In the beginning, play around with it and have fun. Do it again some more the next day. Just give it some time, you'll understand what it does and how it works in no time! But until then, dive head first and have fun.
With new tools, I like to explore the space without much active supervision. For me, it's a new experience and should be fun, even for something as simple as Notion. If I'm comfortable then I use it but it in any other case, I don't give a second thought
I find it really helpful when platforms have little tutorial videos or any other helpful onboarding materials. For example, I bought @Taplio yesterday - they launched here on PH - and their onboarding video was very useful in getting me introduced to their platform.
But in cases where they don't have that, I just click buttons until I understand what they do. I feel like that's the best way to understand a platform.
Anxiety of new tools exists when people are nervous about something that they don't have any experience of.
To ease this, companies can
- Use visual design and workflow that is consistent with industry standards, as these will be familiar to the users
- Have help documentation, videos and live chat easily available
- Have wizards/onboarding processes available if the workflow is complex
I have a really simple recipe: Grind at it one full day, become really angry, curse at it, smash my keyboard and uninstall it. Next day install the tool again, read some tutorials, not just skim them like the first time, understand how to use it and start integrating it in my workflow ποΈ
I try understanding what I aim on achieving with the tool. I understand how that functions, check to see additional features that could help me. Now, I'm a little familiar with the tool. I continue to use it for another day or two to see if it was the right choice!
Yes it is always a task when you are not much familiar in the beginning. It comes with time once you spend some time with the tool you start adapting the tool.
KoolStories
Sessions
Sessions
OKZest
Sessions
LaunchPedia
cmdk
Sessions