Sarah Doody

The Importance of Conducting Continuous Research in UX

I’ve been beta testing a program about UX portfolios recently. When I first had the idea, I did some research and then, armed with my research, I went to work and created the curriculum. But here’s the thing, I didn’t stop doing research once I launched the product. I’ve continued to research as I’ve been building this program.

Too often, I think teams don’t make research a continuous part of their process. They do research at the beginning, if they’re lucky, and then they get caught up in the “build” phase. Why? Because as soon as you start building you see, and feel, progress. And this can get quite addictive! Although progress is great, we must always ask “am I making the right progress?” If not, then it’s time to hit pause.

So, how have I been conducting continuous research about the UX portfolio beta program? Well, here are some examples:

So think about your product. Is your team doing continuous research?

Based on the example I just gave you, how can your team do research for the product you’re working on? What points in the experience would be ideal to ask people a quick question via email? When would be a good time to ask people to fill out a quick survey? Where can you do more listening to your users (eg. my Facebook group example).

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