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How People Feel about Progress: Metrics That Drive User Behavior | by Jared Peterson | Sep, 2024 | Product Coalition
Sit, Siri! Designing Our Tech to Have Good Etiquette | by Amber Case | Aug, 2023 | Medium
Etiquette by definition is about graceful relationships between different kinds of people. Good design is about designing calm relationships between technology and people. So we should expect our products to practice proper etiquette. As designers, we should create experiences with that etiquette in mind.
Components | The Component Gallery
Archetypes of Gamification: Analysis of mHealth Apps
Eight archetypes of gamification emerged from the analysis of health-related mobile apps: (1) competition and collaboration, (2) pursuing self-set goals without rewards, (3) episodical compliance tracking, (4) inherent gamification for external goals, (5) internal rewards for self-set goals, (6) continuous assistance through positive reinforcement, (7) positive and negative reinforcement without rewards, and (8) progressive gamification for health professionals. The results indicate a close relationship between the identified archetypes and the actual health behavior that is being targeted.
Designing Theory-Informed Behavior Change Apps - BehavioralEconomics.com | The BE Hub
The NOW! Fest 2021 | Day 1 - YouTube
Designing Health & Fitness Apps with the Mind in Mind - Massimo Ingegno (and other speakers)
Don’t Alienate Your User: A Primer for Internationalisation & Localisation
Designing better links for websites and emails — a guideline
Why are “click here” and “by this link” poor choices? And is it acceptable to use “read more”? In this article, I’ll explain popular wording and formatting mistakes and will show more accessible and informative alternatives.
The endless search for “here“ in the unhelpful “click here“ button
8 tips for developing and designing successful behaviour change apps and websites - BehaviourWorks Australia
9 Push Notification Marketing Strategies To Boost Your Subscribers
Putting back users to the forefront: sustainable engagement tips from behavioral science
Luckily, behavioral science can help close the intention-action gap, offering a toolkit to help change behavior for the better. Here are three ways we can apply lessons from behavioral science to drive sustainable engagement: