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)”. So we need to output HTML with WP block comments? Probably they want that format. We’ll include those comments for each paragraph and heading. We must not use placeholders; must be complete actionable content. Must include the e-book promotion paragraph at end with link. We need to count words between 450-500. Let’s aim for ~470 words. We need to incorporate facts from e-book: list of items: Tools to Make This Happen Today, simple formula, action item for this week, actionable checklist for frequency automation, actionable checklist for severity automation, automating the calculation, example auto-generated entry, example from a client project, example from a real project, example priority matrix, how to implement severity scoring, pitfalls, report structure (auto-generated), step-by-step, the process, three severity signals AI can detect, Banani tool note, Frequency definition. We need to embed these facts naturally. We need to ensure we don’t exceed 500 words. Let’s draft about 470. We’ll count manually. I’ll write the article then count words. Structure: Title line: “Title: Prioritization on Autopilot: Letting AI Score Severity and Frequency” Then blank line. Then HTML content. We’ll use headings: maybe h2 for sections. We’ll use wp:block comments. Let’s draft:Why AI‑Driven Prioritization Matters for Solo UX/UI Designers
As a solo designer, you juggle research, design, and reporting. Automating the scoring of severity and frequency turns raw user‑testing notes into a ready‑to‑act priority matrix without manual tallying.
Tools to Make This Happen Today
Start with a spreadsheet or Airtable base, add a column for each tester’s comment, and use a simple AI formula: Score = (Frequency × Weight) + (Severity × Weight). Tools like Banani can generate quick mock‑ups of the report layout, while Google Sheets’ AI add‑ons or Zapier‑connected GPT‑4 can calculate the scores automatically.
Action Item for This Week
Pick one recent usability test, export the raw notes, and run them through your chosen AI tool to produce a severity‑frequency score for each issue. Compare the output to your manual ranking to see where the algorithm aligns or diverges.
Actionable Checklist for Frequency Automation
1. Tag each comment with the participant ID.
2. Count unique participants per issue.
3. Convert the count to a frequency score (0‑5) using a predefined scale (e.g., 1‑2 participants = 1, 3‑4 = 3, 5+ = 5).
4. Store the score in a dedicated column.
5. Verify the total matches the number of testers.
Actionable Checklist for Severity Automation
1. Identify severity signals: task failure, error rate, and user frustration (voice tone or sentiment).
2. Feed the comment text to an AI sentiment model; map negative sentiment to higher severity.
3. Assign a numeric severity (0‑5) based on the combination of signals.
4. Log the raw AI output for audit.
5. Review any outliers with a quick human glance.
Automating the Calculation
With the frequency and severity columns ready, apply the formula: Priority = (Frequency × 0.4) + (Severity × 0.6). Use a spreadsheet’s ARRAYFORMULA or a Zapier step that calls GPT‑4 to compute the score and write it back to the sheet.
Example Auto‑Generated Entry
Issue: “Search bar not visible on mobile.”
Frequency: 4 (8 out of 10 participants missed it) → score 4.
Severity: 5 (task failure, high frustration) → score 5.
Priority = (4 × 0.4)+(5 × 0.6)=4.6 → ranked high.
Example from a Client Project
In a fintech dashboard redesign, AI flagged a low‑frequency, high‑severity error: only 2 users triggered a duplicate‑transaction bug, but the severity score was 5 because it led to financial loss. The automated matrix surfaced it as a top priority, prompting an immediate hotfix.
Example from a Real Project
During an e‑commerce checkout test, the AI detected that 6 of 10 participants struggled to find the promo‑code field (frequency = 4) and expressed moderate frustration (severity = 3). The resulting priority score of 3.4 placed it in the middle of the backlog, guiding the designer to iterate the field placement before the next sprint.
Example Priority Matrix
| Issue | Frequency | Severity | Priority |\n|——-|———–|———-|———-|\n| Search bar missing | 4 | 5 | 4.6 |\n| Promo‑code field | 4 | 3 | 3.4 |\n| Button color contrast | 2 | 2 | 2.2 |\n| Loading spinner text | 1 | 1 | 1.4 |
How to Implement Severity Scoring
1. Define the three severity signals AI can detect: task failure, error rate, and user frustration (via sentiment analysis).
2. Run each tester’s comment through a pre‑trained sentiment model; map the sentiment score to a 0‑5 severity scale.
3. Combine the signal outputs with a weighted average (e.g., 0.4 × failure + 0.3 × error + 0.3 × frustration).
4. Validate the results on a small subset before scaling.
Pitfall 1: Over‑Relying on AI Severity Scores
AI can miss nuanced context; always spot‑check the top‑scored items with a quick designer review to ensure the score reflects real impact.
Pitfall 2: Ignoring Low‑Frequency, High‑Severity Issues
The formula weights severity higher, but if you set the frequency weight too low you may still overlook critical bugs that affect few users but cause major harm. Keep a manual “red flag” list for any severity ≥ 4 regardless of frequency.
Pitfall 3: Forgetting Client Context
Align the scoring weights with client goals; a client focused on conversion may prioritize frequency, while a safety‑critical product may weight severity more heavily.
Report Structure (Auto‑Generated)
1. Executive summary of top‑3 priorities.
2. Detailed table with frequency, severity, priority scores.
3. Visual priority matrix (heat map).
4. Recommended next steps per issue.
5. Appendix with raw AI outputs for transparency.
Step‑by‑Step
1. Collect test recordings and notes.
2. Export comments to a CSV.
3. Run AI sentiment/frequency analysis.
4. Apply the priority formula.
5. Generate the auto‑report using Banani for layout and Google Docs API for final PDF.
6. Share with stakeholders and iterate.
The Process
The end‑to‑end workflow turns raw usability data into a scored, visual backlog in under 30 minutes, freeing you to spend more time on design iterations and less on manual synthesis.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Solo UX/UI Designers: How to Automate User Testing Feedback Synthesis and Report Generation.
Now we need to count words. We need to count words in the entire article after the title line? Probably includes title? Usually they count the content words, but safer to count everything after “Title: …” line. Let’s count. I’ll copy the content (excluding the title line) and count words manually. Might be easier to approximate but need to be within 450-500. Let’s count. I’ll write a plain text version (strip HTML tags) and count. Content (starting after title line blank line): “Why AI‑Driven Prioritization Matters for Solo UX/UI Designers As a solo designer, you juggle research, design, and reporting. Automating the scoring of severity and frequency turns raw user‑testing notes into a ready‑to‑act priority matrix without manual tallying. Tools to Make This Happen Today Start with a spreadsheet or Airtable base, add a column for each tester’s comment, and use a simple AI formula: Score = (Frequency × Weight) + (Severity × Weight). Tools like Banani can generate quick mock‑ups of the report layout, while Google Sheets’ AI add‑ons or Zapier‑connected GPT‑4 can calculate the scores automatically. Action Item for This Week Pick one recent usability test, export the raw notes, and run them through your chosen AI tool to produce a severity‑frequency score for each issue. Compare the output to your manual ranking to see where the algorithm aligns or diverges. Actionable Checklist for Frequency Automation 1. Tag each comment with the participant ID. 2. Count unique participants per issue. 3. Convert the count to