The User Research Strategist: UXR | Impact | Career

Nikki Anderson

Interviews with amazing user researchers to uncover concrete, actionable, and tactical advice to help you maximize your user research impact and excel in your career https://userresearchacademy.substack.com/ www.userresearchstrategist.com

  1. Getting Strategic with Triangulation | Brett Kurjewski (Accelerant Research)

    1 天前

    Getting Strategic with Triangulation | Brett Kurjewski (Accelerant Research)

    Listen now on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. — Brett Krajewski is the Vice President of Research & Growth at Accelerant Research, where he leads the research and client solutions teams, delivering innovative insights to empower businesses and many fortune 500 companies. He was most recently featured on an episode of Awkward Silences Podcast, and has some upcoming webinars. With a career spanning both in-house industry roles and consulting/agency leadership, Brett has built and led high-performing, multi-method research teams for Fortune 50 companies. His past roles include Head of Design Research: Customer at Walmart and Lead of Product Research at Lowe’s, where he drove customer-focused innovation and strategy. Beyond professionally, Brett has trained Seeing Eye dogs for the past 25 years, combining his love of service and animals, and is also a licensed pilot who enjoys navigating the skies somewhere new whenever possible. Brett’s unique blend of professional expertise and personal passions reflects his curiosity, drive, and commitment to making an impact. In our conversation, we discuss: * How Brett discovered triangulation only later in his career and why it changed everything about how he approached impact. * What meta-analysis actually means in practice, and why it’s an underrated starting point for faster, smarter research. * Why researchers need to stop acting like lone wolves and start working like strategic collaborators. * How to balance qualitative and quantitative data without waiting for things to be perfect. * The small, consistent actions that build trust and how they differ when you’re in-house versus agency-side. Some takeaways: * Early in his career, Brett saw research as “the answer.” Later, he realized that data triangulation, pulling from primary research, internal metrics, heuristics, and third-party sources, helped him tell richer, more balanced stories that actually got traction. It wasn’t about perfection or overloading people with data. It was about showing how user needs and business goals intersect, and building stories from multiple truths rather than a single source. * Rather than constantly commissioning new work, Brett champions meta-analysis, which involves reviewing what’s already been done across different departments. That might include past research, customer insights, agency data, or marketing reports. Doing this upfront reveals known truths, uncovers gaps, and often means you only need to research 2 out of 10 questions, not all 10. It makes you faster, more relevant, and a better partner to the business. * Trying to solve everything at once kills momentum. Brett advises researchers to start with small, tangible wins, like answering two key questions fast with an unmoderated test. Showing up early with something useful, rather than disappearing and delivering a polished report weeks later, builds credibility. These quick contributions earn you the right to do deeper, more strategic work down the line. * Too many researchers say they want a seat at the table, then go off and work solo. Brett emphasizes bringing stakeholders along for the ride and letting them weigh in, see progress, and feel ownership. That doesn’t mean caving to their agenda. It means understanding what they care about, folding it into your framing, and using that shared language to build alignment and influence. * One of the most powerful habits Brett adopted: releasing insights in milestones. Whether you’re in-house or agency, think in chunks, such as sharing the competitive analysis while you’re still synthesizing interviews. Share directional trends while still in the field. Transparency builds trust, helps teams move faster, and reminds everyone that research is ongoing, not just a one-time delivery. Show them how the sausage is made, not just the final plate. Where to find Brett: * LinkedIn * Transforming Insights into Results: Advancing influence in Corporate landscapes from the bottom up * Innovate or Imitate: Redefining Design and Research on our Terms Stop piecing it together. Start leading the work. The Everything UXR Bundle is for researchers who are tired of duct-taping free templates and second-guessing what good looks like. You get my complete set of toolkits, templates, and strategy guides. used by teams across Google, Spotify, , to run credible research, influence decisions, and actually grow in your role. It’s built to save you time, raise your game, and make you the person people turn to—not around. → Save 140+ hours a year with ready-to-use templates and frameworks → Boost productivity by 40% with tools that cut admin and sharpen your focus → Increase research adoption by 50% through clearer, faster, more strategic delivery Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Book a call or email me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! The views and opinions expressed by the guests on this podcast are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views, positions, or policies of the host, the podcast, or any affiliated organizations or sponsors. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    28 分鐘
  2. How Games UXR Actually Works | Mark Cox (Lloyd's Banking Group)

