Gravity7
-
Recent
- Principles of Social Interaction Design (pdf)
- Big data, social data: which matters more?
- Lean UX and lean startups: is trial and error the best way forward?
- The secret sauce of social
- When should you think about social interaction design?
- Check out the new check in
- Tracking and trackers: user experience that counts
- Social media and marketing doublespeak
- A few thoughts on social media user types
- Zero Moment of Truth, or Zero Moment of Insight?
- Instagram: the object of sharing & the shared object
- Live video chats — if next new thing, what social design issues?
- Enterprise social: it’s still about the people
- Games People Play: Transaction Satisfaction
- Games People Play, and Social Games Online
-

I make your social media work better for people. Social Interaction Design (SxD) is user-centric approach to social media design, implementation, and strategy that accounts for how different kinds of users engage with social media, and how sites and application design and execution lead to emergent social practices. It applies to user experience design (UX), interaction design (IxD), user interface design (UI), and information architecture (IA). It draws on insights from psychology, sociology, anthropology, communication theory, and media theory. I am available for consulting to design agencies, social media agencies, startups, and social media campaign managers.
about.me
Founder, SxdSalon>, a group blog
Monthly Archives: September 2006
Marcamp/France Telecom/Orange trip report
Was at Marcamp yesterday, down on the point of oyster, just south of the city, for an afternoon of cel phones, marketing, social networking, and wireless profit and propheteering. It was good to see familiar faces (mike price, paul smith, … Continue reading
Alfred Schutz, F2F, Social Software, and Streams of Consciousness
“If I wish to observe one of my own lived experiences, I must perform a reflective Act of attention. But in this case, what I will behold is a past experience, not one presently occurring. Since this holds true for … Continue reading