They really should stand up a test environment for the workplace kids to play in. The last profits might allow some meagre funding for it.But probably testing the layout of the live website before publishing the other changes.
They really should stand up a test environment for the workplace kids to play in. The last profits might allow some meagre funding for it.But probably testing the layout of the live website before publishing the other changes.
Unicorns?My wild guess is "Classic" has been added to the rewards icon to differentiate it from whatever the new reward availability will be called I.e. Classic vs. Bonus / Elite reward
They have been testing different versions of the website and booking pages for months now. Usually about 3-4 different versions at a time for a few weeks at a time. Whatever preforms best (in terms of sales, basket size etc etc) then goes live or will go live.They really should stand up a test environment for the workplace kids to play in. The last profits might allow some meagre funding for it.
Not just calendar view - every view from what I can see.In the calendar view, yes that's true. Maybe the term still has some life left in it!
so whatever performs best for Qantas, not the customer experience.They have been testing different versions of the website and booking pages for months now. Usually about 3-4 different versions at a time for a few weeks at a time. Whatever preforms best (in terms of sales, basket size etc etc) then goes live or will go live.
I wouldn't say that. If that was the case they would've kept point+pay exactly where it was.so whatever performs best for Qantas, not the customer experience.
There is a correlation between both. Easier for things to be done. more likely to pay for the flight, even if it's a 1% difference.so whatever performs best for Qantas, not the customer experience.
Are you saying that any variability we see on the site is IT or marketing doing behavioural testing on us? Do a controlled release of a feature or story and see how it flies.They have been testing different versions of the website and booking pages for months now. Usually about 3-4 different versions at a time for a few weeks at a time. Whatever preforms best (in terms of sales, basket size etc etc) then goes live or will go live.
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Don't know if it is marketing, more IT front end experience I assume.Are you saying that any variability we see on the site is IT or marketing doing behavioural testing on us?
In before the intern reviewing the data mistakes their change they made just before DSC as the reason sales spiked.Don't know if it is marketing, more IT front end experience I assume.
Basic things like colours and button locations have changed frequently over the past few months.
Just like theicons on the fare page or the same area but 'blue' highlighting saying things like '5 or fewer seats left'.
TBH I don't even think it's QF reviewing the data, I think it could be some company like Deloitte or one of those places.In before the intern reviewing the data mistakes their change they made just before DSC as the reason sales spiked.
All the more likely it's some uni intern or first junior grad compiling the data.TBH I don't even think it's QF reviewing the data, I think it could be some company like Deloitte or one of those places.
so whatever performs best for Qantas, not the customer experience.
Altering a website layout, function or flow, and using any data variations as a measure of business improvement is so completely naive that I doubt even Qantas would do it. There are many 10’s of other factors involved.I wouldn't say that. If that was the case they would've kept point+pay exactly where it was.
Or season, or price, or external marketing or competition promotions or system availability …..choose whatever if it’s live data.Pretty standard A-B testing. More completed bookings can be a reflection of a smoother/quicker customer experience.
Or season, or price, or external marketing or competition promotions or system availability …..choose whatever if it’s live data.
Season/promos/marketing don't factor in because the A/B versions are served simultaneously.
Visitors are randomly assigned one of two (or more!) versions. The recording of results starts and finishes for both versions at the same time so external factors are equal.
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What is A/B testing? With examples
A/B testing is a method of comparing two versions of a webpage or app against each other to determine which one performs better. Learn all about it here!www.optimizely.com
It's not like they are showing one version in January and one in February and then comparing the two.
The test can glean all sorts of useful data and is very common for UX work
season, or price, or external marketing or competition promotions or system availability
Altering a website layout, function or flow, and using any data variations as a measure of business improvement is so completely naive that I doubt even Qantas would do it.
