A Selectively Scrappy Approach to ResearchOps
Summary
Megan Blocker will talk about how to decide where to invest your precious time and attention for maximum impact. In other words, where is it most important for your team to get serious about ResearchOps, and where is it okay to stay scrappy? How can you grow sustainably by picking and choosing your battles? It all depends on your goals, your context, and your priorities. We’ll talk about a framework for making those decisions, and about how applying it worked for our growing team.
Key Insights
-
•
Scaling research requires balancing skill levels, organizational scale, culture, and leadership buy-in.
-
•
You don't need formal research titles to do research; skills can be distributed across designers, PMs, and others.
-
•
A small research team serving a large organization can leverage apprenticeship and education models to expand impact.
-
•
Building a large, engaged user testbed quickly is possible with minimal resources and has strategic benefits.
-
•
Leadership buy-in is signaled not just by budget but by leaders seeking out research to guide decisions.
-
•
Organizational culture shapes how you implement research — entrepreneurial cultures allow quicker experiments, hierarchical ones require stakeholder management.
-
•
Developing reusable tools, templates, and playbooks helps scale quality research across a growing organization.
-
•
Scrappy grassroots efforts can lead to formalized, systematic research programs over time.
-
•
Continuous storytelling and advocacy are essential for gaining and maintaining leadership support.
-
•
Research scale and focus need continual reassessment as team size, culture, and buy-in evolve.
Notable Quotes
"I realized that dedicating my time and energy into something that wasn’t going to be used was not a good use of my time."
"Research skill and talent can be present in many different kinds of people, you don’t have to have research in your title."
"In a hierarchical culture, you ask permission; in an entrepreneurial culture, you ask forgiveness."
"We made a 250-person testbed grow to 1200 people in under a week just through one email campaign."
"If you want access to those names, you got to come through us and show your research plan, which helped us ensure quality."
"We focused on interviewing and synthesis because those methods were most likely to be employed by our product managers."
"Offers of championship from leaders, like 'What do you need from me?' are strong signs of buy-in."
"Our education program isn’t just basic info—it builds empathy and literacy across the whole product team."
"Scrappy grassroots methods never fully go away; you always need to ask where you can get scrappy next."
"Stakeholder analysis and managing stakeholders is critical in hierarchical cultures to maintain trust."
Or choose a question:
More Videos
"No role exists in isolation, said Fred Rogers, emphasizing interconnectedness beyond the individual."
Daniel GloydDesigning From the Inside Out: How Method Acting Can Inspire Design Research
February 12, 2026
"Recruiting for indigenous participants via Craigslist missed the unique role community ties play, so we regrouped and connected through community organizations."
Deirdre Hirschtritt Cesar Paredes Marie PerrotResearch is Only as Good as the Relationships You Build
November 17, 2022
"After four years we were able to see in a concrete way what happened, the changes that we have been able to do for the organization."
Benjamin RealMaturity Models: A Core Tool for Creating a DesignOps Strategy
October 1, 2021
"Not all climate jobs have digital outputs, so don’t waste your time chasing digital roles in fields like green concrete."
Max Gadney Andrea Petrucci Joshua Stehr Hannah WickesAssessing UX jobs for impact in climate
August 14, 2024
"If they can do it, so can I – that’s the takeaway from these transformation stories."
Lada GorlenkoTheme 1: Intro
January 8, 2024
"Play is known to create psychological safety, break down barriers, and foster shared alignment."
Feyikemi AkinwolemiwaPlay to innovate: How curiosity and experimentation transform UX
March 11, 2026
"Lauren Cantor keeps all those links and other resources so we don’t have to be googling while listening."
Bria AlexanderOpening Remarks
March 29, 2023
"User recordings are your most valuable asset but have become riskier due to biometric privacy laws."
Llewyn Paine[Demo] Deploying AI doppelgangers to de-identify user research recordings
June 5, 2024
"OKRs can sometimes suck the oxygen out of the room if they focus only on bottom-line results, missing process and experience."
Bria Alexander Benson Low Natalya Pemberton Stephanie GoldthorpeOKRs—Helpful or Harmful?
January 20, 2022