Creating Personas Helps Team Collaboration
We learn about users so our brand/product teams can have a framework to build better experiences. There are many challenges though as each individual has their own mental model of what is being discussed in the room. There are a few ways to combat this; first, teams can create personas. Personas is a fictional, yet realistic, description of a typical target user of the product. It is a tool to help teams keep in mind the characteristics, motivations and goals of the user throughout process to help them make design decisions based on user's needs. The goal is to help teams know the user so well that you make user research part of the culture.
The second actionable strategy to help create a collaborative work environment and learn how to understand users is to help one another see the bigger picture. While each team member is an expert in the their craft, without coming together and synthesizing the knowledge, it can lead to a disjointed, expensive collection of partial answers and a glaring lack of insight. Perhaps its not just laziness or lack of effort on an individual, but actually teams are not using the same vernacular during internal reviews. Rosenfeld recommends that it is important and helpful to identify at least a few shared references and vocabulary to enables researches from different backgrounds to understand each other and eventually collaborate.
While we explored a few ways to get teams to work together, taking time to schedule an old-fashion interview with the user is invaluable. By having conversations with your target user, it can uncover hidden insights which could otherwise be overlooked. Getting exposure hours to user behavior helps prevent obscurantism. In fact, Jarad Spool suggest that teams take 2 hours every 6 weeks observing users such as field visits or usability test. By having this face time, conversations can help you identify the gap between what people say and what they do. It is even better to contextualize your learnings by laying out your user research methods in Christian Rohrer's "Landscape" as an auditing tool; ensuring that you have covered off on both qualitative and quantitive insights.
References:
https://constructive.co/insights/5-user-research-benefits/ http://www.userfocus.co.uk/articles/7-sins-of-user-research.html http://alistapart.com/article/seeing-the-elephant-defragmenting-user-research












