Following best practices in agile software development to meet actual user needs

Design Methodology

Following best practices in agile software development and user-centered design, the ECHOLOT system will be developed iteratively using the Double Diamond Model, developed by Design Council UK and employed worldwide across public institutions, universities and large technology and product design companies. This model helps to understand challenging problems and develop innovative solutions through four iterative phases.  Discovery and Definition phases involve in-depth engagement with stakeholder communities to gather insights. Once the problem(s) are (re)defined in an innovative way, the model works through the Implementation and Evaluation phases. Possible solutions are evaluated through test implementations, and are improved incrementally. Our methodology also involves co-design tools such as user personas, scenarios and journey maps.

User Personas

A user persona is a realistic, research-based profile of a target user, summairising their goals, needs, behaviors, and pain points—it is a tool we use to design with a clear, shared understanding of who we’re building ECHOLOT for. The user personas for ECHOLOT were developed together with our case study stakeholders. Each persona shares goals, needs and pain points which form the backbone of ECHOLOT’s requirements engineering process.

Interested in taking part?

ECHOLOT is committed to continuous engagement with our stakeholder communities. We value regular feedback and run surveys, organise interactive co-design workshops and training sessions. If you’re interested in taking part in some of these activities, want to stay informed for future events, or just want to share direct feedback, do not hesitate to get in touch below! If you’re more hands-on and want to contribute bug reports or issues connected to our tool development, you can also directly visit our GitHub repositories and submit an issue there.

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ECHOLOT is a project funded by the European Union under Grant Agreement n.101233096. The views and opinions expressed in this website are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Union.

ECHOLOT is part of the ECCCH Cultural Heritage Cloud initiative, managed by the ECHOES project.

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