    10月30日

    How Games UXR Actually Works | Mark Cox (Lloyd's Banking Group)

    Listen now on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. — Mark Cox is a lead researcher and the Design Research and Service Design Agency Spotless in London. He’s been in research for about 7 years, and because he’s operated in an agency, he’s been lucky enough to work on all kinds of projects in different industries. The hat he currently wears is as a Games User Researcher. In our conversation, we discuss: * The early origins of games UXR and how it still leans on its Atari-era roots. * Why you can’t apply traditional UX timelines and methods to game development. * What “positive friction” means and when player frustration is part of the design. * How Mark tests narrative and art concepts with non-interactive prototypes. * Where aspiring games UXRs should actually start if they want to break in. Some takeaways: * Unlike traditional UX, games research isn’t focused on removing friction, it’s about shaping it. Some frustration is intentional, and part of the fun. Mark works with teams to understand when challenge adds value and when it tips into player drop-off. This means the researcher’s job is to trace the emotional arc of gameplay, not just catch bugs or confusion. * Narrative and concept testing often happens with no prototype in sight. Mark tests scripts, art, and design direction using static slides, paper wireframes, or storyboards. Focus groups are a big part of this phase, helping teams hear how players talk about characters and world-building. If the story isn’t landing early on, it rarely gets better by launch. * Mark outlined multiple types of playtesting: usability (can players navigate the UI?), appeal (do they value it?), and retention or engagement (will they come back?). These studies often include layered methods: observation, think-alouds, surveys triggered after specific in-game moments, and even eye-tracking. A good playtest doesn’t just show how players behave, it helps explain why they behave that way. * The “fun” question is real, but rarely useful. Teams often ask “Is this fun?” but the better question is “What kind of fun are we aiming for?” Is the goal mastery? Escape? Social chaos? Mark pushes for clarity on the player emotion the team is chasing, so the research can help track whether that’s happening and where it’s falling short. * Breaking into games UXR means doing the work before you get the job. Mark suggests joining Discords like the GamesUR SIG, getting involved in beta testing communities, and finding ways to observe or participate in amateur game design groups. Hiring managers want to see real curiosity and a strong grasp of the medium. That doesn’t mean you need a formal background in games, it means you’ve tried things, reflected on them, and learned. Researching games starts by showing you understand what makes them work. Where to find Mark: * LinkedIn Stop piecing it together. Start leading the work. The Everything UXR Bundle is for researchers who are tired of duct-taping free templates and second-guessing what good looks like. You get my complete set of toolkits, templates, and strategy guides. used by teams across Google, Spotify, , to run credible research, influence decisions, and actually grow in your role. It’s built to save you time, raise your game, and make you the person people turn to—not around. → Save 140+ hours a year with ready-to-use templates and frameworks → Boost productivity by 40% with tools that cut admin and sharpen your focus → Increase research adoption by 50% through clearer, faster, more strategic delivery Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Book a call or email me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! The views and opinions expressed by the guests on this podcast are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views, positions, or policies of the host, the podcast, or any affiliated organizations or sponsors. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    29 分鐘
  3. Inside Insight: How I use Userbrain to set up an unmoderated test

