Technology Category
- Application Infrastructure & Middleware - Middleware, SDKs & Libraries
- Platform as a Service (PaaS) - Application Development Platforms
Applicable Industries
- Cement
- Construction & Infrastructure
Applicable Functions
- Product Research & Development
- Quality Assurance
Use Cases
- Construction Management
- Experimentation Automation
Services
- Testing & Certification
- Training
About The Customer
Nokia is a leading global communications and technology company with 90,000 employees located all around the world. The company's UX design teams are spread across India, Bulgaria, Canada, Portugal, and Finland. The two main groups that benefit from a collaboration platform are Cloud and Network Services (CNS) and Network Infrastructure. The CNS team is part of the Common Software Foundation, an initiative to bring CNS applications together into a coherent software suite. The company's overarching design language is called FreeForm UX and it ensures the 3 areas are unified in their design principles. Nokia is at a stage where design is important but receives little funding.
The Challenge
Nokia, a global communications and technology company, faced the challenge of effective collaboration and communication among its 90,000 employees spread across multiple locations. The company's UX design teams were distributed across India, Bulgaria, Canada, Portugal, and Finland, making it difficult to work cohesively due to different time zones. The two main groups that benefited from a collaboration platform were Cloud and Network Services (CNS) and Network Infrastructure. The CNS team was part of the Common Software Foundation, an initiative to bring CNS applications together into a coherent software suite. The UX designers worked on three legs of the design system, core UI widgets, mapping, and charting. However, the company was at a stage where design was important but received little funding.
The Solution
Nokia adopted Marvel, a platform that facilitated effective collaboration and communication among its globally distributed teams. Marvel was instrumental in building a new design system and supporting product development. It helped with the foundational work for Nokia's demo site and design library, including delivery improvements such as fully integrated usage guidance, introduction of theming and tokenization, improved icon library, and support for right to left languages from the Middle East. Marvel's remote User Testing tools provided support to decision making and approval from stakeholders. During the research phase of the design process, Nokia leveraged Marvel User Testing in conjunction with moderated remote concept testing and usability testing to generate heat maps and statistics for users’ interactions with the GUI. This helped to provide supporting information for user tests and more accurately defend design decisions around navigation patterns for some applications.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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