The pistol grip, the iPhone, and the Google homepage all have one thing in common—they feel right and are intuitive so that users don’t need an instruction manual to work them. For the most part in the military, however, such human-centered design is a rarity in systems being deployed to tactical forces and security operations center analysts.

That’s quickly changing through what’s known as “user experience,” commonly referred to as UX. In this eBrief, we discuss how UX is helping to transfer the complexity of products and systems away from users and on engineering/product teams instead. The result: military products are becoming more useful, usable, and desirable.

Download this FREE editorial eBrief for all the details on how the successful user experience strategies improve military products.

 

 


Breaking Defense thanks Visual Logic for supporting this editorial E-Brief.
Sponsorship does not influence the editorial content of the E-Brief.