The document describes a workshop on generative research techniques to understand customer motivations. It discusses that generative exercises using hands-on activities can elicit deeper emotions and insights compared to traditional interviews. The workshop covers different types of exercises like lists, stories, sorting, mapping etc. It provides examples for each exercise type and guidelines on prototyping, testing and iterating an exercise with users. The overall goal is to help participants design customized generative exercises and apply them to learn about customer needs and inspire new product ideas.
Generative Research Workshop by Nearsoft — Amsterdam MaterialMisael Leon
Determine what your users want or whether they will like your new feature. Generative user research is a powerful tool that can help you understand your target users' desires, expectations and lifestyle habits, taking the speculation out of product decisions and surfacing new customer opportunities.
Generative Research — InVision DesignTalkMisael Leon
ustomer-centric, the importance of understanding your users’ motivations is increasing. As designers, it’s our job to gather and synthesize customer input and turn it into actionable design strategy.
User interviews are a great way understand your users’ motivations, but some ideas are hard to verbalize. Plus, traditional 1-on-1 interviews lack flexibility and don’t get to the core of human emotions.
In this DesignTalk, we’ll learn how to use generative research tools—or hands-on exercises—to understand your users' motivations. You’ll learn how to uncover unspoken desires, expectations, and lifestyle habits. By the end of the webinar, you’ll have a variety of activities to use to take the speculation out of product decisions and surface new customer opportunities.
Powerful Techniques to Understand Customer MotivationsNearsoft
Understand your target users' desires, expectations and lifestyle habits, taking the speculation out of product decisions and surfacing new customer pain points and opportunities.
Generative Research Workshop by Nearsoft — Amsterdam MaterialMisael Leon
Determine what your users want or whether they will like your new feature. Generative user research is a powerful tool that can help you understand your target users' desires, expectations and lifestyle habits, taking the speculation out of product decisions and surfacing new customer opportunities.
Generative Research — InVision DesignTalkMisael Leon
ustomer-centric, the importance of understanding your users’ motivations is increasing. As designers, it’s our job to gather and synthesize customer input and turn it into actionable design strategy.
User interviews are a great way understand your users’ motivations, but some ideas are hard to verbalize. Plus, traditional 1-on-1 interviews lack flexibility and don’t get to the core of human emotions.
In this DesignTalk, we’ll learn how to use generative research tools—or hands-on exercises—to understand your users' motivations. You’ll learn how to uncover unspoken desires, expectations, and lifestyle habits. By the end of the webinar, you’ll have a variety of activities to use to take the speculation out of product decisions and surface new customer opportunities.
Powerful Techniques to Understand Customer MotivationsNearsoft
Understand your target users' desires, expectations and lifestyle habits, taking the speculation out of product decisions and surfacing new customer pain points and opportunities.
Discovering Unmet Needs and New Solutions with Participatory Design Jennifer Briselli
Discovering Unmet Needs and New Solutions with Participatory Design
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https://www.jisc.ac.uk/events/student-experience-experts-group-meeting-20-apr-2016
A guide for conducting quick practie workshopo of Design Thinking. This material was presented in a short workshop for elected startups in incubation program.
Facilitating peer to-peer conversations to deepen insights integration mitr...Mitra Martin
A new approach to socializing insights from a research study to drive transformative change through a "learning chrysalis" - a series of facilitated, 1:1 peer-to-peer conversations.
Light Weight Methods to Drive Your Designs ForwardNicole Capuana
Product teams these days need to be moving quickly and iteratively in delivering great products. At times though, teams can get stuck on how to move the designs forward. Sometimes it’s because of unexpected complexity and other times there are multiple paths to explore.
In this workshop, participants will experience a variety of methods that help teams gain a shared understanding through collaboration with clients, product owners, and key stakeholders. Each of the methods covered are light-weight and can be adopted by teams at any stage in the product design and development. Learn how to:
+ get started with user research,
+ define personas,
+ generate and turn ideas into solid solutions,
+ create low-fidelity mockups that can be tested with users immediately,
+ conduct a usability test,
+ synthesize your findings,
+ and gain focus for the product through games and structured discussion.
Every method covered will focus on designing a mobile app so that participants get the full experience of how each method fits into designing a product.
Don't worry if you don't have any UX background, this workshop will guide you through exercises. And if you're a UX rockstar, come flex your usability prowess with other professionals. Come learn and share tips & tricks! Everyone on a product team can benefit from this hands-on practice.
