Role: User-Interface Designer |
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This role coordinates the design of the user interface. This includes gathering usability requirements and prototyping candidate user-interface designs to meet those requirements. |
Role Sets:
Developers |
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Relationships

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Modifies:
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Main Description
The user-interface designer role is not responsible for implementing the user interface. Instead, this role
focuses on the design and the "visual shaping" of the user interface, by:
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capturing requirements on the user interface, including usability requirements
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building user-interface prototypes
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involving other stakeholders of the user interface, such as users, in usability reviews and use
testing sessions
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reviewing and providing the appropriate feedback on the final implementation of the user interface, as
created by other developers; that is, designers and implementers.
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Staffing
Skills |
The User-Interface Designer may come from a creative and visual arts background instead of a business, engineering or
computer science background. The User-Interface Designer focuses on the usability of the system.
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Assignment Approaches |
Especially in larger projects, a separate group of people is often formed in which everyone plays the
user-interface designer role. This group focuses primarily on the user interface and the usability aspects
of the system. This is important because of the following:
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the skills required by a user-interface designer often need to be improved and optimized for the
current project and application type, with potentially unique usability requirements, and this requires
both time and focus
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the risk of "mixed allegiances" must be delimited; that is, the user-interface designer needs to be
influenced more by usability considerations than implementation considerations
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More Information
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