Democratising UX: how to spread user research education and insights throughout your organisation
With demand for UX insights within organisations outstripping the capacity of UX teams to deliver research, there is a growing need for greater UX knowledge and capability across different functions within businesses. But how do you spread user research beyond the walls of your UX research team? What is the value of everyone having access to UX insights—or having the ability to run research themselves?
On 26th March, we gathered a range of speakers to share their successes, challenges and expert advice around democratising UX. Learn from a variety of different perspectives on the topic, and have the opportunity to share your own experiences with the community.
Lee Duddell educates the audience on 'Common Mistakes Rookies Make When Testing (and How to Overcome Them)’.
10. 3. He adds a scenario
It’s Friday morning and you’re at work in a swanky office in Soho.
The team you’re in have been working very hard and you want to reward
them, there are 5 of them, with lunch. You’ve asked them and they all fancy
Sushi, but you need it delivered by 12:30 (it’s 10:30 now). One of them is
vegan, another milk intolerant. So you search Google for “Central London
Sushi Delivery”.
You’re at checkout and want to use a voucher code you found online.
11. 4. Asks people to compare two designs
Which design do you prefer?
vs
13. Five mistakes
1. Easy to guess screeners
2. No scenario
3. Too much scenario
4. Asking about design (rather than observing behaviour)
5. Tasks, that aren’t
16. Three ways to help Matt
1
Training Workshop
2
Encourage teamwork
3
Make a guardrail
17. Training Workshop (3 hours, up to 12 people)
1. Internal Case Study
2. Testing process = Question > Build > Test > Launch > Results
3. Map research questions to example studies
4. Build a simple design test + critique it
5. Build a think out loud test + critique it Helps Matt see the
importance of good
study design
18. TRAINING EXAMPLE MAPPING QUESTIONS
Early stage designs and concepts
Your Design Questions
● How can I improve this new page design?
● What is most/least appealing/important on this page?
● Is the messaging clear?
● What are users' first impressions?
● What's missing from the new design?
● What do users expect will happen next?
● Where do they click or tap, and why?
Run a Click Test
21. 2. Encourage Teamwork
1. Set time in Sprint for team to agree research questions
2. Peer review of studies pre-launch to test questions
3. Lean on researchers to help/advise
22. 3. Guardrail
1. Start with image-based studies + think out loud
2. Setup “approved” screeners
3. Use study templates and question/task banks
4. UserZoom Academy...
24. Three things to remember to help Matt
1
Writing tasks does not
come naturally
2
Run a training workshop
to build together
3
Start with two simple
study types