Sales POP - Purveyors of Propserity
The Most Important Component of Any Mobile App
Blog / All About CRM / Dec 11, 2018 / Posted by Nikolaus Kimla / 4253

The Most Important Component of Any Mobile App

0 comments

There are many important components that go to make up a worthwhile mobile app. But the most important component is…(drum roll please)…the user interface, known to most everyone today as the UI.

Very obviously, with a mobile app, you’re quite limited as to viewable screen space. A potential user will glance at it, and if they don’t immediately get an idea of how it works, they’re gone. Mobile users are quite impatient, and won’t engage if they don’t get it pretty close to right away.

The Laptop or Desktop Difference

On a laptop or desktop computer, it’s a little different. A user might persist a bit, access online documentation or help, or engage in a live chat with the vendor company. There is also technology with which the user can be onboarded step-by-step.

Beyond that, the laptop or desktop experience can be triggered, optimized, and fine-tuned down to even the type of user. For a CRM, that could be a sales manager, an administrator, or a salesperson. At Pipeliner, we’re utilizing 4 different technologies today, right in the application, to help the user along. We have a chat window, a knowledge base, an onboarding technology, and a support ticketing system.

On mobile, however, such flexibility isn’t possible. A potential user either understands it, or they don’t. Even one too many clicks could lead a user astray, and they would be lost. Help and support on mobile is limited—you can’t do a lot in such a small space.

UI Focus on the User

UI design, from my experience, isn’t a matter of trend. In most cases, “trend is not your friend.” Who sets a trend? It should never be a designer following along the lines of “what is cool right now.” The UI should be designed completely around the user and their experience, and their ease of use.

I’ve actually learned a lot from games. Games provide a very good overview of how users onboard and interact. I’ve been paying very close attention to the online game Fortnite, one of the most successful games in history with over 250 million users. My son and everyone in his class are playing it. The target age group for this game is 9 to 14, and it’s amazing to watch how fast these kids are learning and interacting. They’re not reading the documentation! They’re just jumping right in. The game is understood without a second thought.

Of course, a game must also be challenging. While a business app should be just as easy to use as a game, the “challenging” aspect cannot be part of it. The user of a business app isn’t earning extra points by finding the hidden treasure or the secret weapon, so all functionality must be geared to ease of use.

Visual and Universal

A UI should be totally visual because mobile itself is a visual tool. At Pipeliner, we’ve simply extended the design philosophy of our desktop version—dynamic instant visualization—to our mobile CRM. It is completely visual.

When it comes to symbology, our UI is designed in a way we know our user community will understand. There are many icons that are universal. For example, everyone understands that a star means “favorite.” A plus sign (+) means adding something. A magnifying glass means “search.” A gear sign indicates setup.

It’s a similar scenario to icons seen on road signs—they’re the same the world over so that drivers in any country will understand them. The same is true with icons in airports. With over 50,000 airports in the world today, and travelers from everywhere, can you imagine what would happen if each airport decided to create their own icon for, as an example, baggage claim? Chaos would result.

This kind of uniformity is even more important on mobile because mobile has even more users than automobiles or airlines. A majority of people in the civilized regions of planet Earth have mobile phones. If you don’t have one, people regard you very oddly—you’re living on the moon.

Apps should have a universal navigation system, even when colors, backgrounds, and languages are different. An example is calendar apps—while there are different companies making calendars, they look pretty much the same. Otherwise, how could someone use them and update them? People also want to know when holidays and special days are. These are different for every country, but the symbology is the same.

Business Differentiation

While you should implement universal icons and instantly understood symbology, you must also integrate your own corporate look and feel into the design. We have done that at Pipeliner, and it requires a little bit of magic that every company has to utilize. If you don’t do that, you’re not separating yourself out from competitors.

You have to strike right in between being completely unique—having your own look—and being completely universal. There’s a sweet spot in there so that you maintain your own look and feel but make it possible for any user to come along and engage with your app.

