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How to do user research effectively as a busy product manager

Vikram Goyal
UX Collective
Published in
7 min readAug 14, 2024

A board with a lot of yellow coloured sticky notes. These sticky notes contain insights which a user researcher would have identified based on talking to customers
Photo by Daria Nepriakhina 🇺🇦 on Unsplash

Two types of user research

Identifying users to talk to

Reaching out on email and scheduling time

This is a screenshot of an email I sent to customers asking for feedback on a particular feature. It contains few questions on the feature and also contains a meeting link using which a meeting can be booked by the customer
I ask questions directly in email when seeking feedback on a feature

Asking the right Questions

Capturing and Communicating Insights

Using Evaluative Research for Usability Testing

Researching with internal teams instead of users

Using sales conversations for user research

Additional Reading

Written by Vikram Goyal

Currently PM@Airmeet — building a kick-ass product for conducting remote events and conferences.

Responses (3)

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High quality information on users is critically important to the foundation of strategy, and the only way that quality can be provided is by someone qualified to do it well.
Michael Porter's definition of strategy can be summarised as "what can we…

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To echo Joanna's point, it's a better use of everyone's time to collaborate with qualified UXR's to design suitable research and gain effective insights (as opposed to busy PMs taking it on themselves).

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As a UXR I always find it difficult to properly synthesize data in big chunks and cross reference it with earlier research. I am trying to help others reach conclusions faster at leapfrogapp.com. Check it out if you want a more collaborative research repository.

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