{"id":25003,"date":"2020-05-29T16:34:19","date_gmt":"2020-05-29T14:34:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.intellias.com\/?p=25003"},"modified":"2024-07-09T13:18:53","modified_gmt":"2024-07-09T11:18:53","slug":"the-covid-19-effect-how-human-centered-design-is-transforming-the-future-of-digital-products","status":"publish","type":"blog","link":"https:\/\/intellias.com\/the-covid-19-effect-how-human-centered-design-is-transforming-the-future-of-digital-products\/","title":{"rendered":"The COVID-19 Effect: How Human-Centered Design Is Transforming the Future of Digital Products"},"content":{"rendered":"

Just a year ago, walking the streets of our cities or taking a plane on a business trip, very few of us could really appreciate the meaning of the purported Chinese curse: \u201cMay you live in unusual times.\u201d The beginning of the year 2020 brought so much radical change to our lives that many see our merry existence before COVID-19 as a dream we\u2019ve just awoken from. The future is vague and holds a lot more uncertainties than it used to.<\/p>\n

According to an MIT survey<\/a>, up to a half of American employees are working remotely these days. The #stayathome lifestyle is steering consumer behavior toward shopping and ordering food online, subscribing to multiple streaming services, and generally replacing habitual offline shopping spots with the virtual equivalent. Many experts and major employers believe that these practices are likely to stay<\/a> after the pandemic is over, so the quality of online services is due to change drastically, and human-centered design and engineering will play a major role in this process.<\/p>\n

Businesses will quickly come to realize that \u0441ontinuous investment in UX improvements<\/a> must be the cardinal mantra of any online store or platform aiming for user retention and growth.<\/p>\n

In this article, we take a look at how a human-centered design approach can yield tangible benefits for digital product developers and their users.<\/p>\n

Challenges for businesses and users alike<\/h2>\n

The coronavirus pandemic has had an unprecedented, adverse effect on businesses around the world. Some industries that operate primarily in the physical world are suffering colossal financial damages and are seeking recourse from governments and industrial associations. Even those that operate partly or exclusively online are scrambling to change and adapt to the new reality.<\/p>\n

Those who had been considering digital transformation<\/a> before the pandemic are now seeing it as a catalyst to their postponed or partially fulfilled plans. Any digital transformation is a long and iterative process and companies that succeed in embracing it as their standard modus operandi are likely to be much better prepared for the future. And if this transformation is accompanied by a strong focus on human-centered design rather than one prioritizing a product or technology, it will provide the business with a solid foundation for long-term prosperity and success.<\/p>\n

According to experts<\/a>, some trends are much better positioned to thrive in the age of self-isolation and social distancing. Some examples are:<\/p>\n