Feb 6, 2024
UI/UX
This article is about Quality Assurance and its role in User Experience Design. Furthermore, we've covered some of the important requirements our Quality Assurance Specialist has to take into account to ensure a high-quality UI/UX design.
Let’s start with what QA or Quality Assurance Testing actually means. It refers to one of the most crucial components of the development process that is designed to detect any errors that may have occurred before the release of the end product. Verifying that the product is functioning as intended, as well as debugging it before it is shipped out, is the main goal of Quality Assurance Testing.
As a digital agency, our focus leans more toward the design and visual quality of a web page, which is also one of the main responsibilities of our in-house Quality Assurance (QA) Specialist. The idea is for the QA to maintain the overall high quality of the product, so it shouldn't come as a surprise that QAs are often involved in design and web development as well.
When it comes to defining the scope of a QA's responsibilities, it should go beyond simply ensuring that the product's functionality is working as intended. A QA must also consider the perspective of the end-user.
Usability and accessibility refer to how one could access a page, navigate through a website or even complete orders without much effort or involving many actions.
The product description or page needs to display every bit of necessary information for the user regarding its functionality and features and everything needs to perform as it should.
The product needs to accommodate and adapt to multiple different devices and operating systems to ensure all users are able to go through the same experience. When testing, a website should perform equally as well in a variety of browsers and screen resolutions.
There's no doubt that there's nothing more annoying than a slow-performing system. Surveys show that the average user expects a certain page to load in up to 3 seconds. As a result, due to our constant desire to improve, we've done extensive research on how we can optimise the speed of every page we build on Webflow.
Apart from the above-mentioned criteria, our QA also needs to acknowledge and test the graphical user interface (GUI). The GUI is an interface visible to the user and through which that user interacts with computers and smartphones using images and other visual indicators rather than text. Our QA's job is to test that interface and check the screens and various controls in order to ensure that the software application is functioning appropriately and as intended.
You have never done graphical user interface (GUI) testing before?
Take a look at the test cases below to help get you started:
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