ROLE
Lead designer— UX, testing, interaction, prototyping
TEAM
1 designer (me) 1 design manager 3-4 program managers 20+ software engineers
This case study is:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Basically.
Daniela is a product manager at Contoso, Inc. She's working on a new project with the UX, content and engineering teams.
**She needs to review a feature with the team, so she decides to setup her online meeting using Microsoft Teams. However, she finds it very difficult.
**Teams doesn't show her team’s availability or let her create recurring meetings. These are very important for Daniela's meeting.
**Being colour blind, she also finds it difficult to read the labels inside the form fields. **She feels incredibly frustrated and powerless.
**Upon a co-worker’s suggestion, she decides to create her meeting with Outlook. She finds it much more user-friendly and useful.
**From that day onwards, she used Outlook to schedule and manage her calendar. She organized all her meetings happily ever after.
Everyone, literally.
Back in 2017
<aside> 💭 Along with Daniela, a large chunk of users preferred Outlook to Teams. Why?
</aside>
Fundamentally bad user experience: The old form had numerous issues which induced friction and hindered usability. Amongst the numerous, these were the top ones:
Mental model mismatch: Imagine the ability to see wonderful things with your eyes, but not have the ability to describe it for someone else. Using Outlook meant you got that ability. Naturally, many Teams users flocked there for a combination of reasons:
Strong verbatim from research studies
Early qualitative research and telemetry indicated an alarming 80% drop-off from the event scheduling form. From qualitative research, most users confirmed that upon realising that Teams doesn't offer many of the functionality offered by Outlook, they preferred to complete their task there.
Hell, even I was using Outlook to schedule meetings to discuss how to improve Teams scheduling!