UX Design For B2B Online Publisher
- UX/UI Design
- $10,000 to $49,999
- Mar. - July 2016
- Quality
- 5.0
- Schedule
- 4.5
- Cost
- 5.0
- Willing to Refer
- 5.0
"Webabstract’s service was tailor-made for us."
- Financial services
- Budapest, Hungary
- 11-50 Employees
- Online Review
- Verified
Webabstract improved the UX design of a website by doing user research, implementing those results into their design and testing the new design to ensure usability and efficiency.
The website has 4,000 monthly users, a 1,500-user increase since it launched. Webabstract's creativity and focus on end-users improved the website's usability. Their UX knowledge impressed throughout the project but hiring developers would make them a stronger, full-service team.
The client submitted this review online.
BACKGROUND
Introduce your business and what you do there.
We are a medium sized company in the Hungarian domestic B2B information-services market: our profile is professional publishing and related advisory services, with almost 15 000 clients, including small and medium-sized enterprises, legal, tax, accounting, HR professionals, and institutions of public service as well. Our annual revenue reached 3 million EUR in 2016.
I'm the CPO, who’s responsible for the product/content development.
OPPORTUNITY / CHALLENGE
What challenge were you trying to address with Webabstract?
We provide information to more than 8,000 tax and accounting professionals. They are always looking for fast, accurate and credible answers, which means that the best solution for them must be on the web, but not just a kind of content-heavy website. That is why we needed to create a website, which is a 3 in 1 solution: professional database, news feed that reflect the changes of Hungarian tax laws, and online advisory services with highly qualified experts.
Our goal was to reach more new customers in this target group. We had some issues before, concerning how to create our content based website. We had never worked with a UX consultant. We needed to improve the design and the usability of the site.
SOLUTION
What was the scope of their involvement?
At the start of the project, we had a detailed feature list, with great plans and expectations. One of our biggest competitors in the tax and accounting information service has a well-known, content-heavy website. We wanted to analyze their strengths and weaknesses, and learn what people do not like in their user interface.
We had a couple of personal and skype meetings with Webabstract’s lead (senior) UX designer, to clarify our feature set and build up a buyer persona, and he showed the results of their desktop research.
Then, we had to organize customer interviews with our clients, because accountants are always busy and not very tech-savvy people. They prefer print publications to digital solutions.
Despite these difficulties, the Webabstract team found the right way to reach our customers: they organized the interviews “on the field” (on tax conferences and accountants’ obligatory training). With the method of card sorting, they helped to find out which features are the most important for our target group.
At the end of the discovery and research phase, we had a clear picture about how we should start the product design from the first ideas and sketches – and we developed the customer journeys and the information architecture together at some workshops. Webabstract’s scheduling was really flexible in this phase, and they delivered almost everything before the deadline, although we changed the agenda several times.
After they finished all the wireframes, which was the most important milestone of this project, they convinced me that the second round of the usability tests should not be missed before the UI design. We have learned that our customers need more content on the dashboard, like recent news and commentaries of the tax legislation, and they want to send their questions to dedicated experts.
In the last phase of the project, Webabstract delivered the key parts of the UI, and in addition, they organized design workshops to help our junior designer with mentoring concerning how to iterate the elements and design all the subpages of the website.
How did you come to work with Webabstract?
We approached three companies that had UX references: a well-known full-service digital agency, and two smaller UX agencies (one of them was Webabstract). Webabstract reacted fast and were flexible: they called us almost immediately (we had to send several emails to the other two agencies, and there was no real personal contact) and scheduled a meeting with their project manager. The whole Webabstract team was very inspiring at first sight. Their pricing and their services seemed the best value for money.
How much have you invested with Webabstract?
It cost around 10,000 USD.
What is the status of this engagement?
The project started with planning in March 2016, and Webabstract completed the design works in July 2016.
RESULTS & FEEDBACK
Could you share any evidence that would demonstrate the productivity, quality of work, or the impact of the engagement?
First of all: the result of the project is a well-designed, accessible, and user-friendly website, which now supports the sales of our similar print products, and can aggregate all our digital contents for the tax and accounting professionals. More than 4,000 customers (almost 1,500 totally new customers) use this site monthly, to send their professional or legal questions to our experts.
Although our in-house team was unable to develop some important functions in the meantime, Webabstract performed well. They gave us useful advice after the project's hand-off, on how we should reorganize our designers’ and developers’ workflow, to achieve our goals. On the other hand, they showed us clearly that UX is “not like magic”: with deep analysis, using the User Centered Business Canvas and other strategic planning tools, the design process can be more successful, an important part of the product development.
What did you find most impressive about Webabstract?
I have never known any designer team that is so vigorously focused on the business goals (and besides that, was creative also). Webabstract’s service was tailor-made for us, and was supported by experience-based knowledge. They improved our UX strategy by focusing on our customers’ needs.
Are there any areas Webabstract could improve?
I will never separate the UX design process and the software development from each other. Due to this huge mistake, our in-house developer team could not finish all the components of the product. I recommend that Webabstract should hire and train more developers in the upcoming years, to be able to manage much more full-service digital product development simultaneously, from scratch until the launch.
RATINGS
-
Quality
5.0Service & Deliverables
-
Schedule
4.5On time / deadlines
-
Cost
5.0Value / within estimates
-
Willing to Refer
5.0NPS