5 Tips to Conquer Complex Research

If you know anything about Expero, you know we specialize in solving “complex problems.” This means we’re not working on your average brochure website or e-commerce app. We’re tackling apps and softwares targeted to niche domains with expert end-users who have very specific needs and goals to solve their very complicated problems. They’re often working with huge data sets or high-performance computing, and they need major architecture and bandwidth chops. And these users typically have other attributes in common--like very little time, specific workarounds for old problems, and a frustration with a general lack of efficiency in the product(s) they’re currently using to meet their needs.

It’s easy to see how product strategy, development, even design can be affected by increased complexity. How do you lay out an innovative project roadmap for a group of scientists who are skeptical about gestural interfaces? Where do you start with architecture? Should you use a graph database or a traditional relational model? Does this workflow need a wizard or just a basic form?

So what about user research on complex applications? How is that different?

Well, it is and it isn’t.

The basic tried-and-true research activities are still relevant. Things like requirements gathering, contextual inquiries, persona development, user testing. These are the building blocks of user research.

What’s different is how you approach the user research: with the confidence to try to speak the their language and the humility to understand there is still so much you don’t know about these expert users. It’s like practicing a non-native language in its mother country. You’re never gonna be as good as a native speaker, and indeed you’ll find many different dialects, but just demonstrate that you’re trying to understand and keep asking questions, and you’ll get where you’re headed a lot faster. Sometimes you might end up with a frustrated subject matter expert who doesn’t understand why you still don’t know what you still don’t know, but that’s a real potentiality before you finally get what they’re trying to say.

Another difference is that complex projects mean that, in our experience, designs are more likely to be wrong at the outset--which makes user research that much more pivotal. Consider a stakeholder investing in a technology that’s never-been-seen before--an app aggregating all sensor and inventory data necessary for enterprise farming or a news tool that creates sentiment analyses of articles. There are no baseline needs or goals for these end-users; just the stakeholder’s unique vision and ideas. To top it off, the stakeholder knows this is a never-been-seen technology, and wants to protect it until it’s “ready”--meaning they don’t want prospective users to see the in-progress work, only the finished product, resulting in a great deal of potential refactoring later.

Here are 5 tips for conducting quality user research on a complex project.

  1. Don’t talk to your users too soon.

Ramping up on a specialized domain is hard work, and you shouldn’t count on your SME to do all the heavy lifting in terms of helping you understand the ins and outs of securities trading or enterprise farming. Read about the domains you’re working in, and pay particular attention to current events as well as industry jargon.

And, if you’re developing personas for your stakeholders and your design team (and you should be), you can use desk research as a foundation. Job postings are a great place to get basic info on needs, goals and expectations of the end-users.  

Remember, though, that there’s no substitute for actually talking to your users.

  1. You usually have to give a little to get a little.

Cash or product incentives are the go-to method for securing user research participants

for interviews and tests. However, this probably won’t work for your expert end-users,

who often value time above all else. Consider creating a “user group” or similar that users can opt into, and give them a sense of ownership over the outcome of the product or release. Be truthful if they ask “Is XYZ possible?” If it’s out of scope or technically unfeasible, let them know that their feedback will be documented but it might not be the top priority for this round. Honesty goes a long way.

  1. Your SME is your recruitment firm.

Working on the projects Expero specializes in means that the target end-users are likely

not signed up with their local market research and recruitment firm for some extra focus group cash. Rather, they’re likely mired deep in a clunky legacy technology they’ve created countless workarounds for, or they’re struggling with Excel when they should be looking to the disruptive new app you’re proposing. Encourage your subject matter expert to provide you with current users they know or prospective users they’re targeting, and don’t aim too high. If your SME or stakeholder can provide you with a list of 30 or even 50 users, that’s amazing. If you can get 10-12 users, count your lucky stars.

Note that your stakeholder or product owner may also be slightly more sensitive about sharing incomplete or in-progress ideas with target end-users they don’t want to dissuade from using their product. This is a real and understandable reticence. Mitigate it by giving them full veto access to the testing and interview scripts, and allowing them to ping you in real time with comments during testing.

  1. Add a little interview to your testing.

As a researcher, you know how important it is to understand your users--not just how they interact with a particular app, but how they behave generally, what they want, what motivates them, what delights them. It’s hard to get all of this detail out of a 1-on-1 session, but take it with baby steps. Do incremental (lean) design testing, and sneak in a few related interview questions while doing so. For example, if you’re testing an account creation workflow, spend 10-20 minutes interviewing the user on accounts they’ve created in the past, what motivates them to create accounts versus log in as a guest, whether they use a separate “junk” email for account login, etc. Then dig in to the design and the traditional user test. This will help both develop personas to inform long-term design, and tweak the design of the piece you’re testing.

