Paul Rouke Bio

I'm the user experience director at PRWD, and have 7 years commercial experience at Littlewoods Shop Direct. Delivering User Centered Design processes to improve systems and applications is what I do.

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PRWD

Usability and software development agency specialising in:

  • User Centered Design
  • Best Practice E-commerce capability, UCDCommerce
  • Business Modernisation

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PRWD, specialists in online user experience
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Posts Tagged ‘google’

In-house Google Analytics Training from PRWD

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

Over at PRWD we have published details of our Advanced Google Analytics Training Course, and below I have provided details of what the course is about and who the course is aimed at:

Why Google Analytics Training?

Google Analytics is a free tool which is generally very simple to be installed on a website. There is an ever increasing number of websites using Google Analytics as their analytics tool of choice, but that isn’t to say businesses understand how to set-up Google Analytics correctly and how to get the most commercial value out of the statistics and reports available.

Google Analytics provides both basic and enterprise class features and functionality, but understanding what is available and what applies to individual businesses and users does not come easy.

This course, delivered in-house to ensure key stakeholders from the same company can benefit simultaneously, aims to help you and your business colleagues begin using Google Analytics effectively.

Objective

The course aims to provide you with the knowledge of how best to use Google Analytics on an on-going basis to gain the most valuable visitor insights and commercial value
Google Analytics Training by PRWD

What you will learn

  • Personalisation – how to personalise your experience to enable you to access the most important areas for you in your specific role
  • Goals and Funnels – how you should use these essential features to enable you to to track vital visitor behaviour and potential site issues
  • Segmentation – how you can use segmentation to monitor specific visitor behaviour from highly targeted segments of your visitors
  • Reporting – how you can create and manage reports most relevant to you and your business to help make genuine commercial decisions
  • Marketing Activity Accountability – how you can best use Google Analytics to track all your marketing campaigns for full accountability
  • Tips and Best Practice – essential tips and best practice on how to use your new found knowledge and expertise on an on-going basis

PLUS – Google Website Optimiser

An introduction to this essential tool and how you can use it to make continual improvements to your on-site conversion rates

Who is the training suitable for

  • Offline Marketing Managers
  • Online Marketing Managers
  • Marketing Directors
  • E-commerce Managers
  • IT Managers
  • Project Managers
  • Marketing Assistants
  • Business Analysts

Duration, delivery, location and cost

  • Duration: 3 hours
  • Delivery: training provided in-house for 1-10 employees
  • Location: UK wide, and in particular Manchester and London
  • Cost: £400 + vat (excludes reasonable expenses)

How to book

Easy, simply call us on 0161 918 6729

PRWD training clients

We have been privileged to train people working at the likes of Speedy Hire, The Scout Association, Mencap, Abbey, Yell and Pod1.

Further reading

Paul Rouke Speaking Alongside Google and PricewaterhouseCoopers

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

I’m highly honoured to have recently been asked by How Do to speak alongside Google and PricewaterhouseCoopers at a conference entitled Speeding up in the Slowdown on Thursday 4th June 2009 in Liverpool.

Conference Overview

Coping with and emerging from this recession in a stronger and profitable state are quite simply what most businesses wish to achieve. This major How-Do half day conference in Liverpool has drawn together five outstanding speakers whose collective expertise can help companies achieve just that.

In the current challenging economic climate, companies who not only survive, but actually thrive, are those who can develop and utilise a true competitive edge. If you want to guarantee your business the opportunity to implement ideas that will help make it more productive, more pro-active, more competitive and ultimately more profitable, then this conference is for you.

How-Do has brought together an outstanding panel of speakers for this conference at Liverpool Science Park, all of whom are focused on providing the type of insight and information that can make a real difference to the success of your organisation.

Areas Covered

The speakers including myself will be covering five key areas of your business:

  • learning first hand from Google on what’s really working online
  • how to develop and win new business
  • more effective communication and engagement with business media
  • improving the performance of your e-platforms
  • reviewing and developing your strategy in a crowded marketplace

The Panel Of Speakers Are

  • Andrew Barke (Google)
  • Paul Rouke (PRWD)
  • Bill Gleeson (Liverpool Daily Post)
  • John Leach (Winning Pitch)
  • Eva Berg-Winters (PricewaterhouseCoopers)

Booking Information

Delegate tickets are £88 + VAT early booking/charity rate (for bookings before 22nd May or whilst tickets last), £118 + VAT thereafter. Places are limited and you can book online to reserve your place. If you have any queries please contact Cathryn O’Grady on 07918 174176, or by e-mail cath@how-do.co.uk.

Google Chrome Launches – Have They Forgotten Their Motto?

Friday, September 5th, 2008

Google’s famous motto ‘do no evil’ seems to be in conflict with the terms and conditions of their new browser Chrome – Google stated that they can use any of your copyrighted material posted to the web via Chrome. This has since been retracted but inevitably makes me question Google’s true agenda. The other thing which strikes me is the similarities between the Microsoft and Google chrome logos.

