Measuring task success

Tomer Sharon
5 min readSep 15, 2018

This is part 5 in a series of articles about measuring Key Experience Indicators (KEIs). In this series I go deeper into the Google HEART framework for large-scale data analysis. The framework was put in place to help choose and define appropriate metrics that reflect both the quality of user experience and the goals of your product. Each article in the series discusses one of the HEART dimensions — Happiness, Engagement, Adoption, Retention, and Task success. Enjoy and use it!

What is task success?

Task success goes back to the definition of traditional usability and include two primary components — user effectiveness and efficiency. When measuring task success, there has to be a known task assigned to users. This means that looking at analytics data or analyzing usage logs is not going to be helpful here since you have no idea what users want to accomplish. When you create a situation where you know what the user is trying to do, then KEIs that inform you about time-on-task (efficiency) and task completion rates (effectiveness) are extremely helpful. You can create these situations using user research tools such as UserZoom.

Why measure task success?

Task success metrics give you priceless indications about the users’ experience. A lot of individuals and companies speak highly about user…

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Tomer Sharon

Cofounder & CXO at anywell, author of Validating Product Ideas, It's Our Research, & Measuring User Happiness. Ex-Google, Ex-WeWork, Ex-Goldman Sachs. 2∞&→