Rosenverse

This video is only accessible to Gold members. Log in or register for a free Gold Trial Account to watch.

Log in Register

Most conference talks are accessible to Gold members, while community videos are generally available to all logged-in members.

Insight Types That Influence Enterprise Decision Makers

Gold
Wednesday, May 13, 2015 • Enterprise UX 2015
Share the love for this talk
Insight Types That Influence Enterprise Decision Makers
Speakers: Christian Rohrer
Link:

Summary

The speaker shares his journey from a computer science background to becoming a cognitive science PhD and UX expert working at notable companies like Yahoo, eBay, Realtor, and Intel Security. He uses this experience to frame how to gather user insights, particularly in enterprise UX where users range from end users to administrators and buyers with differing needs. He introduces a layered model of user experience focusing on core user needs, usability, and appeal. Then, he presents a 3D research methods framework spanning qualitative to quantitative, behavioral to attitudinal data, and context of use from natural to scripted. Usability studies, ethnographic fieldwork, surveys, big data, and concept testing each fit differently on this landscape and serve particular phases of product development: strategize (focus on user needs with field studies and interviews), optimize (diagnosing usability issues), and assess (measuring success quantitatively). Challenges in enterprise UX include multiple user personas, conflicting priorities, and access constraints. The speaker highlights pitfalls such as relying on anecdotal data or conflating buyer insights with user needs. Finally, he recommends a balanced approach combining quantitative behavioral and attitudinal methods with qualitative field studies to form a "golden trapezoid" of user research for better decision making.

Key Insights

  • Enterprise UX must consider distinct roles: end users, administrators, and buyers, each with unique needs.

  • A layered user experience model centers on core user needs, surrounded by usability and then content/look and feel.

  • Qualitative research is direct and rich in context, enabling discovery of unexpected insights.

  • Quantitative research is mostly indirect and excels at measuring how much or how many, providing certainty.

  • Behavioral data shows what users do, attitudinal data reflects what users say, and both must be considered.

  • Context of use matters: natural, scripted, decontextualized, and hybrid methods reveal different facets of user experience.

  • Ethnographic field studies are the most powerful qualitative method for understanding real-world user behavior.

  • Enterprise UX faces access issues, competing priorities, and internal politics that impact research and product decisions.

  • Product development stages map to research needs: strategize phase focuses on user needs, optimize on usability, assess on outcomes.

  • Combining quantitative behavioral/attitudinal methods with qualitative field studies forms a balanced, effective insight generation approach.

Notable Quotes

"Every great user experience begins with meeting a user need at its very core."

"Security and great user experience is almost a null set — we need to enlarge that circle."

"What people say and what people do are not the same thing, not because they lie but often because they aren’t aware."

"In enterprise, people often just want to not get fired — that’s a very important need."

"Having no competition can be a problem because there’s no pressure to create a great user experience."

"Field studies are the most powerful qualitative method available — nothing else compares for real-world insight."

"Most executives think user research is big numbers good, small numbers bad, or focus groups with M&Ms."

"What we often see in enterprises is anecdotal or self-reported data that doesn’t reflect the true user ecosystem."

"Usability labs are qualitative and mostly behavioral, and they help diagnose why something isn’t working."

"The golden trapezoid of user research combines quantitative behavioral and attitudinal data with field studies for best insights."

Ask the Rosenbot
Kim Fellman Cohen
Measuring the Designer Experience
2019 • DesignOps Summit 2019
Gold
Jim Kalbach
Jazz Improvisation as a Model for Team Collaboration
2019 • Enterprise Experience 2019
Gold
James Lang
If you can design an app, you can design a community
2025 • Rosenfeld Community
Victor Udoewa
Beyond Methods and Diversity: The Roots of Inclusion
2024 • Advancing Research 2024
Gold
Jon Fukuda
Storytelling for DesignOps
2023 • DesignOps Community
Lily Aduana
5 Reasons to Bring Your Recruiting in-House (and How To Do It)
2021 • Advancing Research 2021
Gold
Lena Shenkarenko
Collaborative Wireframing for Creating Team Alignment and Shipping Better Products
2020 • DesignOps Summit 2020
Gold
Melinda Belcher
Insider preview of Enterprise Experience 2020
2020 • Enterprise Community
Jorge Arango
[Demo] How to re-categorize content at scale using LLMs
2024 • Designing with AI 2024
Gold
Tracy McGoldrick
IBM User Experience Program—The What, Why and How
2021 • Advancing Research Community
Greg Petroff
Everything is About to Change: Software as Material
2016 • Enterprise UX 2016
Gold
Jemma Ahmed
Redefining the research toolkit: Expanding methodologies for a changing world
2025 • Advancing Research 2025
Gold
Carol Scott
Avoid Harming Your Team and Users: Promoting Care and Brand Reputation with Trauma-Informed UX Practices
2025 • Rosenfeld Community
James Rampton
The Basics of Automotive UX & Why Phones Are a Part of That Future
2024 • Rosenfeld Community
Louis Rosenfeld
Opening Remarks
2022 • Civic Design 2022
Gold
Savina Hawkins
Harnessing AI in UXR: Practical Strategies for Positive Impact
2024 • Advancing Research 2024
Gold

More Videos

Jim Kalbach

"Empathy in jazz means the band is in it together—when someone plays a wrong chord, the rest adapt and turn it into an opportunity."

Jim Kalbach

Jazz Improvisation as a Model for Team Collaboration

November 6, 2017

Louis Rosenfeld

"A really strong book has to be designed as a journey with a consistent voice guiding the reader."

Louis Rosenfeld

Coffee with Lou: Should You Write a (UX) Book?

March 7, 2024

Catt Small

"If you’re sitting there thinking I need to build out this project and nobody else is saying the same thing, it means you have to do it, period."

Catt Small Micah Bennett Brian Carr Jessica Harllee

What's Next for ICs: Exploring Staff and Principal Designer Roles

February 22, 2024

Marieke McCloskey

"We can’t be there for every behavior after the nudge, nor do we necessarily want to be."

Marieke McCloskey

User Science: Product Analytics & User Research

March 11, 2021

Llewyn Paine

"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

Joshua Noble

"If you cannot remove a treatment, it may not be a true cause."

Joshua Noble

Casual Inference

October 6, 2023

Sara Logel

"We’re biologically wired to respond to intellectual challenges the same way as physical threats."

Sara Logel

Your Colleagues are Your Users Too

March 29, 2023

Bria Alexander

"The themes this year include transforming century-old industries, startup to enterprise, the outsider’s perspective, and partnering to transform."

Bria Alexander Louis Rosenfeld

Welcome

January 8, 2024

Sam Proulx

"More ways to contact support—chat, email, phone—are essential because different disabilities require different options."

Sam Proulx

Online Shopping: Designing an Accessible Experience

June 7, 2023