    10月23日

    Inside Insight: How I use Userbrain to set up an unmoderated test

    In this episode, I cover: * My full setup process for running an unmoderated usability test in Userbrain, from goal-setting to test creation * How to write clear, action-based and opinion-based tasks that get useful behavioral data * Using AI to generate and refine test tasks, plus how to correct vague or over-open questions * Techniques for analyzing unmoderated test data using AI insights, clips, and reports * How to connect usability findings back to research and business goals to identify real impact Key Takeaways: * If your research goals aren’t clear or your tasks are vague, the data you get back will be inconsistent and shallow. A well-structured setup defines what you want to learn, aligns it to business decisions, and sets measurable outcomes before the first participant even starts. Most “bad” unmoderated results trace back to poor planning, not poor participants. * Participants need to know exactly when a task begins and ends. Without defined boundaries, they may wander off-path or complete actions you can’t analyze meaningfully. By giving each task a specific finish line, like “stop when you reach the flight results page,” you get consistent, comparable footage that supports clean synthesis later. * AI can be useful for avoiding blank-page paralysis, but its phrasing is often too broad or contextually off. Treat it as a brainstorming tool—generate rough drafts, then rewrite them to fit your product, audience, and goals. The value comes from editing, not accepting what it gives you. * Positive feedback feels good but doesn’t move design forward. When analyzing results, zero in on moments of confusion, frustration, or unexpected behavior as those are where you find opportunities to fix or improve the experience. Stakeholders care more about barriers than affirmations. * Unmoderated tests produce endless data, but without a clear line to decisions or KPIs, they risk being shelved. Revisit your research goals during analysis, group findings under those goals, and connect each issue or success metric to its potential business impact. That’s what turns usability findings into strategic recommendations. The unmoderated test guide: Grab the full unmoderated testing guide with all the steps and examples here and try it out with your next project (or with a project you recently did!). Try Userbrain: Want to try this out on Userbrain? You can grab a free trial below: Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Reach out to me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    1 小時 9 分鐘
  4. The New Reality of UX Careers | Mindaugas Petrutis (Lovable)

    10月16日

    The New Reality of UX Careers | Mindaugas Petrutis (Lovable)

    Listen now on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. — In our conversation, we discuss: * Why traditional org charts and career ladders are breaking down and what that means for researchers and designers. * How AI and startup culture are reshaping roles, shrinking teams, and pushing senior-level decisions onto mid-level professionals. * Why most people feel unprepared for their new responsibilities and how to close the gap without waiting for formal mentorship. * How to build your own “board of directors” through small acts of generosity and curiosity. Some takeaways: * Org charts are collapsing and it’s changing everything. Many companies, especially in tech, are shrinking their teams while still aiming for scale. That means fewer senior leaders and more ICs making high-stakes decisions without traditional support. The result: mid-level professionals find themselves thrown into strategy roles they never trained for. This indicates a shift in how companies operate at their core. * There’s no playbook for where we’re headed. You can’t Google your way out of the complexity of hybrid roles. When someone’s a lead on paper but making director-level calls with no mentorship, the usual advice doesn’t cut it. People need better access to real conversations and fast feedback loops. Mindaugas recommends building your own crew of people to talk things through, not just reading another Medium post. * The people who navigate change best aren’t trying to be the smartest in the room. They’re collecting diverse perspectives, asking for honest takes, and updating their opinions as they learn. In a noisy world of LinkedIn hot takes, this kind of thoughtful input often comes from quiet backchannels. Building those backchannels takes intention, not perfection. * Don’t start with the ask. Start with curiosity. One of the best ways to build strong professional relationships is to reach out with zero agenda. A quick note saying “I appreciated your talk/post/article” stands out precisely because nobody does it anymore. When you do that over time, you create a trail of goodwill so when the time comes for an ask, you’re not a stranger. Mindaugas shares how this approach helped him build a global network from scratch. * Mid-level is now the pressure point of modern orgs. Senior ICs are being handed business-critical decisions without context, coaching, or peers to learn from. Community matters as a practical scaffolding for decision-making and finding those people is the key to helping you get to your next level, and push through that mid-level ceiling Where to find Mindaugas: * LinkedIn Stop piecing it together. Start leading the work. The Everything UXR Bundle is for researchers who are tired of duct-taping free templates and second-guessing what good looks like. You get my complete set of toolkits, templates, and strategy guides. used by teams across Google, Spotify, , to run credible research, influence decisions, and actually grow in your role. It’s built to save you time, raise your game, and make you the person people turn to—not around. → Save 140+ hours a year with ready-to-use templates and frameworks → Boost productivity by 40% with tools that cut admin and sharpen your focus → Increase research adoption by 50% through clearer, faster, more strategic delivery Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Book a call or email me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! The views and opinions expressed by the guests on this podcast are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views, positions, or policies of the host, the podcast, or any affiliated organizations or sponsors. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    30 分鐘
  5. Getting Scrappy with Product Research | John Fontenot (Terlumina, Path to Product)

