Sometimes dead ends happen more gradually than simply giving someone no option to continue. Services that are very simple for those on the ‘happy path’ often hide complex and hard to navigate side routes that don’t necessarily ‘stop’ a user from doing something, but slow them down to the extent that they can’t get what they need to do done.
If your service has complex elements further down the route, it’s best to explain these at the start, rather than giving users the expectation that your service is simple all the way through.
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An effective communicator and business analyst with an inquisitive mind, strong analytical, problem-solving, and decision-making skills
Services in the internet age are not only defined by the user who’s looking for them but composed of ‘small pieces loosely joined’
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Similar ideas to Reason for a Dead End 2. Users have strayed off the beaten track
This is the one ‘intentional’ dead end your user might face – where someone has a situation that simply doesn’t fit your service. For example, someone lives too far away for you to deliver to them, or doesn’t meet the criteria your service has set out for another reason.
Although your servi...
Common barriers within your particular service
Just as you have done with the things you presume your user can do, the first task is to identify all of the things you assume your users will have access to at any given point in their journey, and analyse what happens when they don’t have access to these things.
As a rule of thumb, you sh...
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