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Find Your News SolutionResearch lays the foundation for product development because it’s important to get to know your audience before making something for them. It’s also important to have potential audience members provide feedback on product features before you finalize them if you want to increase your chances of success. We’ve launched a handful of experiments this year in the Lab and used a wide range of light-touch user experience research techniques to guide our thinking. We’re sharing our “toolkit” as an easy guide for teams who want to deepen their UX research practice.
There are many user research methods that can be used for a project, but depending on its scope, timing, and budget, some methods may be better than the others. In our lab, for example, we are satisfied with interviewing 30 people to explore a concept or running usability tests with 10 to 15 users before launching an experiment because the risk is low and our timeframes are tight. Even on a small scale though, we get enough information from potential users to continue with our experiments.
Meanwhile, there are a few research methods that we haven’t used given the time and effort they need to be done well. For example, we haven’t set up any diary studies, a method that asks users to document their activities, interactions, and emotions over time. This method isn’t ideal for our lab since the process is long, sometimes taking up to a month or longer to finish while requiring researchers to establish a well-organized timeframe to collect and analyze data submitted by users. Diary studies also require specific tools for users to record data.
Even though the methods are different, the overall research process stays the same. At the beginning of a project, your research should be exploratory and generative, and the focus should be on collecting as much information as possible about the product or the audience. Mid-way through a project, your research should start focusing more on evaluating ideas rather than generating information. It’s very important to understand which methods are more suitable and why to use them at the time.
Here is an overview of our “toolkit”, explaining when and why we take on each phase of research, the goal, the methods we use and what stage of design we’re in each step along the way. Extended details about each research method, along with practical tips and real-life examples, are below.
Great for: Gathering qualitative feedback, which is an observational and conversational rather than binary or data-driven.
What to do: Meet with users, typically one at a time, to discuss any user-related topics.
End goal: Understand users’ feelings, motivations, objectives, habits, routines, and pain points.
Tips
Examples: Interview script and research analysis for our Philly Eats app experiment.
Great for: Gathering general information about competitors’ products; Helping identify the unique value your product provides.
What to do: Find similar existing products in the marketplace, then collect and compare data (i.e. features, reviews, and content) about those products.
End goal: Make better product strategy decisions by looking into similar existing products and examining what they are doing well and what they are not.
Tips
Example: Competitive analysis for the Philly Eats app experiment.
Great for: Reaching out to more users in a short period of time; Gathering data-driven quantitative feedback.
What to do: Post survey links online or hand out printed survey forms to people.
End goal: Collect a larger amount of responses to understand trends in users’ motivations, objectives, habits, routines, and pain points.
Tips
Survey tools you can use
Google Forms (free, easy to use; our preferred tool)
Survey Monkey (free version offers unlimited surveys up to 10 questions; paid version offers more templates, question types, collaboration, and embedding features as well as branching and conditional logic options)
Typeform (good for designing beautiful and visually sophisticated surveys; free and paid versions available)
Example: Our survey for the Philly Eats app, regarding feature prioritization.
Great for: Validating information architecture schemes, which are outlines of the way information appears in your product; Gathering quantitative feedback.
What to do: Write down the individual product elements you want people to consider, and have them put them into groups. One example is ranking the elements (i.e. 1–4).
End goal: Understand people’s perceptions about your product’s information hierarchy based on their own preferences, and how intuitive a product’s flow is to people.
Tips
Example: Results from a card sorting exercise for the Philly Eats app.
Great for: Comparing two different versions of a design; Gathering quantitative feedback.
What to do: Set two different designs side by side and ask people specific questions about things like color, text or image placement, graphics, etc.
End goal: Determine which variations of the design have the most positive responses from users.
Tips
Example: Notes and results from the A/B testing session for the sorting functionality in our Philly Eats app.
Great for: Gathering both qualitative and quantitative feedback.
What to do: Meet with users, typically one at a time, to discuss any user-related topics.
End goal: Understand how people react to a product’s look, feel, and usability by observing:
Tips
Usability testing tools you can use
Examples: Usability testing script for the Philly Eats app; Notes and results from the usability testing on Philly Eats notifications.
After looking at the UX research methods we’ve shared, I hope it’s clearer how essential they are to creating something valuable for users. Research allows teams to put themselves in other people’s shoes to understand what they need and how they feel about the product. If you have questions about these methods please reach out to us, or if you have a different method that you would like to share, please leave a comment below.
The Lenfest Local Lab is a multidisciplinary product and user experience innovation team located in Philadelphia supported by The Lenfest Institute for Journalism.
The Lenfest Institute for Journalism is a non-profit organization whose mission is to develop and support sustainable business models for great local journalism. The Institute was founded in 2016 by entrepreneur H.F. (Gerry) Lenfest with the goal of helping transform the news industry in the digital age to ensure high-quality local journalism remains a cornerstone of democracy.
The Lenfest Institute provides free tools and resources for local journalism leaders to develop sustainable strategies to serve their communities.
Find Your News Solution