As a designer, I have had to tread carefully with my wardrobe choices. I know my customers well enough to understand what they want and don%u2019t want in terms of the type of clothing they wear. As a designer, I have tried to do the same for my clients: we are all about creating great products for our customers and giving them choices when it comes to what they select from our range of stock.
I invite you to consider this as part of your black-box testing process:
%u2022 What are the most important items for your customers?
%u2022 For each item, do you need an additional piece or two?
%u2022 Does the product look good on the model? Do you think it does? How does it feel on your skin? Is it comfortable? Does it compliment your outfit? Do you like how it fits or how it looks on you (and has anyone else approved).
When considering this part of testing, ask yourself these questions:
%u2022 Is there a way that we can improve on what we have now (say by enhancing our design) so that we can make better products for more people today?
%u2022 What is the principle behind this approach %u2013 is there an existing industry standard we could use instead of making up something new?
From both ends (product and market), everything should be done with care: every little bit helps %u2013 but only if everything goes as planned!
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