User Interviews For UX Research - What, Why & How
User Interviews For UX Research - What, Why & How
🌞 Introducing The 2022 User Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
The UX Research Field Guide > Discovery Research Methods > User Interviews
i. User Interviews
Because interviews are live (either online or in-person), moderators are able to pick
up on and respond to verbal and non-verbal cues, ask followup questions, and probe
into topics more deeply. The candid, interactive nature of interviews often leads to
serendipitous nuggets of insight that is hard to achieve by other methods.
This UX research method is a relatively quick and easy way to collect qualitative user
data, and interviews pair well with just about any other research method—use them
🌞 Introducing The 2022toUser
follow up with usability testers, understand decisions made during card sorting x
Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
studies, or flesh out feedback from ongoing listening surveys.
Generative interviews
Generative interviews are the most common type of user interview—they are the best
way to answer the question “what don’t I know?”.
Like other generative or discovery methods, generative interviews are used early in
the design and development process when you’re looking for opportunities and
ideas.
Contextual interviews
Contextual interviews (or contextual inquiry) are a special type of semi-structured
interview that gives researchers insight into the context of use. These interviews take
place in a user’s environment (in context), which can make them feel more natural
than interviews conducted in a lab or a staged virtual setting.
Continuous interviews
Continuous interviews are interviews you do on a regular basis by setting aside a
chunk of time each week to connect with users. The goal of continuous interviewing is
to keep you in touch with the people that matter most—your customers.
🌞 Introducing The 2022Continuous interviews are especially important for people who may not have regular x
User Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
research contact with users. They can also be used to keep teams in touch with users
in between research projects. Teresa Torres, who teaches a course on continuous
Product Pricing Company Resources For Participants Sign In Sign Up
interviewing, explains:
One thing to keep in mind is that the feedback you get from continuous interviewing
may be a bit more scattered than feedback from other, more focused research.
Our Continuous User Interview Launch Kit includes an analysis template that will
help keep track of the notes you take during sessions and scan through them quickly
to find emerging themes. These themes can help influence more focused research, or
serve to add color to your existing roadmap.
They can also be used to inform strategic decisions, allowing you to understand
participants' current behaviors, expectations, or frustrations to determine a plan for a
product or service.
Because interviews capture the voice of the participant, they often provide powerful
first-hand testimonials that support research-backed recommendations for
improvement or change.
During initial discovery (before you have a product to test) to uncover broad
patterns and themes relating to people’s experiences, problems, behavior,
and opinions.
To test concepts and early ideas for possible solutions, before heavy design
work gets underway.
As a followup to usability tests or other evaluative methods, when it’s
important for you to have users articulate their decisions or experiences.
After a product has launched, as a means of understanding evolving
customer needs and expectations.
But the truth is user interviews really shine during discovery, when you still don’t really
know exactly the problem you’re trying to solve or how. You might have a general
idea about what a problem is, in which case generative interviews can help you refine
your understanding. Or, you may simply want to develop a product in a given space,
and you need to generate ideas about what problems exist before you can imagine
their solutions.
User interviews can help you answer just about any qualitative research question you
can think of. Qualitative means it's answered with words, not numbers. So while user
interviews can't tell you how many people bought your competitor’s product, they can
help you understand why people made that purchasing decision.
Typically, user interviews are just one piece of your research puzzle. For most projects,
you’ll want to supplement interview data with quantitative methods like product
analytics, usability tests, or surveys.
From there, you should be able to answer the key question: What do I want to learn
through user research?
User interviews, like all the research methods discussed in this Field Guide, should
start with a research question that is specific enough to know when you've found the
🌞 Introducing The 2022answer, actionable in that you can do something about it, or practical in that you can x
User Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
reasonably answer it within the scope of a research project.
A better question may be, "Does my pricing page accurately answer my users
questions?", or "Why do people in my target market choose X competitor over my
product?".
Both of these questions could be answered with user interviews, and your team would
have a clear path to action once the study was complete.
Some of these interview questions should spring directly from your core research
question.
For example, if you want to learn how people research travel destinations, you could
plan to say “Tell me about your last vacation” followed by the question “What
prompted you to choose X as a destination?”
That’s because although its good to prepare a loose questionnaire to guide the
interview, you should feel free to deviate from it when it makes sense. You don’t want
the interview to feel stilted—you want it to flow, and you want your interviewee
comfortable. If the interview is taking a useful turn, follow it where it wants to go.
For discovery interviews, where the scope of your inquiry might be quite broad,
consider a list of topics in lieu of a questionnaire.
If you identify a handful (3-6) of larger topics you’d like to cover, and identify a
handful of subtopic, you’ve got yourself a nice loose guideline for an interview that
won’t be overly confining.