  1. Remote possibilities are endless.

If you are able to get your expert end-users to give up some of their valuable time to you, make it as easy as possible for them. Don’t insist on an in-person interview; set up a WebEx or GoToMeeting and provide a quick link. Don’t make the user share her screen; share yours and give her control of your mouse and keyboard. Don’t insist on a certain schedule; make time for them. If your end-users are students or day traders, for example, you should probably plan to stay late at work to accommodate. Don’t go over the time you promised; if you say it will take an hour, take an hour. If it looks like time is running short, ask if they have a few more minutes and be cool with it if they don’t. And finally, if the user says he can give you a half hour instead of an hour, take what you can get! You can still get valuable feedback in a half hour; just remember to discuss with your team what the most pressing research questions are so you can be sure to tackle those first.

User research on complex problems is not a new UX domain; it’s just a few new twists on an old idea. Research aims for the ideal, but often takes what it can get. These tweaks to research sacrifice quantity and face-time, maybe, but preserve quality and user feedback.

 

Using UI Prototypes to Validate Your Product (Online Seminar)

Are you a Product Manager looking to show some early design directions to stakeholders and end-users? Are you a Developer needing a little more direction from the design team? Or a UX Designer or Researcher trying to figure out how detailed your designs need to be to communicate your intentions and get valuable feedback from users?

In this online seminar, UX Designer Mark Couvillion and I highlight the major differences between static wireframes and interactive prototypes, show examples of the design fidelity spectrum, and outline the best ways to leverage wireframes and prototypes throughout the product design life cycle. At the end of the online seminar, you’ll even experience a wireframe-v-prototype battle royale through a series of mini user tests on a product designed specifically for this session!

Enjoy the chat, and feel free to comment and/or request a future online seminar topic.

Are you a Product Manager looking to show some early design directions to stakeholders and end-users? Are you a Developer needing a little more direction from the design team? Or a UX Designer or Researcher trying to figure out how detailed your designs need to be to communicate your intentions and get valuable feedback from users?

 

Originally published by Expero.

Anybody's Guess: Why Research Matters

As a user researcher, I am, of course, an evangelist of all things research. I love research! I love reading everything and learning everything and understanding everything I possibly can about a subject. Infographics are neat but I want more more more information! Give it to me—all of it!

As a user researcher, I also, of course, realize that not everybody feels the same way. Often including clients.

Read More

Toward a Screenless World?

Several years ago, I attended a neat speech by a young but awesome UX Designer named Golden Krishna, with credentials ranging from product innovating at Samsung, to designing at Zappos, to writing for major publications. The speech was titled “The Best Interface Is No Interface,” and the room was packed—presumably full of user interface designers. It was a great hook.

I loved this speech. It was dynamic, engaging, and completely different from the thinly veiled advertisements for products and processes that seemed to define most of the presentations at South by Southwest that year (every year?). (Exception: the one about the cat video phenomenon. That one was awesome, too, and as timeless as Shakespeare.) This speech was a cut above the rest by no small margin, and I will freely admit that Golden’s delivery was as captivating and refreshing as his topic. His Colbert-esque sarcasm and wit mixed with his earnest, sharp intelligence won me over immediately, even if I was, at the outset, skeptical of his thesis statement.

So, when I got my hands on an advance copy of Golden’s new book by the same name, I was superexcited. I thought, This is going to be great. All those great ideas compressed into a bunch of pages (which, in fact, I used a screen to read; sorry, Golden) that I’ll be able to read and re-read and disseminate and even quote to unassuming non-tech-industry bystanders!

Read More

Lean Up Your Act: How to Tackle Lean and Win Design

It's 2014, and that means big changes - not just for Elon Musk, but for small UX consulting firms too!

To shake things up a bit, Design For Use has recently overhauled our process from a longish-term Waterfall methodology to the very sexy newish Lean design and testing approach. After attending numerous UX conferences and networking meetups, we were inspired by the iterative and revelatory nature of Agile and Lean methodologies - and, of course, the major perk: less time spent on creating those beautiful deliverables.

Armed with guidance from books like Lean UX and Running Lean, as well as a flurry of compelling conference presentations, we were ready to take the Lean world by storm. We knew we would not fail in overhauling our design process and user testing methodology. Lean meant fewer deliverables! More iterations on design! More frequent user testing! More collaboration with stakeholders! Lean UX was going to revolutionize the way we did business and served our clients!

So. Is Lean UX everything we dreamed it would be?

Yes and no, dear reader. Yes and no.

Read More

Ferris Bueller and Don't Miss Technology

Ferris Bueller warned us: "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."

Too right, Ferris. And the same is true of the tech industry. Tech moves fast. Trends will pop up like burnt toast, then crumble; apps will come and go; and Facebook will add features that are sneaky and go a little too far. These are the natural laws of tech.

If you're feeling overwhelmed by the constant movement in tech and the near-daily launch of hip new products and apps and sites, check out these great ways to keep up with the scene.

Read More