Design ROI: Cover a Little, Get a Lot
Summary
In recent years, hundreds of articles have been published on the best way to measure, demonstrate and argue quantitatively "what is the Return on Investment of UX & Design?" In this talk, Gonzalo will explain how to make small measurements but with great impact – rather than trying to cover a huge universe of variables to measure design's ROI, which only makes us lose ourselves in theory. It will be based on a "fictional" environment but one similar to his (hundreds of designers and hundreds of digital products across 10 countries.) Takeaways How to demonstrate your value to management by translating your work into numbers and milestones How to implement a Global DesignOps that permeates your whole company
Key Insights
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Design-driven companies that promote continuous iteration and user-centric methods show higher revenue growth and better financial returns according to McKinsey studies.
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Aligning design metrics with corporate financial goals requires translating tactical KPIs into the language of profit, revenue, and cost savings at the highest organizational levels.
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Design ROI should be conceptualized simply as how design work either increases revenue or reduces costs to tie contributions to business outcomes.
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Separating design goals into what we want to achieve (customer-facing outcomes) and what we need to achieve (tools, processes, team development) clarifies ROI measurement.
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Experience metrics like NPS and usability scores complement revenue and cost measurements to capture the holistic value of design.
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Design system efficiency can be quantified by measuring reduced time to market and saving working hours, providing a concrete ROI example.
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Investments in long-term assets like documentation, reusable research, and training yield deferred ROI difficult to measure immediately but crucial for sustained value.
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Context matters: early-stage design teams focus on quick wins to demonstrate value, while mature teams measure strategic impact aligned with business goals.
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A common challenge is maintaining a shared language across organizational tiers to articulate design’s business impact effectively.
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ROI measurement is not about finding a perfect formula but developing relevant, context-sensitive metrics that foster trust and help design teams integrate into strategic decision-making.
Notable Quotes
"Investing in design practices has a clear impact on business benefits, proven after 33 years of research."
"Promoting design means business growth, it’s been empirically demonstrated."
"Only when we translate our success into the company’s language can we really quantify our contribution to overall strategy."
"If teams have a clear ROI strategy, they’re more likely to be involved early in product creation."
"Profit is simply revenues minus costs, so we measure design’s contribution by the effect on either side."
"Don’t spend too much time trying to translate experience goals directly into business metrics; show the value of experience separately."
"We found a three percent decrease in time to market using our design system, which translates into measurable business savings."
"Investments in training may not yield immediate profit but can be justified by linking skills to efficiency gains and future savings."
"The success of ROI measurement depends mainly on the maturity stage and context of your design team."
"Our aim is not just to demonstrate design’s value for growth, but to become an essential part of the company’s overall strategy."
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