For example, say your area of interest is snacks (because who isn’t interested in
snacks?). You might come up with larger topics like cookies, popcorn, charcuterie,
and healthy snacks. And beneath each main topic, you might have a few subtopics. In
the end, your list of topics might look like...
And you can use this list of presumptions as a guideline for understanding how, why,
and what your interviewee looks for in a snack without locking yourself into a
prescribed list of questions.
Getting-to-know-you questions
Digging in questions
Have you used any other tools in the past to solve [problem]?
What's your team's current budget for [activity]?
Tell me about how you and/or your team uses our product.
What do you wish our product could do that it can't today?
💡 TIPS:
● Copy and adapt this as needed.
● Try out your script with a test audience before sitting down
with participants..
● Start your script with a broad introduction to get participants
comfortable and then narrow down into more specific topics.
● Don’t ask leading or loaded questions:
○ ASK: What do you think about this product feature?
○ DO NOT ASK: What do you like about this product
feature?
● After the person responds, make sure to reflect back what you
heard to them.
● Be patient with silence—your participant may be thinking
about how to best express their thoughts.,
Thank you so much for taking the time to talk with me today. My
name is [NAME] and I am a [X] with the team.
Thankfully, there are ways to streamline the process, which we’ve shared below. But
first, it’s time to:
Write down the qualities you think that person—this knowledgeable answer-giver
you’re picturing—is likely to have. This list is the beginning of your participant profile,
which you will use to write your screener survey.
We say beginning, because it’s likely that your list is too long, the profile too narrow.
Really scrutinize each of the qualities you wrote down—does a participant have to be
🌞 Introducing The 2022vegetarian or Black or married or live in Southern California in order to provide x
User Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
valuable insights to your question?
Product
Unless it’s Pricing Company Resources For Participants Sign In
truly necessary for a participant to fall within a certain demographic,Sign
youUp
can probably strike that criteria from your list. When we filter by demographics, we’re
often making assumptions about relationships between people’s backgrounds and
their behaviors—and doing so risks biasing your research and missing out on diverse
perspectives.
We wrote an entire module about finding and recruiting the right participants,
creating screener surveys, and UX research incentives—which is why we aren’t
diving deep into the details here.
That’s why it’s good to start small. For most interview studies, you only need 5
participants.
So start by recruiting 5 people, since you are almost certain to need that many. You
can always recruit more folks later based on your needs:
Consider how much information you need; the more complex the situation
you are investigating, and the less you know about it to begin with, the
more people you will need to talk to. Depending on complexity, you might
plan to recruit 6 to 10 participants.
Consider important subgroups in your pool of potential interviewees (for
example, if you need to talk to members of multiple age groups). In that
case, you might want to recruit 3-5 people from each subgroup, so multiply
accordingly.
If you have not conducted open-ended interviews before, or have not done
any recently, add two or three extra interviews to your list for practice—if
everything goes well, you’ll even have some extra data.
Remember that when you’re doing discovery research, it’s good to keep an open
mind and have a flexible research plan. You can plan and budget for any number of
participants, but that doesn’t mean you have to recruit them all at once. Generative
interviews can sometimes generate ideas about who you should interview next. So if
one interview leads you down an unexpected (but relevant path), follow it.
🌞 Introducing The 2022Recruiting participants for interviews can be fast (really)—which means you can x
User Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
respond to new lines of inquiry as they crop up.
Of course, if you feel like doing a 15-minute, 20-minute, or even hour-long user
interview, that's perfectly ok too!
Obtain consent
Don’t collect data without permission. Before the day of the interview and at the
beginning of the session, clearly explain why you’re conducting the interview, how the
data will be used, and how it will be stored. Get every participants’ informed consent
in writing—these forms, and your verbal explanation, should be in plain, easy-to-
understand language.
Time and date—if doing remote research, make sure you give the time and
date in your participant’s time zone.
Location—include a map and directions if the test is in person, or a link to a
video call and instructions for joining.
Research topic—don’t give too much information away, but do remind users x
🌞 Introducing The 2022 User Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
what the research will be about.
Read more about scheduling and communicating with participants in this Field
Guide chapter.
• If you don’t get confirmation from a participant, send them a reminder and
include that software/dial in information again. This will save you time and
heartache! Product plug: you can easily do this through bulk messaging in User
Interviews.
• If you’re showing a prototype or doing a usability test, test the test first. Ask a
colleague to run through it with you or, at the very least, trial it yourself.
• Be kind and patient, especially with folks who may be stressed during this time
and/or unfamiliar with the tools you’re using to conduct your interviews.
• Maintain eye contact. Get a notetaker and/or record and transcribe the
interview so you can focus on your participant, not your keyboard.
