A single-item, 7-point rating scale administered after each task in a usability test, asking 'How easy or difficult was this task?' Quick, reliable, and highly sensitive to task difficulty.
Definition: A single-item, 7-point rating scale administered after each task in a usability test, asking 'How easy or difficult was this task?' Quick, reliable, and highly sensitive to task difficulty.
The Single Ease Question (SEQ) is a post-task questionnaire consisting of one question: "Overall, how easy or difficult was this task?" Users respond on a 7-point scale from "Very Difficult" (1) to "Very Easy" (7).
Speed: Takes seconds to administer after each task, minimizing disruption to the test flow
Sensitivity: Research shows SEQ is highly sensitive to task difficulty—scores reliably distinguish between easy and hard tasks
Diagnostic Power: Unlike overall metrics (SUS, NPS), SEQ pinpoints which specific tasks cause friction
Benchmarkable: Established benchmark data allows comparison across studies
Based on industry research:
The industry average is approximately 5.5.
Ask immediately: Administer SEQ right after task completion, before memory fades
Do not explain: Let users interpret "easy" and "difficult" in their own terms
Combine with success: A high SEQ with task failure signals the user did not realize they failed
Track per task: The value of SEQ is task-level diagnosis, not overall scores
SEQ measures task-level ease; SUS measures overall perceived usability. Use both:
Together, they answer both "Which tasks need work?" and "How usable is the whole system?"
A 10-item standardized questionnaire that produces a score from 0-100 measuring perceived usability. The industry's most widely used instrument for benchmarking usability.
A UX research method where representative users attempt to complete specific tasks with a product while observers watch, listen, and take notes.
A Core Method combining all three Building Blocks: testing task completion (effectiveness and efficiency), observing behavior and non-verbal cues, and asking questions about the experience. The most comprehensive single research method.
This term is referenced in the following articles:
An interactive tool that guides you to the right research method based on your goals, constraints, and context.
How to prove your redesign actually worked. A guide to establishing baselines, tracking metrics (SUS), and calculating ROI.