Five ways how AI can augment user experience design
The emergence of artificial intelligence (AI) is touted to improve many fields of business, with experience design no different. Cees de Gooijer, UX and Product Principal at AND Digital, outlines how AI can help lift the field to new heights.
Whether we like it or not, AI is changing the way experiences can be delivered to customers. From data-driven decision-making to early design validation, AI can help to bring products to market faster – and most importantly, with the right features.
Other key use cases including enhancing accessibility, validating user needs early, and delivering hyper-personalised interfaces.
Delivering personalised experiences
Expectations have skyrocketed when it comes to personalised experiences, especially given the hyper-personalised devices we carry in our pockets daily. AI and machine learning can accelerate the creation of these experiences, by analysing large volumes of browsing behaviour, purchase history and demographic data.
It can also power these experiences on-platform, in real-time, by predicting user preferences and behaviours based on interactions and contextual data. This enables the generation of tailored experiences and personalised content that adapts dynamically to your user's evolving needs and preferences.
Netflix and Amazon are great examples, using browsing and purchase history to make personalised movie recommendations and product suggestions. But personalisation is also growing in other industries, like finance (with personalised investment advice and financial planning), and healthcare (with personalised treatment plans and preventive care recommendations).
The opportunities in AI-driven personalisation are only growing, but don’t let the hype get in the way of your security and ethics: they’re more business-critical than ever. Prioritise customer consent, transparent data collection and robust security measures first, then you can offer those tailored, loyalty-building experiences.
Enhancing accessibility with Generative UI
The industry still has a long way to go on the accessibility front; it’s often an afterthought when it should be at the core of all digital services. With the help of AI, accessibility can be delivered as a priority. AI-powered assistive technologies like text-to-speech and context-aware suggestions can aid users with low-literacy, motor or cognitive impairments, helping people get more from their digital interactions.
With AI we can even generate a personalised user interface for every user, optimised for that specific person’s unique needs. Not only that, AI can continuously analyse how users are interacting with a product to keep improving accessibility measures. Generated UIs can even ensure that the experience adapts as users become more familiar with the system. For instance, beginners might see a simplified interface, while advanced features can be revealed for expert users.
Testing ideas early with synthetic users
The earlier you can user-test your ideas the better; giving you more time to spend validating the ones that really have legs, and ultimately getting your products to market faster (and cheaper). AI can help power this process, by building simulations of your defined personas to test your ideas on. Synthetic users are surprisingly effective, especially in filtering out bad ideas from a large batch in early iteration.
But as with any practice that involves your users and their experiences, AI is no substitute for the real deal. Filter out the bad ideas early, but then validate, test and refine your product development with real users. Relying solely on AI without real user feedback is like sailing blindly.
Automating real-time analysis
Custom GPTs are revolutionising market research and competitive analysis. By using well-defined prompts and predefined sources like competitor websites, industry reports, social media, and news articles, you can automate a lot of the analysis process.
The GPT sitemap tool can effortlessly scrape data from any website, allowing for regular updates – weekly, monthly, or as needed. And providing examples of the desired output ensures you get what you're looking for. This automation frees up time for strategic tasks and keeps you informed in near real-time about the latest trends and competitor activities.
Automating tedious tasks
There’s lots of opportunity to use AI to enrich processes behind the scenes, but we’re also delivering AI-powered solutions to improve our clients’ experiences (and their clients’ experiences).
A recent example was at ARAG, a Dutch legal aid company. We developed an AI case handling interface that can assess large volumes of documents; from contracts and emails to telephone transcripts and WhatsApp conversations, to extract relevant facts and summarise key information. That interface means time freed up for lawyers to spend on the strategic, tactical aspects of their cases; and less time on tedious tasks.
There’s understandable reluctance around AI and its role, but opportunities like this are doing real ‘good’ in our world; ultimately making quality legal aid more accessible and affordable to those in need.
What does the future look like for AI in experience design?
While we’ve come a long way very quickly, there are still significant opportunities for improvement in the UX space. These opportunities are likely to come not from newer models, but from multi-AI agent setups. We know that the value of UX comes from understanding a user’s entire journey and holistically supporting them along the way.
Yet, AI is currently being added to journeys to address small needs individually rather than creating comprehensive, end-to-end experiences. By employing multiple AI agents for various tasks and enabling them to interact with each other and users, we can create more dynamic, ‘human-like’ experiences. This approach is going to be game-changing over the next few years.
More broadly, while there will probably always be resistance and ‘purists’ in any discipline, there’s no getting away from the fact that the future will be AI-powered. That doesn’t mean we’re looking at ‘robotising’ our world; authentic human experiences will always be more important. But if your business isn’t adapting to AI, other companies will; and they’ll be more efficient and more effective by doing so.
The opportunity will be there for the taking, to better connect with consumers through AI-powered personalisation, to optimise customer support with predictive, adaptive user interfaces. And those who take that opportunity will thrive.