Chapter #92. Pick Good Defaults
The power of default settings is often overlooked, but they have huge potential to affect the UX of your product.
Some examples of great defaults:
When I get into my car, the default sound output of my phone switches from handset to in-car speaker. I can change it, but the default is sensible.
Sign in to an analytics product and the selected date range is "this week", with a comparison date range of "last week." Imagine if the default was "today" and showed no data—useless, right?
When I tap a name in my "recent calls" view, my phone calls that person, rather than starting a new text message or video call. Those options are tucked away in a context menu.
Picking a good default is a balance of factors:
How many users you think (or know through research) want this default setting
How difficult it is for the user to change to an alternative
How discoverable that alternative setting is
As a UX professional, it's your job to weigh up these factors and a lot of that judgement...