{"id":184554,"date":"2007-08-09T18:34:26","date_gmt":"2007-08-09T18:34:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/staging.rm.gfolkdev.net\/?p=184554"},"modified":"2022-10-11T13:57:51","modified_gmt":"2022-10-11T13:57:51","slug":"user-experience-and-the-analysts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rosenfeldmedia.com\/user-experience-and-the-analysts\/","title":{"rendered":"User experience and the analysts"},"content":{"rendered":"

As part of our ongoing research of the UX environment, we recently took a closer look at the six major analyst firms (Aberdeen<\/a>, AMR, Forrester<\/a>, Gartner<\/a>, IDC<\/a>, and Yankee<\/a>). We were hoping to determine if the analysts were paying much attention to user experience, so we searched a variety of UX-related terms (21, to be precise) on their respective web sites. We then looked at which firms paid attention to which UX topics, how these firms stacked up against each other, and how they compared to the web’s overall UX consciousness.<\/p>\n

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The following table summarizes our general findings (highly recommended: view the full-size version<\/a>\u2014much easier to read). We used Google searches as our yardstick to gauge our UX terms’ relative strengths across the web. So, for example, of all the UX-related documents that Google knows about, 10.7% mention knowledge management. We did the same thing for each analyst site, using their own local search systems, and then we averaged those numbers:<\/p>\n

Which numbers really stood out among the analyst firms?<\/em><\/p>\n