    10月2日

    Getting Scrappy with Product Research | John Fontenot (Terlumina, Path to Product)

    Listen now on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. — John Fontenot has spent a decade in tech, working initially in software partnerships for Intel’s Software and Services Group where he was first introduced to the role of product management. In 2018 John made a pivot into a role as a UX Researcher to get his foot in the door of a product team for a small HRTech SaaS company and hasn’t looked back. John has worked in a variety of Sr. IC product manager roles, Director and Group Product Manager roles, and is now serving as VP of Product Management for Terlumina, an Enterprise SaaS startup focused on healthcare compliance management. John also runs a program called Path2Product where he helps aspiring PMs transition into their first product management role. John is a huge proponent and student of UX Research and truly believes that good product management can’t be done well without it. In our conversation, we discuss: * What “scrappy” product research really means and when it crosses the line into chaos. * Why PMs can (and should) learn research basics when they don’t have a dedicated partner. * How to build trust with researchers without stepping on their toes. * Creative recruitment strategies when incentives aren’t an option—and what that reveals about product-market fit. * The case against paying customers for interviews, and how to make people want to talk to you. Some takeaways: * Scrappy research isn’t an excuse to be sloppy. Scrappy doesn’t mean fast for the sake of speed, it means smart, efficient, and focused on risk. John outlines how some decisions call for deep, strategic research, especially when millions are on the line, while others don’t need to be tested to death. The key is knowing the stakes and picking the right level of investment. Scrappy research works best when it’s intentional, not reactionary. * John shares creative ways to reach users without incentives, like turning idea boards into interview leads or mining Facebook groups and Slack communities for warm outreach. In regulated industries where payments aren’t allowed, trust and thoughtful messaging become even more important. The best outreach comes from doing your homework, if you know what people care about, they’ll usually talk. Payment can create a transactional mindset; genuine interest creates better conversations. * With researchers often outnumbered 10 to 1, it’s unrealistic to gatekeep all research tasks. But that doesn’t mean PMs or designers should bulldoze their way in. John advocates for shared ownership with clear boundaries, where non-researchers offer support, not competition, by helping with smaller usability tasks or contributing to recruitment. Trust is built by asking first, showing competence, and being open to feedback. * Recruitment speed isn’t always the goal. Paying for participants might help with speed, but it can muddy your insight quality. If no one wants to talk about the feature you’re testing, that might be a signal it’s not worth building. Slower recruitment through organic methods forces you to get sharper on messaging, segmentation, and whether the problem actually matters. * John argues that researchers are most valuable when they go beyond testing buttons and start shaping product direction. Researchers who understand business priorities and speak the language of product are better able to influence decisions. Likewise, PMs who understand research can spot poor methods and ask sharper questions. Everyone benefits when the team invests in learning across roles and when researchers step confidently into strategic conversations. Where to find John: * Website * LinkedIn * Blog * Why you should never pay for customer interviews Stop piecing it together. Start leading the work. The Everything UXR Bundle is for researchers who are tired of duct-taping free templates and second-guessing what good looks like. You get my complete set of toolkits, templates, and strategy guides. used by teams across Google, Spotify, , to run credible research, influence decisions, and actually grow in your role. It’s built to save you time, raise your game, and make you the person people turn to—not around. → Save 140+ hours a year with ready-to-use templates and frameworks → Boost productivity by 40% with tools that cut admin and sharpen your focus → Increase research adoption by 50% through clearer, faster, more strategic delivery Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Book a call or email me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! The views and opinions expressed by the guests on this podcast are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views, positions, or policies of the host, the podcast, or any affiliated organizations or sponsors. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    30 分鐘
  6. Physical Products, Brutal Honesty, and the Agency Way | Filip Cicek (Ruthless Insights)