Google Chrome and Microsoft logo

Impressive Look, Speed and Ease of Use

Ignoring my initial hesitance I downloaded the browser and I have to say I’m impressed with the look, speed and ease of use.
I’m also please to see Google have created a URL box which also works as a search function, called the omniBox. A great example of applying user centered design. The browser is a lot less cluttered also meaning that more appears above the fold and its faster to load. Another nice feature is that you can grab tabs to open them up as new windows.
Chrome, which is still in beta version, has had a few teething problems; its unable to use some plugins and is currently only available for Windows. Also if you type :% into the search bar it makes Chrome crash, but I’m sure these will all be ironed out in the near future.

Google, The Big Brother

My real shock was when I opened up my history. It had listed my history pre-Chrome, showing information such as who’s profiles I had viewed on Facebook, emails I had sent and documents I had opened on my desktop (with exact times) and the option to open them direct from the browser. Its a useful feature and there is the option of ‘incognito mode’ but it a little too scary to think what people could do with such information if they got a hold of my laptop, not to mention what Google can do. I’m all for intuitive search but for me however, it’s a little too far – I think it’s time to de-Google.

If you have already tried it, how are you finding this new web browser, and what are your views on the advanced history functionality that can track your daily activity to such depths?

UCDCommerce Adds Support For Google Checkout

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

The latest update of our flagship e-commerce system UCDCommerce adds support for the Google Checkout payment system. This allows users to make purchases without having to register on the site, taking advantage of the reliability and trust of the Google brand to help encourage users to make their purchases.

Trust and convenience

For first-time visitors to an e-commerce site, having to register and enter their payment details can be a daunting process. Fear of fraud and the desire to avoid having to maintain a list of passwords for every e-commerce site they visit means that many users can be discouraged from buying from companies not already known to them. Google Checkout helps to overcome these worries by ensuring that all payment details are handled by Google and not the retailer, and also ensures that the user needs only to maintain their Google password and not a separate one for the retail site.

Advantages for retailers

Google Checkout is good news for retailers too. It removes some of the barriers to purchase which leads to more conversions, and it can also add value to Google AdWords campaigns – if your e-commerce site implements Google Checkout, your AdWords advertisements will automatically have a ‘Google Checkout’ logo appear next to them, letting the user know that they are only a few clicks away from being able to buy the product advertised. This can be a crucial advantage in making your advertisements stand out from the crowd and, again, can lead to better conversion rates.

The User Experience

Here at PRWD, we take user experience very seriously, so we have naturally considered the impact on user experience of adding Google Checkout support. Fortunately, Google take user experience seriously too, and their checkout interface is well-designed, following good interaction design principles. We’re confident that Google Checkout can enhance the experience of your site’s users.

Future Developments

This is just the latest new feature to be added to UCDCommerce. We’ve got lots of interesting plans for the future, which we’ll be revealing over the coming weeks and months.

Uncovering the Google User Experience

Monday, June 30th, 2008

I’ve recently been reading the Usability Blog by Jesper Rønn-Jensen from Denmark, and he has come across a corporate post by Google on their User Experience Principles.

This really does make for a fascinating insight into how the worlds most respected search engine (and other web applications) treat usability and user experience. What this also allows you to do is look at each of their products and see how aspects of each one of their 10 principles has been applied.

Below is the full details of Google’s User Experience Principles, taken from their site on the 30th June 2008:

Google User Experience

Our aspirations

The Google User Experience team aims to create designs that are useful, fast, simple, engaging, innovative, universal, profitable, beautiful, trustworthy, and personable. Achieving a harmonious balance of these ten principles is a constant challenge. A product that gets the balance right is “Googley” – and will satisfy and delight people all over the world.

Ten principles that contribute to a Googley user experience

1. Focus on people – their lives, their work, their dreams.

The Google User Experience team works to discover people’s actual needs, including needs they can’t always articulate. Armed with that information, Google can create products that solve real-world problems and spark the creativity of all kinds of people. Improving people’s lives, not just easing step-by-step tasks, is our goal.

Above all, a well-designed Google product is useful in daily life. It doesn’t try to impress users with its whizbang technology or visual style – though it might have both. It doesn’t strong-arm people to use features they don’t want – but it does provide a natural growth path for those who are interested. It doesn’t intrude on people’s lives – but it does open doors for users who want to explore the world’s information, work more quickly and creatively, and share ideas with their friends or the world.

2. Every millisecond counts.

Nothing is more valuable than people’s time. Google pages load quickly, thanks to slim code and carefully selected image files. The most essential features and text are placed in the easiest-to-find locations. Unnecessary clicks, typing, steps, and other actions are eliminated. Google products ask for information only once and include smart defaults. Tasks are streamlined.

Speed is a boon to users. It is also a competitive advantage that Google doesn’t sacrifice without good reason.

3. Simplicity is powerful.

Simplicity fuels many elements of good design, including ease of use, speed, visual appeal, and accessibility. But simplicity starts with the design of a product’s fundamental functions. Google doesn’t set out to create feature-rich products; our best designs include only the features that people need to accomplish their goals. Ideally, even products that require large feature sets and complex visual designs appear to be simple as well as powerful.

