Writing effective Use Case and User Story Examples

Tip 1. When creating use cases, be productive without perfection
Tip 2. Define your use case actors
Tip 3. Define your “Sunny Day” Use Cases (Primary Use Cases)
Tip 4. Identify reuse opportunity for use cases
Tip 5. Create a use case index
Tip 6. Identify the key components of your use case
Tip 7. Name and briefly describe your use case
Tip 8. Create the use case basic flow
Tip 9. Create the use case alternate flows
Tip 10. Produce your use case document
Tip 11. Generate a Use Case Model Diagram
Tip 12. Do you need User Stories?

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Creative brief

A creative brief is a document used by creative professionals and agencies to develop creative deliverables: visual design, copy, advertising, web sites, etc. The document is usually developed by the requestor (in most cases a marketing team member) and approved by the creative team of designers, writers, and project managers. In some cases, the project’s creative brief may need creative director approval before work will commence.

The creative brief, consisting of a series of simple questions asked by the creative team and answered by the requestor, becomes the guidepost for the development of the creative deliverable. As with many strategic documents, if the project goes off track referring back to this mutually agreed upon document to see where the divergence began is helpful.

Creative briefs can come in many flavors and are usually tailored to the agency or group that is developing the creative deliverable. They know which questions (and answers) are of paramount importance to them in order to deliver a high-quality creative execution.

A creative brief may contain:

  • Background — what is the background of the project? Why is it being done?
  • Target audience — what do they already think about this subject? Is there anything that should be avoided?
  • Objectives — what is to be accomplished? How will this be measured and success understood?
  • Single message — what is the one thing to tell the audience? What is the single thing they should remember about the offering? How will they believe what we say?
  • Mandatory elements – mandatory elements such as the client’s logo, address, phone number and so forth.
  • Deliverables — what is to be used to give the audience the message? What is the best way or place to reach this audience?
  • Timeline — how soon is this needed? When is it expected to be done? How many rounds (revisions) will this project undergo?
  • Budget — how much can be spent to get this developed? Is there any budget needed to publish/flight the creative?
  • Approvals — who needs to give the “okay”?

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Word of Art and Word of Code

artcoder says: “I call myself artcoder because I like turning art into code. Trained with a master’s degree in computer science, I started out my career as a programmer working for large corporations, small companies, and dot-com’s. After years of manipulating lines and lines of abstract code, I found beauty in art and web design. Re-tooling myself in the skills of Photoshop, Fireworks, XHTML, CSS, and color theory, I make my attempts at web design. Now I would like to say that I lead a balanced life with one foot in the world of art and another foot in the world of code.”

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Dojo Toolkit
Dojo Toolkit

Dojo’s Dijit and DojoX provides a complete collection of user interface controls, giving you the power to create web applications that are highly optimized for usability, performance, internationalization, accessibility, but above all deliver an incredible user experience. Completely free and open-source with no strings attached or licenses to buy!

Dijit is suitable for just about everything, including:

  • Simple web sites and blogs that just want to unobtrusively add some simple widgets or interactivity, such as a Flickr Image viewer or a Twitter feed summary
  • Robust web applications such as email communication suites, mapping engines, and e-commerce solutions
  • Enterprise intranet apps to replace legacy thick client desktop software for internal and external sales reports, document management systems, and other productivity software to manage and visualize data entry and retrieval
  • Embedded and mobile applications

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WCAG 2.0

Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0.

These are written rules governing web accessibility as published by the W3C’s WAI. http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/

Law Office of Lainey Feingold

http://lflegal.com

Law Office of Lainey Feingold, the business site of disability rights lawyer Lainey Feingold, was designed by Mike Cherim specifically to conform to the level of AAA under the WCAG2.0. And having already officially achieved this status, there was hope we might have our first Timeless Universal Design Award on our hands!

The site is built on a customised WordPress platform and, in terms of web accessibility, it’s clearly a great piece of work with obvious care and attention paid to:

  • Semantic markup
  • JavaScript that degrades gracefully
  • Keyboard accessibility
  • Compatibility with a wide range of browsers and assistive software
  • A design that is still eminently usable without images

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