There’s been a lot of buzz in the user research world about user research democratization. Let’s explore what it is and isn’t the pros and cons, and things to consider when democratizing your research approach.
In simplest terms, user research democratization means making it possible and acceptable for anyone in an organization, regardless of role, to conduct user research.
This idea is likely to anger many researchers. After all, research takes training and special expertise, and they may worry that democratizing it will put them out of work. But that’s not the case. So before you click away from this article, let’s look at what research democratization is not.
Democratization of research does not mean handing over the practice of research to everyone in your organization and eliminating the specialized research role.
In fact, when a company democratizes research, its researchers will need to do even more work. They will need to create a curriculum and train, evaluate and collaborate with non-researchers. Plus, there will still be situations where professional researchers are solely responsible for conducting research or for aspects of research.
Not only that, but there is no one way to democratize research. There are different levels of democratization—all of which rely on professional researchers.
User research democratization has many benefits, but there are things to consider as well. Let’s take a look.
To understand the “why” behind research democratization, let’s first examine traditional research.
At the kick-off of a research project, stakeholders define the research objectives and the questions that need answers. Then the researcher takes over. The researcher conducts the research. Some stakeholders might observe, but often they don’t, or they only observe some of the research. The researcher analyzes the findings, prepares the report, and provides it to the stakeholders. How much of the report is read and digested by the team? Who knows?
The traditional research method makes it difficult to be sure team members truly understand the results. In fact, traditional research methods often result in the researchers gaining deep insight into the customers, while the rest of the team lags behind in understanding.
And that doesn’t make any sense at all.
User research democratization, on the other hand, creates a more user-centric organization where every team member gains a deeper understanding of the customer. As an organization, not only do you better understand customers’ needs, wants and wishes, but you are better positioned to deliver on them. This will lead to more successful products that resonate with customers.
Of course, research democratization comes with tradeoffs. There are pros and cons, benefits and risks. Organizations must explore these to understand whether democratization will truly benefit them, rather than cause harm.
PROS/BENEFITS |
CONS/RISKS |
Builds respect for professional researchers’ skills and expertise. |
Creates doubt or disrespect for researchers’ skills and expertise. |
Creates enthusiasm for research and customer connection and understanding. |
Brings potential bias, ethical questions, and overall lower research quality. |
Promotes a deeper customer-centered culture and higher respect for research. |
Potentially overwhelms researchers who must train and support non-researchers. |
Shifts decision-making to a customer-intelligence-based approach across the organization. |
Could potentially increase team workloads. |
Providing research training adds knowledge and new skill sets to the team. |
Non-researcher research could result in negative participant experiences. |
Research democratization is a double-edged sword. With each benefit comes a potential risk. But in the end, if you can successfully manage the cons, the pros will result in an organization that has deep, top-to-bottom insight into its customers, and is better positioned to meet their needs.
Democratization is not one-size-fits-all. Once you have buy-in from your team on the general idea of research democratization, you will need to explore what level works best based on your needs.
IF YOUR ORGANIZATION NEEDS… |
LEVEL OF DEMOCRATIZATION |
…to keep pace with research demands. |
High Level: Train non-researchers to conduct research. |
…to drive deeper customer understanding and empathy. |
Mid-Level: Involve team members in non-front-facing research tasks like notetaking. |
… to encourage more insight-driven and customer-focused decision-making. |
Low-Level: Increase team access to all research and data to shift to a customer-centric mindset. |
There are many things to consider when implementing research democratization. Let’s take a look.
Senior stakeholders should assess:
Researchers should assess:
To assure the quality and integrity of research, training must include:
While user research democratization is not easy or inexpensive, the benefits are worth it. Having an organization that deeply understands its customers brings success that will far outweigh the time, stress, and expense of implementing democratization.
Sources:
A Framework for Research Democratization by Amanda Nadya
https://uxdesign.cc/a-framework-for-research-democratization-ede51222bf75
What is The Democratization of User Research by Lucy Benton
https://dovetailapp.com/blog/what-is-the-democratization-of-user-research/
Scaling user research through democratization by James Vinn
https://dovetailapp.com/blog/scaling-user-research-through-democratization/
The Right Way to Democratize UX Research by Robin Beers, PhD
https://www.wevoconversion.com/the-right-way-to-democratize-ux-research/
Democratize User Research in 5 Steps by by Kara Pernice
https://www.nngroup.com/articles/democratize-user-research/