    9月4日

    Physical Products, Brutal Honesty, and the Agency Way | Filip Cicek (Ruthless Insights)

    Listen now on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. — Filip Cicek is a seasoned researcher with a Master's degree in Sociology and over 15 years of diverse experience spanning academia, non-profit, and business realms. Proficient in both qualitative and quantitative research methodologies, Filip leads Ruthless Insights, a cutting-edge consultancy specializing in UX and market research. In our conversation, we discuss: * How physical product research forces rigor, patience, and multiple rounds of muddy discovery. * The invisible weight of decision-making when mistakes cost millions and can’t be undone. * What it takes to manage client expectations and stop pretending research can always be fast. * Why Filip left academia and started Ruthless Insights after getting fired and how he made it work. * The real challenges of agency work and how bad recruiting, rushed timelines, and AI shortcuts create sloppy insights. Some takeaways: * Physical product research demands rigor, not speed. When mistakes cost millions and there’s no going back post-launch, teams take research seriously. Filip explains how physical product work forces multiple rounds of exploratory studies, each more focused than the last, until real confidence is built. There’s no skipping the mess of qualitative research, no rapid sprints, no quick pivots, no AB tests. The trade-off? You get to do real, strategic work that actually gets used if you’re willing to sit in the mud for a while. * Filip and Nikki both agree: multiple rounds of generative research can feel like an existential crisis. You finish each round with more questions than answers, stuck in abstract insights your stakeholders don’t always want to hear. But those vague, frustrating truths are the only path to real product clarity, especially in high-stakes spaces. Researchers need to get comfortable with uncertainty and help clients understand that clarity takes time. * Many stakeholders just don’t know what good research actually takes. It’s your job to tell them. Filip’s advice: don’t agree to three-week timelines just to be helpful, push back with clarity. Clients don’t need speed, they need to not be wrong. And when researchers stop overpromising and start managing expectations, trust and repeat work follow. * Ruthless Insights was built on rejection and a bet on honesty. Filip started his agency after getting fired and being told to “bet on yourself” by a client. That same client helped him name Ruthless Insights, based on Filip’s refusal to sugarcoat tough findings. His whole model is built around doing the job well without padding the process or the price, no fancy office, no fluff, just clean, useful insight. It’s not glamorous, but it’s what keeps clients coming back. * Most people don’t understand how hard research is until they try it. From clients underestimating how long recruitment takes, to stakeholders clinging to a single quote from an interview, Filip has seen it all. He’s learned to pre-empt confusion by overcommunicating upfront, bringing recruiters in early, and walking stakeholders through the analysis process. He doesn’t try to move fast, he tries to be accurate. And that’s what builds a reputation that outlasts a slide deck. Where to find Filip: * Ruthless Insights * Statis-fact * LinkedIn Stop piecing it together. Start leading the work. The Everything UXR Bundle is for researchers who are tired of duct-taping free templates and second-guessing what good looks like. You get my complete set of toolkits, templates, and strategy guides. used by teams across Google, Spotify, , to run credible research, influence decisions, and actually grow in your role. It’s built to save you time, raise your game, and make you the person people turn to—not around. → Save 140+ hours a year with ready-to-use templates and frameworks → Boost productivity by 40% with tools that cut admin and sharpen your focus → Increase research adoption by 50% through clearer, faster, more strategic delivery Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Book a call or email me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! The views and opinions expressed by the guests on this podcast are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views, positions, or policies of the host, the podcast, or any affiliated organizations or sponsors. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    32 分鐘
  7. Connecting the Research Dots | Iwalola Sobowale (Moniepoint)