Simplicity

Overall, the key that I always keep in mind as regards a UI is simplicity. This concept was communicated beautifully by Steve Jobs: “Simple can be harder than complex. You have to work hard to get your thinking clean to make it simple. But it’s worth it in the end because once you get there, you can move mountains.”

About Author

CEO and partner of pipelinersales.com and the uptime ITechnologies, which I founded in 1994 and has since played a significant role in the development of the IT-environment. pipeliner is the most innovative sales CRM management solution on the market. Pipeliner was designed by sales professionals for sales professionals and helps close the gap between the requirements of C-level executives for transparency and the day-to-day operational needs of field and inside sales. I am also the founder and Initiator of the independent economic platform GO-AHEAD!, which orientates itself on the principles of a free marketplace in terms of liberal and social responsibility. Connecting people, the trust of business leadership in terms of values such as freedom, self-responsibility, and entrepreneurial spirit, and strengthening their awareness in order to create a dynamic boost within the economy triggered through spontaneity, all stand for the initial ideas surrounding GO-AHEAD! I studied in Los Angeles and Vienna and received my Masters's Degree in 1994. I am married and have 3 children My Specialties are in: Sales Management, Sales CRM Software, CRM Cloud Solutions, SAAS, Business Strategy, Software Development, "Pipeline Management", Social responsibility, outbound sales, b2b sales, inside sales, sales strategy, lead generation, sales process, entrepreneurship, coaching, mentoring, speaker, opportunity management, lead management, Austrian School of Economics

Author's Publications on Amazon

This is a practical manual covering the vital subject of Sales Management. I firmly believe that sales are the most important profession for dealing with today’s turbulent world and Econo my, for salespeople create wealth and produce peace. But salespeople need a competent, stable leader—and…
Buy on Amazon
Inside this eBook, you’ll discover a series of chapters dedicated to some of the most important areas facing sales today. From the sales process definition to measurement, lead generation, and proven sales techniques, this comprehensive eBook will provide you with the information you need to…
Buy on Amazon
A common term in sales today is EQ, which stands for “emotional I.Q.” It means the skill a salesperson has in reading emotions and utilizing them in sales. It means empathy and a number of other abilities. The short version is, it’s an I.Q. when…
Buy on Amazon
People are smart to question the future of automation, for it has become part of everything we do. With the quantity of applications and technology around us, we yet still crave more. We become convinced of its power when our package is delivered from Amazon…
Buy on Amazon
Sales management isn’t a simple subject by any means. But at the same time, it does have some basic and somewhat simple fundamentals—and that is what we are bringing to you with this book. First come pain points of sales management, and how to overcome…
Buy on Amazon
Today the Internet has transformed a seller's market into a buyer's market and author Nikolaus Kimla states that the role of sales has never been more crucial. It is now time to give salespeople the role they factually can play: entrepreneurs within the enterprise. They…
Buy on Amazon
This is our public declaration of the intentions behind Pipeliner, and our objectives and motives for the product and for our company. Behind the development of that CRM application and, in fact, behind everything we do, we have a real cause. The story begins with…
Buy on Amazon
For the future, there must be a perfect balance of humans and technology. You have to have the perfect technology, andthen the perfect human being in application, performance and presentation. Today and into the future, it’s a 50-50 balance. In the past it was perhaps…
Buy on Amazon
The salespreneur is based on the concept of the entrepreneur. Before we can explain the salespreneur, you have to have some understanding of the entrepreneur. The entrepreneur plays a crucial role in any economic system. The entrepreneur seeks out information that can be utilized for…
Buy on Amazon
A seasoned captain would never leave port without a competent navigator. In a similar way, a sales manager might be a total ace at "commanding the ship" – at inspiring and coaching sales reps, pointing out and getting agreement on making quotas, and keeping everyone's…
Buy on Amazon
Comments

..
..
..
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. For information on cookies and how you can disable them, visit our privacy and cookie policy.