Christine Perfetti's Talk at UI18: Jumpstart Your UX Research Program
I attended Christine Perfetti's full-day workshop at the recent UI18 conference in Boston. I was really impressed with the way Christine welcomed and handled questions, covered a lot of material, got us talking and working together, and kept up the energy throughout the day. Here are my notes. (Many of these topics were reinforced with short exercises throughout the day).
In the first 90 days
Get to know your internal audience much the same way you would your users...finding out what they know, what their needs are, how they want to be involved in research and what they hope to gain from it.
For your first project, choose something where you have an executive on your side...she called this person an "Executive Champion."
Write up a Study Plan. To do this, get your internal audience together and discuss the testing process and what you want to learn, as well as details like the number of users, how you'll recruit them, and the schedule.
Then craft the tasks the users will complete during testing. She went through a few different types: ** Verb-based tasks - ask users to DO something ** Scavenger hunt tasks - ask users to FIND something ** Interview-based tasks - find out what real users' goals are, and asses based on those goals
Facilitate your first usability test
Facilitating usability tests
Christine gave a lot of good pointers on how to effectively facilitate a usability test, including:
Pre-test briefing to put them at ease
What kinds of questions to ask
How to respond to participant questions
Providing reassurance to struggling users
She also suggested a few quick but fruitful test (which you can layer on top of more in-depth tests):
5-Second tests
First click tests
Comprehension tests
Analyzing the information
Rolling list of observations. An ongoing record of user problems, actions, or comments, one per line. For each participant it is observed for, their number is added to the line.
KJ Method. This was one of my favorite portions of the workshop so I'm saving my write-up for a separate post. Here's my post on the KJ Method.
Journey maps. You can map out anything from a specific task flow, to the whole experience someone has with your product, from discovery to purchase to use, etc.
Communicating the Information
In general, Christine seemed to favor less formal, quicker methods of getting the word out about user research results. This includes email, using your current bug tracking system, or a quick meeting.
General Takeaways
As covered by many people throughout the conference: doing user research doesn't have to be -- shouldn't be! -- some big expensive ordeal.
Involve everyone. Don't do a bunch of research on your own and send out a report. Get decision-makers, designers, developers, etc. into the process from the beginning.
User research skills can be employed not only to gain insights from users, but also to understand your internal stakeholders












