Affinity Mapping, also known as an Affinity Diagram, is a visual, collaborative method used in UX to organize large volumes of qualitative data—such as user quotes, observations, and ideas—by grouping similar items into thematic clusters. This technique helps teams synthesize…
Gestalt Principles (also known as the Laws of Gestalt or the Law of Simplicity) are perceptual rules that describe how people naturally organize visual elements into structured, unified wholes. Instead of seeing isolated parts, our brains group related elements, fill…
Information Architecture (IA) in User Experience (UX) is the practice of organizing, structuring, and labeling content in a way that makes information easy to find, navigate, and understand. It serves as the blueprint for a digital product’s content structure, helping…
Navigation Path refers to the sequence of steps, screens, or pages a user follows to reach a specific goal or destination within a digital interface such as a website, application, or data system. Extended Definition In User Experience (UX) design,…
A Sitemap is a hierarchical visual or coded representation of the structure and content of a website or application. It illustrates how individual pages or screens are organized and interconnected, serving as both a planning tool for UX and a…
User insights are actionable understandings derived from observing, analyzing, and engaging with users to uncover their needs, behaviors, motivations, and pain points. In UX design, these insights go beyond raw data to reveal the why behind user actions, enabling teams…