Research Your Stakeholders Like Your Users

by Kristen DeLap


Product and UX folks ruthlessly research and analyze their users, to great effect. In fact a closing statement of mine in my team meetings is “go talk to your users”. While there is always room for improvement, this is a skill that we all know and employ well.

An artifact of that is often a user map. At its core, a user map is trying to answer questions around what is this person trying to do, what's getting in their way, and what do they actually need (which is often different from what they say they want). You're looking at goals, pain points, context, and behavior. And crucially, you're looking for the gap between what they say and what they do.

In contrast, the traditional stakeholder map, which we've explored before, is mostly about power and interest. Where does this person sit? How much do they care? How much can they affect your work? It's a useful diagnostic. But it's organizational, not human. It helps you categorize people. It doesn't help you understand them.

An interesting move is what happens when you apply the user research lens to a stakeholder. Instead of asking how much power this person has, you ask: what are they actually trying to accomplish this quarter? What are they afraid of? What are they protecting? What do they say they want versus what do they actually respond to? What context are they operating in that you can't see from your seat? Where is the friction in working with you (even if they'd never say it out loud)?

That's user research, but applied inward.

Designers, researchers, and product managers use this kind of curiosity every day. It's a skill. The shift is simply in recognizing that your stakeholders have pain points too. They have constraints you can't see. They have things they're trying to protect. Treating them accordingly - with the same rigor and genuine interest you'd bring to a user interview - tends to change the quality of the conversation. You can stop negotiating and start understanding.


STAND-UP EXERCISE

Choose one stakeholder your team interacts with regularly, perhaps someone whose priorities feel misaligned, or whose feedback is hard to predict, or who you find difficult to bring along.

Using the same empathy map format you'd apply to a user map that stakeholder as a team. Work from what you already know: how they show up in meetings, what they push back on, what they consistently ask for, what seems to matter to them. Note where your knowledge is thin — those gaps are as useful as the answers.

I like to use a virtual whiteboard with the following sections:

  • Says: What are they saying about their expectations, concerns, and feedback? Get direct quotes from the stakeholder. 

  • Thinks: What are they thinking but might not be vocalizing? Consider their worries, aspirations, and priorities. 

  • Does: What do they do in relation to your product? Note the stakeholder's actions and behaviors. 

  • Feels: How do they feel about the product or their involvement? Observe their tone and body language.

  • Hears: What might the stakeholder hear from others that influences their perspective? Feedback from colleagues, market trends, or industry news…

Once you have this, you can begin brainstorming pain points and opportunities. Try to pinpoint specific areas where the stakeholder faces challenges or frustrations. And then highlight areas where improvements could be made to better meet stakeholder needs and expectations, and improve the relationship.

When you're done, sit with the map for a moment. Does anything surprise you? Where are you making assumptions you haven't tested? Is there a conversation you could have, or a way you could frame your next interaction, that accounts for what you now see? Which of the opportunities are you going to take advantage of?

The goal isn't to psychoanalyze your colleagues. It's to bring the same quality of attention to the people inside your organization that you already bring to the people outside it.

Miro board with stakeholder name at top and 7 sections with sticky notes

Good Gift Giving is User Empathy

by Kristen DeLap


This is a major gift giving season, and there are countless gift guides being published by retailers and media outlets. These gift guides typically group folks into broad groups by demographic like “Top Gifts for Dads” or “Gifts for your Girlfriend”, or by interest-group like “Gifts for the Cook” or “Hostess Gifts”. However, this season, Vox published a slightly different take in an article How to become a truly excellent gift giver. I was struck by how many of their points are actually UX principles or practices.

The first lesson listed was to pay attention to the recipient, even writing a mini bio of the person. This of course is UX research at its core, creating a user profile to build a user journey. The article also introduces a three point framework to ask yourself when gift giving: “Can I introduce you to something you might not otherwise know about? Can I get you a nicer version of something than you would buy for yourself? Can I make you feel seen?” These roughly apply to user experiences when we convert them to: Can I introduce you to an experience you might not know about? Can I delight you by providing a better experience than you were expecting? Can I meet your needs, perhaps needs you might not even realize you have?

The more we pay attention to our users, the better the outcomes. This is true whether designing and building a digital ecommerce experience or finding a meaningful gift for a recipient. When doing the below exercise my team generated many themes that are applicable to both problems. Create a similar seasonally-themed learning activity with your team below.

Screenshot of Miro board with series of stickies describing user empathy.

STAND-UP EXERCISE

This exercise could be part of a larger end-of-year gathering, or trimmed to fit into a stand-up or two.

Each team member is asked to add to the virtual whiteboard an image of a gift that they were happy to receive. I asked the team to only use gifts that were a surprise, not something they’d asked for or added to a wish list, but the gift could be from any occasion. Due to size, my team then broke into breakout groups, to discuss their gifts and decide on one to present back to the larger gathering. The giftee told their story of why it was such a great gift to recieve and what it has meant to them.

Then as a team we discussed learnings or themes that emerged, especially ones that are relevant to user empathy and user understanding. Adding them to a visual whiteboard and grouping them helps facilitate discussion. How can we take these themes of gift-giving into our user research and our product team prioritization?

Screenshot of Miro board where participants added avatar of themselves and photo of a gift to a grid.