After the exciting start of the year, we’ve rolled out a few more new features that will give workspace admins more visibility over teammates’ activity in the workspace, enable advanced copying and moving of maps and personas, and take product planning to the whole new level.
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Here is what’s new in UXPressia 4.31:
As a workspace admin, you might want to gain instant visibility of how your team uses the workspace. We’ve got you covered now!
To gain an insight into your team’s activity, go to the Workspace page. You’ll see an analytics overview there.
To get an in-depth view of the activity within the workspace, you can download a csv file with a detailed report.
Note: to be able to view the statistics, you must be the workspace admin or super admin.
Now you can copy the structure of your maps and personas and copy and move maps and personas together with other maps/personas which you linked to them.
Moving maps and personas linked to other maps/personas has become extremely easy.
To copy/move a map/persona together with other maps/personas that are linked to it, check the box near the “Copy/Move all linked maps/personas” option and confirm the action.
There’s one more new option for the “copy” action: when copying a map or persona, you can clear the content inside it.
This feature is useful when you want to copy the structure of a map/persona, not the information it contains.
Customer journey maps often have substages, and after the update it’s up to you to decide whether to show or hide them during the scroll.
We noticed that the ability to add five channels per process was not enough for some of our users to reflect their customers’ behavior.
Forget about that! Now you can add up to ten channels per process to the “Process and Channels” section of your customer journey map, more clearly visualizing the customer’s path at different stages of their journey.
With this release, we’re introducing a Backlog View for impact maps that makes prioritizing user stories and planning product iterations times easier.
Now, you can prioritize your user stories and track your progress in a dedicated space — the Backlog View. Think of it as of your product backlog.
In the Backlog View, there’s a table with all the user stories you’ve added. We organized them in a table with a single purpose — to allow you to manage them effectively.
First of all, you need to prioritize your user stories using the scoring system that works very simple:
The higher the score is, the more critical the user story to your product success is.
Once you are done with scoring user stories, you can assign them to the iterations that you’ve added.
You can also track your progress by marking user stories: once you mark a user story as complete, the progress bar on the left will indicate the progress you’ve made in working on a specific iteration.
Starting today, you can resize columns in your impact maps. Changing the size of a column will help you add as many details to the cells inside it without sacrificing the total look of your map.
We’ve got more new features in the pipeline. Which ones? Stay tuned and you’ll find out pretty soon.
Try out the new features we released today and let us know whether you like them or not.