Make the participant feel comfortable. Create a rapport, assure them that there are
no right or wrong answers, and get them warmed up with some get-to-know-you
small talk. Remember, this is about establishing trust, not becoming BFFs—focus on
making sure they feel safe and seen.
Talk slowly. Pause. Ask them if they have any questions of their own before you begin.
For instance, if you are interviewing public school teachers who have to purchase
classroom supplies with their own money, you might work toward the specifics by
asking them:
In another example, if someone from Boston is talking about their habits and says “I
go to Harvard often,” ask them to clarify if they mean Harvard Square, the metro stop,
or the university—or something else entirely.
🌞 Introducing The 2022YouUser
can also ask people to perform tasks by sharing their screen, or by describing the x
Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
action: “Can you show/describe to me how you [X]?”
Wrap it up
As you approach the end of a session, preface your final questions with a statement
like“I just have one more question before we wrap up,” or “To wind things down, I
have just one or two more questions.” This will make the end more gentle, especially if
you have someone really pouring their heart out.
Make sure to reserve time at the end of the interview to sincerely thank your
participants for their time, vulnerability, and contribution to your project. Before you
close the book, ask participants if they have any questions or anything else to add (“Is
there anything I didn’t ask about that you think I should have?”).
“Most of the people will say no. So I wait. Then they think a little bit and actually
have things to add. So here again, don’t underestimate the power of silence,
don’t turn the recorder off. A lot of people will give you interesting feedback
once the interview is “finished”.
And even if you’re relying on recordings, it’s always a good idea to take time after a
session to write down thoughts and impressions and add those notes to the
transcripts.
You can take notes with pen and paper, in a whiteboard tool like Miro, with a
dedicated research tool, spreadsheets—whatever works.
In our User Interview Launch Kit, we’ve included a Google Sheets note-taking
template that makes it easy to take quick and organized notes during an interview
session. It also makes it easy to pull out specific answers and tidbits from each
interview.
Some study designs even call for giving interviewees a chance to review the
transcripts, notes, and initial analysis, in case they have any corrections or retractions.
Place all your records, including copies of the recordings or field notes and any
amendments offered by the interviewee, together for easy later retrieval.
For most interview analysis and synthesis, Google Sheets (or your preferred
spreadsheet tool) is all you need. We also recommend using a tool like Miro, MURAL,
or Figjam to organize your notes and make sense of emerging themes in the data.
Mind maps, word clouds, and storyboards are other effective ways to share interview
data with stakeholders who don’t have the time or patience to mine through
spreadsheets or large data sets.
• After each user interview, Roberta create a snapshot of the interview in Miro.
• She shares the snapshot and key takeaways in a project Slack channel to give
stakeholders visibility as the study progresses.
• After all the interviews have wrapped up, Roberta does a “final synthesis”
using the takeaways she put together along the way.
• This synthesis can be shared with stakeholders (and the wider company) as a
slide deck, a written summary, or both.
Remote user interviews are simpler—you and your participant will just need a video
conferencing link and a computer or smartphone. Tools like Zoom, Microsoft Teams,
and Google Meet have become so ubiquitous that most (though not all!) users will
feel comfortable using these platforms for a call. Even still, try to choose software that
will be familiar to people and always provide clear, step-by-step instructions ahead
of time.
To record in-person interviews, you may be able to get by with a smartphone, or you
might need special audio/video equipment. Always test-drive your setup ahead of
time to make sure the sound is clear and (if applicable) the video offers an
unobstructed view of the participant.
During the interview, you’ll need a tool for taking notes. A good old-fashioned
notepad and pen can work but remember you’ll need to transcribe your notes later
for analysis. We recommend that you:
If you’re planning to conduct a lot of in-depth interviews, you may want to invest in a
research repository tool that offers built-in analysis such as Aurelius, Dovetail , or
Optimal Workshop.
They can be combined with other methods, such as observational field studies or
focus groups. An initial series of interviews can lay the groundwork for a field study, or
an observational field study can develop insights that are later used in planning an
interview series. Participant-observer studies often include interviews.
The same recruitment methods, tools, and logistical planning—and sometimes even
the same interviewees—can be used in both the generative and evaluative phases of
a project. In the generative stage, you might pick their brains regarding the pain
🌞 Introducing The 2022points of using a certain product, and later ask them to use the product to determine x
User Research Yearbook, a groovy directory of essential voices in UXR.
whether those problems have been resolved.
But don't take our word for it. Get out there, conduct some interviews, and see for
yourself how powerful user insights can be!
NEXT: ETHNOGRAPHY
Sign up
© 2022 User Interviews Inc. All rights reserved. Researcher Terms | Participant Terms | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy