Design as a Team Practice, A Practical Guide to Cross-functional Collaboration
Summary
We believe cross-functional team collaboration delivers value faster for users and organizations. However, it’s not always obvious what exactly cross-functional collaboration actually looks like. What practices are necessary to the team’s success? How do you measure team performance? As a developer and a designer, we have direct experience working together and leading teams on truly cross-functional product design and delivery. In our talk, we’ll provide specific examples of what that kind of collaboration can look like, while sharing some of the values and principles that have motivated us.
Key Insights
-
•
Developers struggled to make trade-offs because they lacked understanding of the broader user context.
-
•
Product strategists became frustrated as their detailed user stories began resembling rigid specifications, yet still failed to meet developers' needs.
-
•
Designers held contextual knowledge valuable to the entire team but lacked a channel to share it effectively.
-
•
Using the BICEPS model helps identify and address team members' psychological needs: belonging, improvement, choice, equity, ability, and significance.
-
•
Reimagining biweekly showcases to visualize how individual work contributes to user outcomes dramatically improved team morale and motivation.
-
•
Pairing, modeled after driver-navigator roles, supports dynamic role exchanges that enhance problem solving and learning within cross-functional teams.
-
•
Empathy and trust grow through working closely together and are foundational for effective collaboration and pairing.
-
•
The roles and responsibilities exercise reveals pairing opportunities by matching what people offer with what they need.
-
•
Pairing is not limited to core roles like developers and designers; it can include quality analysts, product managers, customer support, or even informal interests to foster creativity.
-
•
Leadership must explicitly model and support psychological safety to enable honest conversations that break down barriers to collaboration.
Notable Quotes
"Developers were hungry for the bigger picture, but the only information available to them was a set of user stories."
"It felt like an assembly line where you don't really know what is happening before you or after you."
"The BICEPS model helps understand what our co-workers need to feel supported and purposeful."
"Seeing the dots connected so clearly reminded me why I was doing what I was doing."
"Designing as a team means centering all the humans involved, not just the users."
"Pairing is two people with different roles doing an activity together simultaneously, like a driver and a navigator."
"Empathy and trust develop through working together, not in isolation."
"If you have an unmet need, pairing can help address it by matching offers and needs within the team."
"Pairing isn't about taking away jobs; it's about amplifying everyone's expertise and breaking down hierarchy."
"Psychological safety comes from having hard conversations upfront and requires demonstration from leadership."
Or choose a question:
More Videos
"We have never played together before and never rehearsed, yet we pulled off a great rendition spontaneously."
Jim KalbachJazz Improvisation as a Model for Team Collaboration
November 6, 2017
"Don’t write a book expecting to retire on royalties; this is a specialized field with modest sales."
Louis RosenfeldCoffee with Lou: Should You Write a (UX) Book?
March 7, 2024
"Building influence has been such a challenging part of growing in my own career. It takes a lot of communication and understanding others’ goals."
Catt Small Micah Bennett Brian Carr Jessica HarlleeWhat's Next for ICs: Exploring Staff and Principal Designer Roles
February 22, 2024
"You might find that spending the most time getting people interested in collaboration is where the work really happens."
Marieke McCloskeyUser Science: Product Analytics & User Research
March 11, 2021
"Ultimately, AI avatar tools offer UX teams options to keep recordings while meeting legal compliance."
Llewyn Paine[Demo] Deploying AI doppelgangers to de-identify user research recordings
June 5, 2024
"Designers have a hard time interpreting econometrics-driven quantitative research without bridging approaches."
Joshua NobleCasual Inference
October 6, 2023
"We need to think about who we’re sharing with, how they might react, and what motivates them."
Sara LogelYour Colleagues are Your Users Too
March 29, 2023
"We'll have a centralized Slack channel for all discussion to come together as one community."
Bria Alexander Louis RosenfeldWelcome
January 8, 2024
"Consistency is so important that sometimes even consistency in failure works if it means I only have to learn the workaround once."
Sam ProulxOnline Shopping: Designing an Accessible Experience
June 7, 2023