Google teams think twice before sacrificing simplicity in pursuit of a less important feature. Our hope is to evolve products in new directions instead of just adding more features.

4. Engage beginners and attract experts.

Designing for many people doesn’t mean designing for the lowest common denominator. The best Google designs appear quite simple on the surface but include powerful features that are easily accessible to those users who want them. Our intent is to invite beginners with a great initial experience while also attracting power users whose excitement and expertise will draw others to the product.

A well-designed Google product lets new users jump in, offers help when necessary, and ensures that users can make simple and intuitive use of the product’s most valuable features. Progressive disclosure of advanced features encourages people to expand their usage of the product. Whenever appropriate, Google offers smart features that entice people with complex online lives – for instance, people who share data across several devices and computers, work online and off, and crave storage space.

5. Dare to innovate.

Design consistency builds a trusted foundation for Google products, makes users comfortable, and speeds their work. But it is the element of imagination that transforms designs from ho-hum to delightful.

Google encourages innovative, risk-taking designs whenever they serve the needs of users. Our teams encourage new ideas to come out and play. Instead of just matching the features of existing products, Google wants to change the game.

6. Design for the world.

The World Wide Web has opened all the resources of the Internet to people everywhere. For example, many users are exploring Google products while strolling with a mobile device, not sitting at a desk with a personal computer. Our goal is to design products that are contextually relevant and available through the medium and methods that make sense to users. Google supports slower connections and older browsers when possible, and Google allows people to choose how they view information (screen size, font size) and how they enter information (smart query parsing). The User Experience team researches the fundamental differences in user experiences throughout the world and works to design the right products for each audience, device, and culture. Simple translation, or “graceful degradation” of a feature set, isn’t sufficient to meet people’s needs.

Google is also committed to improving the accessibility of its products. Our desire for simple and inclusive products, and Google’s mission to make the world’s information universally accessible, demand products that support assistive technologies and provide a useful and enjoyable experience for everyone, including those with physical and cognitive limitations.

7. Plan for today’s and tomorrow’s business.

Those Google products that make money strive to do so in a way that is helpful to users. To reach that lofty goal, designers work with product teams to ensure that business considerations integrate seamlessly with the goals of users. Teams work to make sure ads are relevant, useful, and clearly identifiable as ads. Google also takes care to protect the interests of advertisers and others who depend on Google for their livelihood.

Google never tries to increase revenue from a product if it would mean reducing the number of Google users in the future. If a profitable design doesn’t please users, it’s time to go back to the drawing board. Not every product has to make money, and none should be bad for business.

8. Delight the eye without distracting the mind.

If people looked at a Google product and said “Wow, that’s beautiful!” the User Experience team would cheer. A positive first impression makes users comfortable, assures them that the product is reliable and professional, and encourages people to make the product their own.

A minimalist aesthetic makes sense for most Google products because a clean, clutter-free design loads quickly and doesn’t distract users from their goals. Visually appealing images, color, and fonts are balanced against the needs for speed, scannable text, and easy navigation. Still, “simple elegance” is not the best fit for every product. Audience and cultural context matter. A Google product’s visual design should please its users and improve usability for them.

9. Be worthy of people’s trust.

Good design can go a long way to earn the trust of the people who use Google products. Establishing Google’s reliability starts with the basics – for example, making sure the interface is efficient and professional, actions are easily reversed, ads are clearly identified, terminology is consistent, and users are never unhappily surprised. In addition, Google products open themselves to the world by including links to competitors and encouraging user contributions such as community maps or iGoogle gadgets.

A greater challenge is to make sure that Google demonstrates respect for users’ right to own and control their own data. Google is transparent about how it uses information and never shares data outside Google without a user’s explicit consent. Our products warn users about such dangers as insecure connections, different privacy policies on other websites, actions that may make users vulnerable to spam, or the possibility that data shared outside Google may be stored elsewhere. Google is reassuring but truthful about data sharing so that users can make informed choices. The larger Google becomes, the more essential it is to live up to our “Don’t be evil” motto.

10. Add a human touch.

Google includes a wide range of personalities, and our designs have personality, too. Text and design elements are friendly, quirky, and smart – and not boring, close-minded, or arrogant. Google text talks directly to people and offers the same practical, informal assistance that anyone would offer to a neighbor who asked a question. And Google doesn’t let fun or personality interfere with other elements of a design, especially when people’s livelihood, or their ability to find vital information, is at stake.

Google doesn’t know everything, and no design is perfect. Our products ask for feedback, and Google acts on that feedback. When practicing these design principles, the Google User Experience team seeks the best possible balance in the time available for each product. Then the cycle of iteration, innovation, and improvement continues.

My particular favourites in relation to Google are points 1, 2 and 3, on being useful, fast and simple, and these 3 principles can’t be more accurately portrayed than in the main Google homepage.

Google, as a Usability and User Experience professional, (not to mention an end user) I salute you!