyone of those […]
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[…] The same holds for user experience. When an instrument is used to measure usability, e.g., in controlled user studies or via live intercepts, it’s often the simple single ease question, which is generally not a bad choice, but has its limits. […]
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[…] © 2024 by Maximilian Speicher ● Originally published by The UX […]
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[…] © 2024 by Maximilian Speicher ● Originally published by The UX […]
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