Team alignment
Set clear research objectives
Available after project creation
How might we overcome the impact of unclear objectives in user research?
Use the project space to align stakeholder objectives with research, design and delivery work.
Objective orientated applied user research done well.
Use ResearchOps to structure applied user research with operations, governance and accessibility baked in.
A project gives you somewhere to hold studies, participants, sessions, notes, evidence, insights and recommendations.
Create the project first. Later parts of the service become useful once the research work has somewhere to live.
ResearchOps follows the shape of a user research project. Start by creating a project. Then add studies, participants, sessions, notes, evidence, insights and recommendations as the work develops.
This sequence is a mental model, not a set of first-visit shortcuts. It shows how the work becomes connected over time.
Step 1 of 8
Define the research work, service phase, team context and objectives.
Step 2 of 8
Plan a specific round of research within the project.
Step 3 of 8
Recruit and manage people taking part in the study.
Step 4 of 8
Schedule and run research sessions.
Step 5 of 8
Capture observations and structured session notes.
Step 6 of 8
Organise what was seen, heard or recorded.
Step 7 of 8
Analyse evidence into meaningful findings.
Step 8 of 8
Turn findings into decisions, actions and service improvements.
These parts of ResearchOps are shown as orientation. They make more sense after a project record has been created.
Team alignment
Available after project creation
Use the project space to align stakeholder objectives with research, design and delivery work.
Recruitment
Available after study planning
Plan recruitment so findings are not biased, exclusionary or weakly connected to the service’s real users.
Evidence and analysis
Available after sessions
Use structured notes and evidence trails to show how research findings lead to service decisions.