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This method is great to get early feedback on your product before writing a single line of code, or coding a mock-up.
Learn to use Rapid Paper Prototyping to quickly co-create and validate products with users. Bring your ideas to life at extremely low cost. It takes the bare minimum amount of details to create a functional interface so potential users can test it. This method is great to get early feedback on your product before writing a single line of code, or coding a mock-up. Paper and ink is all you need.
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+ define personas,
+ generate and turn ideas into solid solutions,
+ create low-fidelity mockups that can be tested with users immediately,
+ conduct a usability test,
+ synthesize your findings,
+ and gain focus for the product through games and structured discussion.
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6. ● Intro: What’s Generative Research
● Explore different exercises
● Prototype your exercise
● Iterate your exercise
● Showcase & Wrap Up
Our Time Together
RAPID PROTOTYPING WORKSHOP
7. ● Customer input for a meaningful solution
● Products must fit lifestyle of users
● Human mind is complicated
Why this workshop?
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
8. What to ask next?
Conversations with users
can feel incomplete...
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
9. Become a better listener
and reach a shared
understanding
Make a conversation
unfold naturally and
achieve a strong rapport
Get rich information on
users’ motivations,
expectations
We’ll learn how to...
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
10. Discover ways to get
stories full of emotion and
detail
Learn from the
participant’s own insights
about themselves
Feel true empathy to
generate a solution
We’ll learn how to...
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
18. Remember, select, talk about, and interpret past events
Describe behavior, thoughts, and feelings
Connect the dots of seemingly disconnected events
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
Recollection Exercises
19. Talk about sensitive topics
Express abstract feelings and thoughts
Verbalize unspoken emotions
Projective Exercises
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
22. 1. Low effort to complete but yield rich discussion.
2. Collecting elements of a category —e.g. “Types of meals I cook.”
3. Gathering feelings and needs around a topic
4. Compiling inventories —e.g. “What’s in my bathroom cabinet?”
Lists
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
23. A List combined with a Diagram
to show priority of elements.
The inner circle is the highest
priority while the outer circles
are of least importance.
Concentric
Circles of Priorities
24. Participants list their experiences
before, during, and after 1-on-1
meetings with team members.
Timelapse List
Before
During
After
25. 1. Eliciting associations, desires, preferences, values
2. Gathering participant’s own words around a prompt to evaluate
symbolic meanings associated with the topic
3. Used to assess motivations and attitudes
4. Easy to create and offer high value results!
(Sentence completion)
Mad Lib
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
26. Good for evaluating symbolic
meaning.
Participants projecting their
perspectives on ideal values for
a newcomer during recruiting
process.
Sentence
Completion
27. Understanding the preferences
and attitudes of young people
when redeeming promo codes in
restaurants.
Complete Sentences
+ Sketches
28. 1. Learning about negative & positive events
2. Exploring a category —understanding perspectives and values
around a topic
3. Gathering lessons learned
4. These are best as solo-work to enable enough time for
reflection
Story
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
29. Snags & Delights are mini-stories
about negative and positive
experiences on recent events.
Mini Stories
30. A letter can help to understand
the impact of past choices on a
participant’s current state.
Letter to myself
31. The Love and
Break Up Letter
A personal letter written to a
product often reveals
profound insights value and
expectations from objects in
everyday lives.
32. 1. Identifying and exploring categories. Relationships among
elements (leads to uncovering mental models)
2. Learning about preferences and priorities (when participants
rank order elements)
3. Remembering stories (when participants select or sort
images)
4. Create a deck of triggers/images collaboratively (it helps
eliminate gaps in your individual thinking)
Sort
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
33. Card sorting
Increasing a system’s findability.
Give users a set of cards, each
labeled with a piece of content or
functionality.
Ask them to sort them into groups
that make sense of them.
34. Card Sorting
Scenario-based sort with
multiple decks: larger
cards with scenario
elements and smaller
cards with social media
elements.
35. Association Deck
Photo deck to choose images that
best fit certain criteria.
Exercise to redesign travel-related
site. Participants were given
photos, typefaces, and moods so
they could react to an unbranded
site.
36. 1. Recording behavior, routines, feelings over time
2. Gathering photos from participant POV —empowers your
participants!
3. Enabling awareness of automatic behavior around a topic
4. Good platform for comparing moments —e.g. Does this log
reflect what is normal?
Track
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
37. Mood Calendar
30 day Mood Calendar to track
emotions, key moments, and
provide a platform for follow-up
discussion.
38. Diary Study
Snippets of experiences during a
period of time.
Useful to spot patterns difficult to
identify by recall.
A template is used to log
moments.
Source: Designing for Sustainability link
39. 1. Using metaphors & analogies to express hard-to-articulate
ideas
2. Capturing moods & feelings
3. Generating future scenarios
4. Participants need lots of time to create and explain
Do not rush!
Make
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
41. Cut-out Interface
Cut-outs of design elements for
participants to use to build paper
prototypes, prioritize features, add
new features, etc.
42. Timeline Board
In this exercise we had
participants (Millennials) plan their
financial future.
Manual activity forces them to
imagine their future selves and
discover ways insurance fit into
their story.
43. Ideal Future Journey
How to project your professional
career by asking participants to
map milestones and major
achievements for their future.
44. 1. Understanding relationships among elements in a category
2. Comparing activities to locations
3. Creating multiple layers of meaning to explore:
a. Likes/dislikes/feelings
b. Channel use
c. Purpose/role of mapped items
d. Priority of mapped items
Map
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
45. Social Media Map
Measuring the importance of
Social media tools, how each
engages the participant, the
purpose of each tool, and how
people control interactions among
them.
46. Business Origami
Modeling and understanding
complex services with no
diagramming skills.
Envision the story of how users
experience a service, making
emphasis on key touch points.
47. 1. Exploring important scenarios — Noticing emotions and
assumptions in different scenarios
2. Lessening pressure around sensitive topics
3. Gathering values, norms, rules, and native language
4. Exploring solution spaces
Play
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
48. Role Play
Measuring the importance of
Social media tools, how each
engages the participant, the
purpose of each tool, and how
people control interactions among
them.
49. Games
Participants were asked to act as
objects or persons related to a
service.
Spot opportunities to improve the
journey they go through when
interacting within a service chain.
54. I haz rezearch!
We are creating a blank
exercise that will be
completed by a user
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
55. EXERCISE # 1
Choose
Exercise Type
→ As a team, discuss what
information you would like to
get from your users
→ Review each of the exercises
from the list
→ Decide what kind of exercise
applies best for the given
scenario… you can customize
them!
10 MINUTES
57. EXERCISE # 2
Prototype the
Exercise
→ For the sketch, use a whole
page per exercise.
→ Sketch one exercise for now
Make it quick, it’s just a draft! …
→ Avoid perfectionism
20 MINUTES
58.
59.
60.
61. EXERCISE # 3
Test your
Exercise with
Real People!
→ Ask a user to complete your
exercise while you guide the
conversation.
→ Build rapport, make open
questions, always ask why… keep
digging
→ Take notes on how are
instructions interpreted. Is there
any confusion?
→ What follow-up questions
worked better?
20 MINUTES
63. EXERCISE # 4
Iterate the
Exercise
→ List all possible fixes to eliminate
confusing instructions.
→ Adjust format if you didn’t like
the results you got.
→ Re-draw your sketch, re-write
the instructions if necessary to
add layers for more depth.
5 MINUTES
64. ● What exercise did you create?
● How would you apply this to your job?
● What was your Aha! Moment?
Show how good you did
65. GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
What would be next?
● Refine your exercise
● Improve rapport skills
● Recruit 8-10 users and bring them over the table
● Interpret the results (Affinity Diagrams)
66. ● “It’s not the customer’s job to know what
they want” - Jobs
● Deeper emotions with hands-on exercises
● Customize your own methods
Key Takeaways
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
70. “Design is all
about people.”
Thanks!March 2018
Misael Leon
Product Designer
mleon@nearsoft.com
misaello
misaelleon
Sandra Vazquez
Business Developer
svazquez@nearsoft.com
sandra_daniela
sandradanielav
71. Generative Research DIY
A GR Case Study: Life insurance for Millennials
List of UX Methodologies and Case Studies
Convivial Toolbox: Generative Research for the Front End of Design (Book by Liz Sanders)
Bringing Users into Your Process Through Participatory Design
From User-Centered to Participatory Design Approaches (Paper by Liz Sanders)
Liz Sanders - Co-creation and the New Landscapes of Design
Liz Sanders on Participatory Design (video)
GENERATIVE RESEARCH WORKSHOP
Useful Links