The Conference Tour

Jul 24th, 2006 No comments yet

dead
Whew! From Vancouver to Montreal to Broomfield, CO, we enjoyed meeting lots of you on our recent conference tour. You can get flickr’d out with photos of folks hanging at ourbooth at CHI or UPA here. Thanks to all those who stopped by and kicked it. It was great to hear about your recent remote research and experience with Ethnio.

Public Pricing. Sweet.

Jul 24th, 2006 No comments yet

B|P has made our remote usability study pricing public, with an interactive spreadsheet. You just enter in how many users you might like in a study, choose which deliverables you’d like, and it will give you a price range. Consulting firms hate to make their pricing public, but we think it makes things just a little easier.To see pricing, visit our remote usability testing page, and click on B|P Cost Estimator on the right.

Guide to Remote Usability

Jul 24th, 2006 No comments yet

Our favorite usability comic site, OK-Cancel, is featuring a guide to remote usability testing written by Nate. It will definitely not make sense to anyone who is not involved with usability in some fashion. It will make even less sense if you have not had your soul sucked away by the computer industry and are leading a happy healthy life outside of the interwebs. More power to you, friend.

Playing Games and Cursing

Jul 24th, 2006 No comments yet

Come say hello to Bolt | Peters and the get fresh crew at Adaptive Path’s User Experience Week this year, August 14-17, in Washington DC, where Nate will be presenting ‘Playing Games and Cursing: The Truth About Remote User Research’ with Rashmi Sinha. Nate and Rashmi will be discussing Ethnio andMindCanvas,  Rashmi’s saucy Game-like Elicitation Methods (GEMs) research web service. Together they’ll  show how interface research that is typically done in a lab can be done remotely, and will help people curse at software and web sites less, by playing games and exhibiting more natural behavior.

Remote Usability Site

Jul 10th, 2006 No comments yet

Blog we created with explanations of the different remote usability methods and links to the latest tools and methods. 

B|P Improves Web Usability for Dolby Laboratories

Dec 1st, 2005 No comments yet

Dolby asked B|P to conduct usability research as part of an effort to completely re-design the Dolby website. Based on the findings from the first round of research that B|P conducted, Dolby was able to improve key areas of the site in the redesign, including site navigation, content structure and screen flow. The second phase was completed in November measuring usability improvements of the re-designed site compared to the previous one.

Techinsurance and B|P = 103% Increase in Sales

Dec 1st, 2005 No comments yet

Techinsurance and B|P share the belief that improved user experience leads directly to the success of online products in the marketplace. This mutual understanding was so strong that both parties committed to an agreement structured around payment as a percentage of improved conversion rates for contractedge.com, a legal software web site. Techinsurance implemented the B|P usability recommendations for contractedge.com, and as a result saw a conversion rate increase of 103%!
Find out how you can structure a similar relationship with B|P.

B|P Expands Its Staff

Dec 1st, 2005 No comments yet

To meet growing customer demand, we have made three new hires in 2004. Senior Information Architect Benjamin Lerch brings to B|P eight years of user interface research and design experience; Information Architect Brian Enright is the third graduate of UC San Diego’s Distributed Cognition HCI program to join B|P. Jocelyn Wine is our new office manager handling the ever-increasing load of administrative tasks. Thank you Jocelyn!

Our New SOMA Digs

Dec 1st, 2005 No comments yet

We’ve moved our satellite office! It’s now at 854 Folsom Street in San Francisco — right down the block from Yerba Buena Gardens and MOMA. We now have four permanent remote usability testing stations here, which can be used concurrently to test up to 20 users per day, as well as big leather couches and a full bar. Come visit! Of course, we still have our main office at One Market Street in San Francisco where we conduct our lab-based usability test sessions.

Happy Holidays!

Dec 1st, 2005 No comments yet

Bolt | Peters would like to wish you happy holidays and a wonderful new year. We are wrapping up the year here with a new office, three new team members, and the Alpha release of our new remote usability testing software! We would love to hear what you’ve been up to, so drop us a line and let us know

Tutorial on Conducting Your Own Remote Study

Feb 16th, 2005 No comments yet

Want to conduct your own remote usability study? We walk you through every step of the research, from recruiting to observation.

Remote Testing versus Lab Testing

Feb 3rd, 2005 No comments yet

Purpose

This is a case-study comparing remote and lab-based usability testing. Bolt | Peters conducted two parallel Usability Studies on the corporate web site of a fortune 1000 software company in January 2002. Both studies used identical test plans but one was executed in a traditional usability laboratory and the other was conducted remotely, using an online screen-sharing tool to observe behavior.