I’ve been using Keynote–Apple’s version of Power Point–for at least a year now. It provides multi slide functionality with an easy to use drag and drop interface for creating objects of pretty much any kind. It also works great at any level of fidelity. I can do quick sketches during the early phase of a project, and when the time comes I can also build complete full color, pixel perfect mockups of an interface. Apple gives me more creative control over my objects with Keynote than Microsoft does with Power Point, which frustrated me to no end every time I needed to place something with precision, or build a custom shape.
Pretty much all of my design projects will include some sort of user testing. It is at this point that I must transform the wireframes I’ve built into a clickable prototype. Now this step can and frequently does get messy, at least the way I used to do it. I used to create my wireframes, one slide for each screen, or state–which is much more common now as RIAs take over more and more of the landscape–and then export them to PDF. I would then take that PDF document into Adobe acrobat, which has a hyperlink tool, thus allowing me to add the interactivity to the wireframes. The problem is that the workflow is slow and inefficient because the tasks involved require two different programs. As long as the wireframes themselves are perfect, I have no problem. I’m done with Keynote. However, any time I want to make a change to a wireframe, I must go back into Keynote, make the change, re-export the entire document as a PDF, take the page or pages that I’ve changed and, one at a time, place them into my existing hyperlinked PDF. Also, Acrobat is not great at making the process of replacing pages very usable. I frequently have to double check whether a page replacement actually worked because it’s not clear during the action.
Now, instead of using acrobat to add the interactivity, I simply use Keynote, which allows my to hyperlink any object to any slide number (or, for that matter any webpage, or even another Keynote slideshow). That way I can make changes to both the underlying objects in the wireframes as well as the click-flow in the same program. Keynote will automatically embed the hyperlinks into an exported PDF as well. That way, the end user of the test needn’t actually have Keynote. The whole process is much more manageable as a result, especially since my prototypes typically involve dozens of individual wireframes.


You might be interested in mocklinkr.com as another way to do clickable prototypes from any image file. Easily upload your images to mocklinkr & send your client a URL instead of a bunch of pictures.
I try to use justproto.com it’s young startup but seems interesring
I’m using Keynote in exactly the same way and, after 12 solid years using Adobe products, Quark, and other design tools I have never been able to create anything as quickly and accurately as I do in Keynote (for UI and wireframing).
PROBLEM IS… when I use EXPORT (vs Print to PDF) – which is the only way to retain hyperlinks – the quality is horrid. I’m going nuts trying to figure out why. Any insight would be appreciated!
Mike,
When you use Export, a dialog box appears with a control to specify the image quality of the PDF. It defaults to Good, which is really the worst quality setting. Choose Better or Best from the Image Quality menu and see if that helps. I’ve had no problem with image quality on my PDFs. But I would say that I’ve never paid particular attention to the image quality in my prototypes. Provided it isn’t horrible I’m fine with it.