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Working as a full-time UX professional for a company, after a while you can build up many projects that should also be kept track of and watched carefully. If you think about a site as having an informational side, a registration, a free trial, web-apps, etc. it does become a long list that would ideally need to be managed.

Are there best practices/ways of managing all of the UX projects that are within a company?

One way I imagine it could work is a live spreadsheet that can manage each project individually that is encompassed inside the company.

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  • Would it be fair to say that this is more of a general project management question than a UX issue? It's certainly a very broad question with no real correct answer.
    – Matt Obee
    Commented Jun 24, 2013 at 13:09
  • At first I debated on this question too, but if you look from a UX prospective, past projects should also have progress tracked and tested that project management does not include. Not saying there is a 1-way answer for this question, but I am sure there are other professionals who found a happy-medium with this issue. Make a little more sense?
    – Kyle Mirro
    Commented Jun 24, 2013 at 13:13

2 Answers 2

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I'm a UX Architect for a fortune 500 company and I have a very big portfolio to manage, so i'd firstly say this is a UX question not a Project Management question as it's a fair question to seek in a forum like this.

My approach thus far.

  1. Create a UX Repository of Excellence. You running around chasing down team(s) to see what they are up to isn't going to scale. The teams need to trust you but also be aware of your value, so you in turn need to de-mystify the magic of UX. Create a central repository that breaks UX into the patterns "Here's 10x tab controls, here's why/when/how tab controls are good/bad and here's some research around them" then follow up with a form or social commentary (transparent) that asks the question "Disagree? tell me more..." (creates a two way trust / challenge point). Basically you want to provide everyone you're co-working with with more "I know" vs "I think" answers, and a honey pot like this will do what I call "passive evangelism"
  2. Be the band manager not the rockstar. I used to be an Evangelist for Microsoft and I learnt years ago that everytime I was on stage presenting, I was failing at my job. I needed embedded experts to be on stage on my behalf becomes it creates "trust" with the audience, so the analogy of being a band manager not a rockstar held. Rockstars come and go but good band managers always scale. In your case find and unroot the officers in your Ux Army and have them be advocates on your behalf, get them to be your eyes/ears in the agile sprints etc that the various teams you have in your portfolio of project(s). Help them, train them and embrace them as they will always be your best agents of change anyway and you come across as a persona who "works well with others" which breaks down the whole "us" vs "them" mentality (which reduces ongoing UX solicitation meetings anyway).
  3. Create a Brag Wall / Update. At Microsoft the quickest way in 2007-2009 to get a promotion was to pat yourself on the back out loud, its shallow and weak but it worked. Turns out in corporations people are like that at times, shallow and want to feel as if they mean something than just a payrollID. Create a "brag" point and make others around you envious of the attention that your UX focus has given, make them want to be part of your program of awesome, and so praise the work they do (which in a way is you praising your own work). Point is amplify the successes of UX moments (not talking about "We just shipped") but tell people what's amazing about how the UX and your team(s) relationship is having on the work ahead.

Example. During Windows 7's creation, every week we'd get a newsletter explaining that weeks' research about they found in ongoing usability studies for its new UI. There were some amazing and facinating insights that would usually get burried in some sharepoint site traditionally. Yet each week I found myself waiting for the latest insight into what success/fail looks like in a product like Windows.

Interview people aswell, get them to talk about how Ux has helped them see differences in the way they think/act/smell/laugh .. GeekStories are brilliant motivators at times as people usually go "I didn't know that...". (did you know Windows Start button / menu was first created as a place holder. The dev at the time figured they'd come up with a menu eventually..so..menu was created in the meantime. Fast forward today, they finally got around to fixing/removing the menu in Windows 8... and turns out ...people did not like that at all). You just got served a Geekstory :)

In Summary

You're not managing a portfolio, you're managing people who work in the same portfolio as you and despite your god-status in the developer enclosure you must act like a passionate and caring god...you must heal, feed, clothe and embrace your disciples while at the same time bring people along for the journey of that which is our beloved Ux Vudu Magic! (if only they knew we were all frauds! hehehe ..shhh don't tell them!)

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  • This was great, and extremely insightful! The scalability was a huge factor in mind when thinking about this topic. Given I am working for a non-profit in a 3-4 person team, it was less about individual portfolios, and more on team / ux building portfolios as you laid out. Thanks!
    – Kyle Mirro
    Commented Jun 20, 2014 at 12:20
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A few ideas, I hope you find them helpful:

  • If possible, use a Wiki tool instead of spreadsheets that sit on individual's computer, drop box, or sharepoint (I use Confluence, it is great for tying into the Agile process that the company is following)
  • If you use Confluence and JIRA together for project management, you can have the status of the Dev & Design tickets visible and automatically updated in your documentation.
  • In general, make it as accessible and visible as possible
  • Make sure that what ever you choose fits in the rest of what the company is doing.. Although, sometimes you can take new tools into use and the rest of the company will follow (happened in our company :) )
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  • Thanks! This was insightful, Confluence seems great, especially with Jira which we use here. I am playing around with PODIO because it is free. The only thing this is missing, is the ability to track progress, but that might be an offline process.
    – Kyle Mirro
    Commented Jun 25, 2013 at 17:16
  • I used a free Wiki (MediaWiki) first, however I would not go back, Confluence has been worth investment, the main reasons being: Confluence is so much easier to use and edit, due to this, it is easy to get rest of the company in too - if they can use MsWord, they can use Confluence. Especially with less tehcnical people, that was a problem before. Then the connection to JIRA, it is super, and with all the plugins that you can get (to edit your designs on page, no need to export-import), for Gliffy and Balsamiq etc. I had a quick look at PODIO, looks interesting, has apps too. Good luck :)
    – Skuirrel
    Commented Jun 26, 2013 at 17:58
  • More intranet is unlikely to be a succesful strategy.
    – edeverett
    Commented Jun 19, 2014 at 11:58

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