Remote Contextual Inquiry as a UX Research Technique

Benefits and Goals

Contextual Inquiry or UX Shadowing is a great user research method that helps to understand the as-is or status quo state of the processes that your software is trying to improve. This UX research method will question the current understanding of the stakeholders and domain experts. I find that oftentimes such stakeholders have overlap with reality, but are generally working off of assumptions that might be outdated, missing the perspectives of certain user segments, or are just outright incorrect in certain key aspects.

This research technique also works best for creating empathy and an understanding of specific industries that might be completely foreign territory to a software designer, product manager, or other technology professional. It’s also a great technique to employ for identifying business requirements, problems, and opportunities within process-driven environments, specifically for B2B or enterprise workflows.

Who to Involve in UX Shadow Sessions

The goal of this type of ethnographic UX research is to create a deep understanding and empathy with your end-users, and specifically to understand the "why" behind their existing workflows. Familiarization with their existing workflows can then lead to identifying problems, gaps, and opportunities that can be tackled through design solutions, such as new features, new copy, or a completely new product hypothesis.

How to do Contextual Inquiry Remotely

I find that UX shadow sessions are best executed after User Discovery Interviews. The user discovery interviews will identify the key types of end-users to do the shadowing sessions with and the key tasks to watch them execute. Once the key tasks are identified, a test subject can be given instructions beforehand to prepare a specific task to walk through, while sharing their entire screen on Zoom. The reason is that often there are several applications and programs that they use simultaneously, the goal is to discover their workflow, rather than just how they interact with one program. The goal is to understand how they switch from one application to another, and how they set up their desktop and work environment.

The core instruction is to tell them to prepare the materials beforehand and have them up on their screen, and that it’s a way to understand their world rather than judge their work. This might involve watching them toggle between 4 different applications on their desktop, while they Google things in the middle.

As they narrate what they're doing out loud, it's the UX Designer's job to probe with questions as points of friction come up, or to discover the whys behind the actions.

Deliverables & Outcomes of UX Shadow Sessions

The key outcome should be a document capturing their existing workflow, whether it’s on a competing software, or a combination of various tools which might also include a physical process such as sticky notes, or “hacks” such as scheduling emails to themselves. This might be accompanied by video clips of the key highlights in the screen share stitched together for better delivering the key points to stakeholders, or screenshots. The secondary output should be points of frustration within that flow. And the third output should be any opportunities as they relate to the frustration points, and how it fits into the software that the research is done for.

If you want to find out if Remote Contextual Inquiry or UX Shadow Sessions are appropriate for your organization or startup, feel free to reach out to us! Subscribe to our newsletter to keep up with our series on UX Research Roadmaps.

UX Listening Tour: A Different Type of UX Interview

Benefits and Goals

A UX listening tour is a great user research tool used to identify stakeholder goals and objectives from across your organization, that can then be solved through UX Design. As a UX consultant, the main point of contact at the client company will communicate general UX objectives to me. However, after conducting a UX Listening Tour with various stakeholders within the startup or company, I generally discover varying goals and problem areas of focus, defined differently based on each stakeholder’s area of expertise, personal objectives, and personal biases. These gaps in focus tend to be greater in larger organizations, but also occur in startups. The goal and benefit of a listening tour are to highlight these gaps and differences and bring them to the forefront. 

A UX listening tour is one of the key must-have kick-off steps for any new project as a way to align your company’s product vision, utilize previous findings and research data, clarify any misalignments about the domain space or business requirements, and gain an understanding of the priorities of your stakeholders. It also serves as a great way to get buy-in for UX from stakeholders within your organization who may not fully see the value in the process.

Who to Involve in a UX Listening Tour

It’s beneficial to involve anyone within your company who influences the way your product is designed or what features it prioritizes. This usually includes anyone who has been involved in the design of your product or anyone knowledgable about the problem space within your company but could also involve influential stakeholders such as a Marketing Lead who might not directly be designing your product. Typically this involves anyone in a Product Manager role, which in startups might be the CTO or co-founders, as well as lead developers, industry or domain experts, and anyone the Product Manager interfaces with.


How to do a UX Listening Tour Remotely

A listening tour is guided by specific questions designed to reveal key nuggets of information but feels like a free-flowing conversation. It is simply executed through 1 on 1 video calls, with some stakeholders sharing and walking through previous product assets, data points, and customer feedback. It might additionally end up being the stakeholders venting their frustrations about company politics, and features that should have been done, which in itself is extremely useful information. As a third party UX consultant, I find that stakeholders are much more honest and transparent about these things with me than with their colleagues.


Deliverables and Outcomes of a UX Listening Tour

The deliverables of a UX Listening Tour might include key takeaways and notes based on stakeholder priorities in terms of features they want, but most importantly will include perceived problems and pain points they see for end-users within their unique field of vision. This will open the door to determining the next steps in the UX research process, which typically involves gaining a similar insight from end-users through User Discovery Interviews

If you want to find out if a UX Listening Tour is appropriate for your organization’s needs, feel free to reach out to us! Subscribe to our newsletter to keep updated with our UX Research Roadmap series of posts.