Building a Three-Level User Experience (UX) Measurement Framework for Mobile Banking Applications in a Chinese Context: An Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Related Works
3. Research Framework
3.1. Procedure
3.1.1. Stage 1: Identification
3.1.2. Stage 2: Validation
3.1.3. Stage 3: Quantification
3.2. Participants
3.3. Data Collection and Analysis
3.3.1. Thematic Data Collection and Analysis
3.3.2. Statistical Data Collection and Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Context Requirement
4.1.1. A-1 Sense of Safety
- A-1-1 Active record keeping. Users often must save the corresponding operation records for subsequent viewing and confirmation when performing essential operations. Concurrently, users should try reducing the repeated input of recorded information, reducing unnecessary execution costs, and improving efficiency. Therefore, it is necessary to actively keep these vital operation records for users in case of need. For example, users can query their transfer or operation records involving account funds. After entering the transfer account information, the transferred personal information can be automatically saved for the next quick transfer.
- A-1-2 Prompt before irreversible operation. In an irreversible operation, it is necessary to confirm the operation result/current operation, reduce the secondary operation’s execution cost, and avoid unnecessary property loss. For example, when purchasing a financial product, a user is informed that the confirmation is the final purchase confirmation and cannot be refunded.
- A-1-3 Provides security settings. We should provide users with account-related security settings to ensure account security and increase users’ sense of security by opening these settings. For example, when users use mobile banking, they provide users with relevant settings for security monitoring and guarantees. For example, users can choose whether to prohibit night purchases. Users obtain a sense of security through the user’s settings for these security functions.
4.1.2. A-2 Exceeded Expectation
- A-2-1 Actively provides related follow-up services. Therefore, we should provide users with complete process services and pay attention to relevant services after the business operation. For example, after a transfer is completed, the application should provide users with account information such as the balance on the card.
- A-2-2 Provide users with appropriate information filtering categories according to scenarios. Users cannot analyze complex information when viewing bills or reports. Thus, they can filter the information according to their needs and provide appropriate information filtering categories to help users filter the specific categories they want to see. For example, we should provide users with more meaningful bill screening categories, such as electronic products, books, and magazines, rather than online shopping.
4.1.3. A-3 Personalization
- A-3-1 Give users the right to choose. Give users the right to choose and adjust some settings. Users can choose services and independently adjust the application’s scope for available services with operation space, such as function adjustment and information push. For example, because banks can increase a credit card limit, users can choose whether to increase the limit [41]. Users can choose the saving time on transferring records by themselves. Users can select the type of information push.
- A-3-2 Provide a personalized function layout for different users. When users manage a business, they hope to find a layout suitable for their characteristics. They can obtain a targeted service experience, or they can also describe their own identity or cultural symbols. For example, users can choose their favorite interface skin according to their usage habits and preferences.
4.2. Data Requirement
4.2.1. B-1 Provide Appropriate Clue
- B-1-1 Present only critical information to users. When users manage a business, there is some information that users care about and focus on. If this information is presented with unnecessary information, and users cannot intuitively obtain the required information, it significantly reduces users’ efficiency when handling business. Therefore, it is necessary to present the critical information that users care about in the interface as much as possible to save the cost of users’ self-learning. For example, in handling credit cards, the user is presented with a card’s annual fee, rights and interests, and other information about various credit cards.
- B-1-2 Provide practical guidance information. It is easy for a user to enter a card number according to the function number of the bank, for example, if the user does not understand the function number of the card or does not manually understand the function number of the bank [42]. If the user does not understand the function number of the card, it is easy to ignore the function number of the bank. For example, when inputting the card number for the first time, we must remind the user of the optical character recognition (OCR) function’s existence and cooperate with the guidance information.
- B-1-3 Visual presentation of information. From the user side, in addition to professional terms, we must highlight vital information to save users’ learning costs. For example, on the display page of financial products, in addition to professional terms, visualize important information and cooperate with sentences that nonprofessional users can understand so that users can master the product overview at once.
4.2.2. B-2 Reduce Cognition Load
- B-2-1 Description consistency. To consistently show information, colors can be more systematic and meaningful. For example, icons of the same business type should use the same color. The description of terms should be consistent across the applications and ensure each feature is consistent.
- B-2-2 Clear navigation and easy identification of information. Navigation shall be clear and direct, making it easier for users to find the desired function. The navigation area and content area should be clear and distinguishable. The navigation name shall be expressed in a way that users understand to avoid ambiguity. For example, the user can clearly define the location of the navigation area in the interface, and various functions are easy to find and call.
- B-2-3 Appropriate segmentation of presentation information. When users fill in a large amount of information in batches or present it logically, it is not easy to fill in a large amount of information simultaneously, particularly when it needs more than two units. For example, when users fill in loan application materials, they must separate information such as paging or stowing and expanding according to different material information. This process would reduce the cognitive burden caused by users when processing information and processing materials and information batches within a reasonable range.
- B-2-4 Clear and accurate information presentation. Because the same type of information may have many different meanings, when presenting the information, the description of the information should be as accurate as possible so that users can clearly and accurately understand what type of information is presented. For example, the banking business includes login, initial, query, transaction, cash advance, online transaction, and other passwords. When a transfer password must be entered, clearly tell the user the type of password required at this time.
4.3. Function Requirement
4.3.1. C-1 Reduce Operational Error
- C-1-1 Rationalization of information prompt mode. Because the types of prompt information have different reminder intensities, the corresponding prompt methods are also different. If a particular type of information prompt is inconsistent with the reminder intensity corresponding to its information, it may cause users to miss important information. Therefore, the method used by an information prompt should correspond to its reminder intensity to remind users more effectively. For example, different forms of reminders are used for information with different importance.
- C-1-2 Reduced manual operation through technical means. Use technical means to automate simplified operations (i.e., acceptable information input) and reduce human errors, such as OCR, smart reading clipboard account information, prompt transfer, automatic repayment, and other functions.
4.3.2. C-2 Help
- C-2-1 Provide explanation and help. Users hope to find solutions and entrances quickly for possible problems and incomprehension, such as professional vocabulary and product details. For example, for places where further detailed information may be required, such as professional bank vocabulary, income risk of financial products, and other detailed information, set up links or floating windows for users in advance.
- C-2-2 Improve customer service function. Intelligent customer service cannot accurately solve a problem, and search results can be incorrect. The application of manual customer service is typically tricky and often requires waiting. Users hope that customer service can solve problems more accurately and efficiently. For example, by reducing the process of transferring to manual customer service, intelligent customer service statement recognition is more accurate.
4.3.3. C-3 Provide Reminder and Feedback
- C-3-1 Provide timely and continuous feedback on information changes. When fund information, progress, and service content in the account information change, if the user does not obtain immediate feedback on the fund change information the first time, the user would feel insecure about the fund flow. The user may not be able to perceive the changed content the first time. Therefore, the bank must highlight it to the user activity and update the status of the account information in time. Every piece of information changes after that and can be given timely feedback. For example, users can timely grasp the progress and status of the transaction after transfer.