    8月28日

    Connecting the Research Dots | Iwalola Sobowale (Moniepoint)

    Listen now on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. — Iwalola Sobowale is a research leader empowering tech innovation in Nigeria’s exciting tech industry. As the Head of Customer Research at Moniepoint, she drives strategic research to enhance customer experience, improve product adoption, and strengthen market positioning. With a background in another Nigerian unicorn - Interswitch, Transsion who are the manufacturers of the Tecno and Infinix, the mobile device brands dominating the African continent, and Fidelity Bank, one of Nigeria’s leading commercial banks, she has led initiatives that optimize digital banking, payments, and financial inclusion. Beyond her role, Iwalola is the co-founder of Usability for Africa, a ground-breaking research initiative that seeks to democratice usability knowledge for African tech. She is currently co-authoring a book that captures these insights and is also the host of The Spotlight Podcast, fostering industry knowledge-sharing to nurture the tech and business ecosystem. Her passion for innovation and commitment to excellence mark her as a standout professional in the field. In our conversation, we discuss: * How Iwalola defines customer-centric product development and ties it directly to strategy, not just research. * Why sharing research isn’t just about visibility, it’s about timing, relationships, and understanding internal decisions. * The difference between reacting to requests and actually guiding what gets built. * Tips for navigating low-maturity orgs without letting them define your trajectory. * Why asking “why” is underrated, and how to do it without getting kicked out of the room. Some takeaways: * To make real impact, researchers need to understand three things: what the business is doing, what it’s not doing, and who the customer really is. Without clarity on these decisions, research either floats or gets ignored. Iwalola talks about the need for alignment—not just understanding the customer, but understanding the organization’s strategic bets. That’s where real influence starts. * You can’t guide decisions if you don’t know what decisions are being made. Guidance isn’t about “being in the room” once a month. It’s about reading internal docs, scanning Slack channels, asking for team roadmaps, and paying attention to who’s working on what. The research doesn’t stop at the user—it starts again inside the company. If you want to be helpful, you need to investigate your organization like you would any other system. * Iwalola makes research feel like a friendly place, no bad questions, no posturing. She shares often, asks stakeholders about what they already know, and brings curiosity instead of critique. That posture builds trust and slowly pulls even hesitant partners into the process. The goal is to help stakeholders make better calls, with you at the table. * Instead of begging for buy-in from resistant teams, start with those who already get it. Work closely with them, and let the results do the talking. Once other teams see that insights actually help drive progress, they’ll start to seek you out. That’s influence built by reputation—not explanation. * Leadership isn’t used to being asked “why,” but it’s one of the most important questions a researcher can ask. It unlocks context, helps you shape your work, and shows you’re genuinely trying to support—not challenge—the direction. If you understand why something is being prioritized, you can better decide how to contribute. Just know your audience, and bring the “why” with care. Where to find Iwalola: * LinkedIn * Instagram * Twitter * Blog articles * Newsletter * Podcast Stop piecing it together. Start leading the work. The Everything UXR Bundle is for researchers who are tired of duct-taping free templates and second-guessing what good looks like. You get my complete set of toolkits, templates, and strategy guides. used by teams across Google, Spotify, , to run credible research, influence decisions, and actually grow in your role. It’s built to save you time, raise your game, and make you the person people turn to—not around. → Save 140+ hours a year with ready-to-use templates and frameworks → Boost productivity by 40% with tools that cut admin and sharpen your focus → Increase research adoption by 50% through clearer, faster, more strategic delivery Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Book a call or email me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! The views and opinions expressed by the guests on this podcast are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views, positions, or policies of the host, the podcast, or any affiliated organizations or sponsors. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    31 分鐘
  8. Using AI as Your Research Intern | Ryan Glasgow (Sprig)

