Heuristic Evaluation
Please note: This content reflects industry best practices. We’ve provided links to third-party resources where appropriate.
What It Is
A heuristic evaluation measures a product’s usability against a set of predetermined qualitative design guidelines, also known as heuristics. It’s a quick, inexpensive way to gather feedback. It can reduce trivial usability issues, leading to improved consistency and ease of use, and reducing noise for future usability testing with users.
A heuristic evaluation is different from any other usability testing because the people who do the analysis inspect the interface instead of using it. There’s no user testing involved, so a heuristic evaluation may not cover all use cases of a product for a particular group of target users.
There are more than 200 criteria that can be used for evaluation, but we use a set of heuristics based on Jacob Nielsen’s 10 Usability Heuristics for User Interface Design:
- Visibility of system status
- Match between system and the real world
- User control and freedom
- Consistency and standards
- Error prevention
- Recognition rather than recall
- Flexibility and efficiency of use
- Aesthetic and minimalist design
- Help users recognize, diagnose, and recover from errors
- Help and documentation
When To Use It
- You’re creating a new product or application.
- There are resources and/or time constraints, but you want to make basic usability improvements.
- Before conducting usability testing and/or customer research.
How It Works
Duration of test: 30 to 60 minutes, depending on the extent of testing
Suggested number of participants: 2 or 3 reviewers
Steps:
- Develop a research plan.
- Conduct the assessment using the heuristics evaluation checklist, which assigns a severity rating to each usability issue.
- Add the identified issues to the backlog for product teams to address.
Note: UX designers start with the most critical issues on the backlog. Issues with the highest severity rating get the most attention.
Outcomes
- A heuristics evaluation report
- Issues for backlog
Resources
Learn more
- 10 Usability Heuristics for User Interface Design (Article)
- Newbie Heuristic Evaluation Mistakes To Avoid (Article)
- 10 Usability Heuristics Applied to Complex Applications (Article)
Questions or feedback? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) or contact the Infor Design UX Insights team at uxinsights@infor.com.