| They can still have all of that for most of their users. Users that can't use these newer features should be offered a simpler more basic experience. Just because it's a minority of users that want to access your medical claims portal from abroad (who'd have guessed that this would be a valid use case for someone who has bought world wide health cover?) this doesn't mean that you should lock them out. You are very short sighted. I hope you end up in a position where you need minor surgery in Vietnam during your gap year and can't enter the claim in the insurance companies system because they insist that ALL user must be able to see their fancy drop down menus with rounded corners OR not being able to book an onward flight from Cambodia therefore being refused entry because you can't prove that you plan to leave in the next 3 weeks all because the internet kiosk you're using is blocking the CDN that pushes some crap JS that adds nothing other than eye candy. What's wrong with creating an alternate UX without all the overhead? I hope you suffer the consequences of your own short shortsightedness. Also, FYI, horses are still allowed on roads. EDIT (can't reply) I think you'll find that medical insurance sites and travelling / booking sites are very similar and attract a very similar userbase. People book flights ticket and medical insurance, people fly then use the medical insurance when they have too. You seriously do live in a bubble, i have a feeling you are an American who isn't very well traveled outside of his own country and only uses medical sites in the context of your non state health insurance. You probably aren't the kind of person that would use any of the services I care about. SECOND EDIT.. I spoke about my two target services from the offset and did not switch context. Do you not realise how these two sites / services go hand in hand? I just got back from skiing. I used an airline site and medical insurance site for the same trip. |
Haha. We went from talking about my 1-man development website, to travel sites, to medical sites.
All because each example is a better fit for your argument. You don't warn me when you change the context of our conversation, you just do it and then insult me afterwards for not meeting your newer demands.
Medical =/= travel =/= my site.
Each are fundamentally different industries with dramatically different requirements. Obviously you have to meet the requirements of your industry and your users. I have CONSTANTLY SAID that you must prioritize your users. Medical users ARE NOT travel users ARE NOT blog users.
You're also failing to take into account a team versus one man. One man or small teams trying to launch have to prioritize their MVP and their main audience. Massive operations with dozens of developers SHOULD meet everyone demands, because they have the time and talent to do so.
When you're capable of not context-shifting a conversation to continually cast your argument as superior, I think this chat can continue.
Otherwise, you're just shifting and insulting me for your own jollies, and you'll excuse me for not going along with it.
Good day!
EDIT to your EDIT:
I currently work in healthcare IT after transitioning from a major travel IT company. The requirements are NOTHING alike, really nothing alike at all. The types of users and the requirements placed on the organizations by regulators are dramatically different. Medical is a WHOLE different ball game with tons of people to answer to.
Also, people can be expected to not book a plane flight with a bad connection on an old phone. "Wait until a better connection" is the standard response that has worked thus far (or call your secretary/company to handle it).
When it comes to medical data, waiting is less of an option and getting a good UX is less of a requirement.