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How to develop a clean and intuitive IoT dashboard using these 6 ideas?

How to develop a clean and intuitive IoT dashboard using these 6 ideas?

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Science and Technology

We've based our work on user comprehension and taken into account a few outside factors that might have an impact on the tool you'll be constructing. We'll now go through a few design pointers that you should keep in mind while you generate and analyze mockups throughout your development process.

Asset Management:

For industrial systems, zoning often appears as a navigational motif. A corporation has a certain number of plants, a certain amount of assets is located at each facility, etc. To make sure that users don't get confused while zooming in on a problem region, it is crucial to map out these user flows beforehand and decide what information is relevant in each location. In turn, this leads to the creation of a visual navigational approach that enables users to switch between macro and micro perspectives for the systems they manage fast.

An explanation of navigation menus:

Make these foldable without hesitation! In digital design, real estate is constantly in high demand. This is especially true for dashboards and data visualization.

Fewer is Better:

The correct information and the right position at the right time are the cornerstones of proper dashboard etiquette. Focus on the most important data and store the rest for a breakout page rather than drowning your readers in a sea of graphs. By putting graph legends in a tooltip or hover state, you may preserve the necessary amount of whitespace in your design. Use dropdown menus and expandable graphs to allow consumers choose and customize the visuals they need rather than providing them with 20 preset options.

Data Organization:

By graphically emphasizing the "headline" information on that page, you can keep each section of your dashboard focused and precise. Usually, font size, page position, or color highlighting are used to accomplish this.

Notification Technique:

Don't put off thinking about how users will be informed of state changes until the very end of your monitoring endeavor. The execution of in-platform alerts requires space, and they must have color indicators that match the rest of your platform. As IoT monitoring systems are more linked with current platforms, external alerts like SMS and email will become more prevalent over time.

Color as a Signpost:

One of the most natural methods for users to organize, rank, and decide on data is via the use of color. Don't make red a good state in one region of the platform and a negative one in another; consistency is crucial here. You should also utilize collapsed legends, but be careful not to overwhelm a user with a rainbow graph. If there are more than five distinct traces shown in a single visualization, it's definitely time to consider how to present the data more effectively.

The idea of using data to assist people in making better choices won't be abandoned anytime soon. Effectively doing this will continue to distinguish market leaders from laggards for years to come. Thank you for reading, and do get in contact with Method if you'd want to talk about designing a good IoT dashboard or other experience-related requirements.