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Every designer should read this UX case study
Design notes on the 2023 Wikipedia redesign.
Exploring the unique challenges of making changes within an open-source, volunteer-led environment. Plus, the importance of prototyping.
Wikipedia is more than a website — it’s perhaps a cornerstone of the World Wide Web. For decades, the site has provided a model for collaborating online, designing long-form content layouts, and supporting internationalization.
Stuff UX designer Alex Hollender explains how the Readers Web Team at the Wikimedia Foundation developed the Wikipedia redesign project and successfully pulled this enormous scope of work as a team, improving millions of people's reading and discovering knowledge experience.
The team began the project in April 2020 and launched in January 2023. You will find great insights into designing for a global audience (300+ languages, every device imaginable), designing for a large audience (~10 billion monthly pageviews), co-designing products (socio-technical processes) with an active community of users, editors, & technical contributors, and designing around user-generated content.
Their goals were:
Make the website familiar & welcoming to anyone who visits (thinking especially about younger people in other parts of the world who have not yet discovered Wikipedia)
Improve the experience of reading, navigating long articles, and knowledge discovery
Better accommodate divergent needs (reading vs. editing)
Develop a more flexible interface with an eye toward future features
They also picked these key metrics to monitor:
Pageviews
Edit rates
Account creation
Session length
Business results/data:
45% increased use of Table of Contents
29% increased use of Search
Preferred by 87% of logged-in users
15% decrease in "navigational scrolling" to find tools, menu items, etc.
You can also find a list of responses to specific UI/UX questions here: design documentation.
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