Explore Our Venue

Don't miss our next announcement

Subscribe to our newsletter:

Front End Beginner Gaige Hall 204

Finding Fire from Smoke — Advocating for UX in Post-Launch Activities

J. Hogue looking straight at the camera, dark short hair, glasses, and a beard and moustache

J. Hogue

When a building is engulfed in smoke, it is not always apparent where the fire’s source is. When there are no visible flames, where do firefighters start the battle? How do they know where to place the engines, the pumpers, and the hoses? 

Developers and site owners often have a similar issue. They can see the smoke — low engagement metrics, abandoned and incomplete workflows, console and stack trace errors — but they can’t always locate the fire. User Experience (UX) research can find its source, determining the scale and source of a problem by its symptoms. When analytics and error logs can’t help, teams should turn to UX tools like heuristic audits, user journeys, heatmaps, surveys, and interviews. 

This session will help developers and marketers identify situations where UX skills can effectively pinpoint the root of a problem. We will use examples from the real world, take questions from the audience, and give you the skills to advocate for UX when the customer’s problems are raising smoke with no clear indication of fire.

Additional Details:

  • Audience level: Beginner
  • Topic: Front End
  • Room: Gaige Hall 204

Presentation slides:

Download Slides

Updates

Join Us at the Higher Education Summit Keynote: Higher Ed, Civic Trust and the Role of the Web

Discover how higher ed websites can build civic trust and reflect community values. Join Jessica Pontarelli Evans of Brown University as she explores the web’s public purpose at the New England Drupal Camp’s Higher Education Summit keynote.

2025 Keynote Announced!

What happens when you treat curiosity not as a means to an end, but as a design tool in its own right? In this year’s keynote, Jason Pamental unpacks how following hunches, chasing questions, and poking at the edges of the unknown can lead to richer, more resonant digital experiences.