    8月21日

    Using AI as Your Research Intern | Ryan Glasgow (Sprig)

    Listen now on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. — Ryan Glasgow is the CEO of Sprig, an AI-native survey platform built to replace legacy tools like Qualtrics. Sprig combines advanced survey capabilities, AI-powered analysis, and an intuitive user experience to help research and product teams get richer insights, faster. Before starting Sprig, Ryan led product at Weebly and Vurb, where he saw how slow, fragmented research workflows could limit product velocity. Today, Sprig is used by companies like Stripe, DoorDash, Notion, and Netflix to run surveys, analyze results instantly with AI, and deliver insights that shape product decisions. In our conversation, we discuss: * How the research community’s mindset toward AI has shifted from fear to experimentation. * What it means to treat AI like an eager intern and why that mental model changes everything. * How to break your workflow into “job steps” and plug AI in where it can actually help. * What Sprig is building to support both qual and quant researchers at different levels. * Why sharing raw data with stakeholders (not just summaries) might be the next big unlock for research impact. Some takeaways: * Many teams outside of research are still figuring out what AI is good for. Meanwhile, UXRs are already experimenting with real tasks, like synthesis, survey creation, and study planning, because they’ve had to. Ryan points out that researchers are becoming internal AI evangelists, getting asked to present their workflows to other departments. The field’s willingness to experiment is turning into a quiet leadership moment. * The best way to work with AI? Pretend it’s a new intern. It’s fast, eager, and can take on a ton but needs oversight, review, and clear direction. That framing unlocks a very different way of thinking: not “Will it replace me?” but “What can I delegate to it so I can focus on higher-impact work?” That shift is showing up in how researchers manage tasks across their workflow. * Before you plug AI into your stack, audit your actual workflow. Break it into steps, like study planning, stakeholder requests, distribution, synthesis, insight sharing, and decide where AI can support. Sprig is built around this approach, helping researchers insert AI at specific job steps. Trying to use one tool for everything often backfires; success comes from surgical fits, not general use. * Sprig is expanding from in-product surveys into long-form survey support with built-in AI features for study creation, open text clustering, and synthesis. Ryan shared how qual researchers use AI to draft surveys, get feedback, and even generate first-pass summaries of open ends. Other tools like Notebook LM and Gamma help researchers do faster analysis and deck creation without skipping the rigor. * One of the most radical ideas Ryan shared: share your raw research data, transcripts, open ends, survey results, so stakeholders can ask their own questions. With tools like ChatGPT or Notebook LM, that data becomes living, queryable insight. It turns research from a static deliverable into an exploratory tool. It also takes the pressure off researchers to have all the answers, all the time. Where to find Ryan: * Website * LinkedIn * X Stop piecing it together. Start leading the work. The Everything UXR Bundle is for researchers who are tired of duct-taping free templates and second-guessing what good looks like. You get my complete set of toolkits, templates, and strategy guides. used by teams across Google, Spotify, , to run credible research, influence decisions, and actually grow in your role. It’s built to save you time, raise your game, and make you the person people turn to—not around. → Save 140+ hours a year with ready-to-use templates and frameworks → Boost productivity by 40% with tools that cut admin and sharpen your focus → Increase research adoption by 50% through clearer, faster, more strategic delivery Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Interested in sponsoring or advertising on this podcast? I’m always looking to partner with brands and businesses that align with my audience. Book a call or email me at nikki@userresearchacademy.com to learn more about sponsorship opportunities! The views and opinions expressed by the guests on this podcast are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views, positions, or policies of the host, the podcast, or any affiliated organizations or sponsors. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.userresearchstrategist.com/subscribe

    31 分鐘
5
(滿分 5 顆星)
8 則評分

簡介

Interviews with amazing user researchers to uncover concrete, actionable, and tactical advice to help you maximize your user research impact and excel in your career https://userresearchacademy.substack.com/ www.userresearchstrategist.com

你可能也會喜歡