- C-3-2 Automatic reminder of important messages. Before the user must perform essential operations, the user often lacks awareness of the upcoming operations because many upcoming operations are only displayed in the interface without a timely reminder to the user before the operation. Therefore, it is necessary to remind the user before these events to ensure they receive the operation information. For example, before the credit card repayment date, the bank would automatically inform the upcoming deduction behavior to remind the user of the upcoming deduction operation of the user’s funds so that the user can have an expected understanding of the changes in his funds in advance.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Data Collection Methodology | Type of Data | Phase of the Study | Data Analysis Method |
---|---|---|---|
Interview | Audio recordings | Identification | Thematic analysis |
Online survey | Survey documents | Validation | Statistical analysis |
Online survey | Survey documents | Quantification | AHP analysis |
Transcripts | Services | Scenarios | Jobs to Be Done | Third Level Criteria |
---|---|---|---|---|
When handling a new credit card, I do not know when I can obtain this card. It is always done when I do not know | Credit Card | Apply for a new credit card | G23-5 I hope to receive important notifications from the bank in time when applying for a credit card | Give timely and continuous feedback on information changes |
I have set up automatic repayment for my loan. I regularly deposit my money in advance and inform me when the bank deducts. This is very good, otherwise, I’m always uneasy. | Consumer Loan | Repayment | G41-5 I hope to keep abreast of the information and trends of the loan at any time |
First-Level Criteria | Priority | Second-Level Criteria | Priority | Third-Level Criteria | Priority |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A. Context Requirement | 0.2403 | A-1 Sense of Safety | 0.1717 | A-1-1 Active record keeping | 0.0281 |
A-1-2 Prompt before irreversible operation | 0.0926 | ||||
A-1-3 Provides security settings | 0.0510 | ||||
A-2 Exceeded Expectation | 0.0343 | A-2-1 Actively provide related follow-up services | 0.0171 | ||
A-2-2 Provide users with appropriate information filtering categories according to scenarios | 0.0172 | ||||
A-3 Personalization | 0.0343 | A-3-1 Give users the right to choose | 0.0300 | ||
A-3-2 Provide personalized function layout for different users | 0.0043 | ||||
B. Data Requirement | 0.2098 | B-1 Provide Appropriate Clue | 0.1049 | B-1-1 Present only critical information to users | 0.0262 |
B-1-2 Provide reasonable guidance information | 0.0525 | ||||
B-1-3 Visual presentation of information | 0.0262 | ||||
B-2 Reduce Cognitive Load | 0.1049 | B-2-1 Description consistency | 0.0105 | ||
B-2-2 Clear navigation and easy identification of information | 0.0445 | ||||
B-2-3 Appropriate segmentation of presentation information | 0.0107 | ||||
B-2-4 Clear and accurate information presentation | 0.0392 | ||||
C. Function Requirement | 0.5499 | C-1 Reduce Operational Error | 0.0899 | C-1-1 Rationalization of information prompt mode | 0.0600 |
C-1-2 Reduced manual operation through technical means | 0.0299 | ||||
C-2 Help | 0.1633 | C-2-1 Provide explanation and help | 0.0327 | ||
C-2-2 Improve customer service function | 0.1306 | ||||
C-3 Provide Reminder and Feedback | 0.2967 | C-3-1 Provide timely and continuous feedback on information changes | 0.2225 | ||
C-3-2 Automatic reminder of important messages | 0.0742 |
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Zhu, D.; Xu, Y.; Ma, H.; Liao, J.; Sun, W.; Chen, Y.; Liu, W. Building a Three-Level User Experience (UX) Measurement Framework for Mobile Banking Applications in a Chinese Context: An Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) Analysis. Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2022, 6, 83. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6090083
Zhu D, Xu Y, Ma H, Liao J, Sun W, Chen Y, Liu W. Building a Three-Level User Experience (UX) Measurement Framework for Mobile Banking Applications in a Chinese Context: An Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) Analysis. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction. 2022; 6(9):83. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6090083
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhu, Di, Yuanhong Xu, Hongjie Ma, Jingxiao Liao, Wen Sun, Yuting Chen, and Wei Liu. 2022. "Building a Three-Level User Experience (UX) Measurement Framework for Mobile Banking Applications in a Chinese Context: An Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) Analysis" Multimodal Technologies and Interaction 6, no. 9: 83. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6090083
APA StyleZhu, D., Xu, Y., Ma, H., Liao, J., Sun, W., Chen, Y., & Liu, W. (2022). Building a Three-Level User Experience (UX) Measurement Framework for Mobile Banking Applications in a Chinese Context: An Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) Analysis. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction, 6(9), 83. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti6090083