The User Researcher's guide to UX discoveries
The User Researcher's guide to UX discoveries
The discovery phase is the starting point for any agile User Experience (UX) project. More and more organisations are adopting agile project management when designing products and services and UX research is vital in supporting this.
But what does this mean for the User Researcher? In this class we'll explore what the discovery phase looks like, including:
What discovery really means
The reasons to conduct a discovery
What the discovery team looks like
Where to recruit users
The common research methods
...and how to bring it all together and present back to the team
At the end of the class, you'll be able to confidently guide your organisation or client through their first discovery.
Some questions you might have:
01 - Do I need to be a user experience expert to take this course?
Definitely not. You will need a basic understanding of user research, but I try to provide a simple guide to all the things that make up a discovery and the tasks you'll likely perform. Think of it as a tour of the flow of a discovery phase, with real-world ideas for getting it done and examples from my own experiences. I'll give you a list of avenues for recruiting users, a checklist of research techniques you can perform and a set of downloadable templates to get you going. My aim is to give you a blueprint for your own discovery phase.
02 - I'm not a user researcher so is this relevant to me?
Absolutely! Service design is rarely a 1-person event. This is for anyone wanting to understand what a UX discovery is. If you're a Product Owner, Project Manager, Business Analyst, Content Designer, UX Designer, Developer or similar, then you'll likely work on a discovery at some point. Anyone looking to build or redesign products and services will get something from this course. I've put this course together from the User Researchers point of view as that's the hat I wear but, ultimately, the same processes and end goals apply to all the team on a discovery.
03 - Why have I never heard of a discovery phase?
In the private sector, a discovery phase can be seen as a waste of time and money and are often avoided. I 100% believe this is a mistake and is exactly why I created this course. All UK government projects follow the government digital service standard. As part of that standard, teams are expected to follow the agile delivery approach. That starts with a discovery phase, before usually moving onto other phases such as Alpha, Beta and Live. That's where my experience comes from - I've conducted many discoveries across many different types of product and services, in both the public and private sector, and I want to show you how this intense period of research will almost certainly save time and money in the future and produce a happier end user!
04 - These are the templates I include:
Discovery / research plan
Sample interview framework
Interview write-up guide
Findings log with sample session write-up
Persona template
Service blueprint
Journey map
Empathy map
Research debt report
A research findings playback slide deck
You don't have to use these templates. If you're already researching and producing outputs then you'll likely have your own. I've included them to give you a feel for how I document the research when conducting discoveries myself. If you've not created some of these before then feel free to use them in your own research.
I hope that sounds exciting. I love discoveries and cannot wait to show you how fun and rewarding they are!
Learn how to conduct your own discovery, find users and all the user research techniques you'll need to get going.
Url: View Details
What you will learn
- Understand what the agile delivery discovery phase is
- Learn how your role as the UX researcher fits into discovery
- Sell the benefits of conducting a discovery to your organisation
Rating: 4.75
Level: Beginner Level
Duration: 1 hour
Instructor: Jon Porton
Courses By: 0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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