Every Sunday, you'll get a new lesson about product, design & startups to your inbox. Researched, heavily user focused & without fluff.
Why Most UX Research Gets You NowhereI’ve worked with over 30+ different startups now. I’ve watched so many designers do user interviews. And I’ve noticed one thing: Your users are lying to you. They don’t even know they’re doing it. It’s not on purpose. They want to help. But UX research as we know it is broken. It gets you polite lies, not hard truths. Here’s what I saw last week: Designer: “Would you use a feature that sends you daily metric updates?”
User: “Oh yeah, that would be great!”
Designer: “And would you prefer push notifications or email?”
User: “Both would be useful, actually!”
Designer: [Excitedly writes down requirements]
Three months later? Less than 3% of users used the feature more than once. What the f*ck happened? The Psychology Behind User LiesLet’s understand why users lie without meaning to. Three big forces are at work: 1. Social Desirability BiasUsers want to be nice. You show excitement about a feature? They’ll match it. They don’t want to hurt your feelings. 2. The Optimism GapWe all think we’ll be better tomorrow. “I’ll check my metrics daily!” is just like “I’ll hit the gym every morning!” Users picture their perfect future self. Not their real, busy, tired self. 3. The Visualization ProblemWhen users think about your feature, they see the best case. They have time. They have energy. They care. Reality isn’t like that. The Guiding Question TrapMost UX researchers use questions that lead to fake insights:
These questions suck because they:
What Users CAN Tell You (And What They Can’t)Users CAN tell you:
Users CANNOT tell you:
Better UX Research: The Detective FrameworkDon’t ask what users want. Be a detective solving a case: 1. Watch Behavior, Not OpinionsInstead of: “Would you like better metric tracking?” Try: “Show me how you made your last business decision.” Instead of: “Would this dashboard be useful?” Try: “Walk me through your morning when you first check your business.” 2. Find The EvidenceGood research shows what users do, not what they say:
3. Follow The PainPain beats wishful thinking:
Case Study: The Dashboard Nobody UsedA fintech startup spent 4 months building an “investor dashboard.” Users said they wanted it. They were excited about it. After launch? Nothing. Nada. Less than 2% logged in more than once. When we dug deeper with the detective framework, we found:
So what did we do? We killed the dashboard and built a simple alert system. Engagement jumped to 68%. The Science of Real User BehaviorResearch on how users really behave shows:
Three Questions That Predict Real User BehaviorWant to know if users will actually use your feature? Ask these:
How to Start Using This TodayHere’s your action plan:
Final ThoughtsUX research isn’t about validating your ideas. It’s about finding problems worth solving. Remember: What users say ≠ What users do Next time a user loves your feature idea, be skeptical. They aren’t lying on purpose. They really think they’ll use it. But humans suck at predicting what we’ll actually do. |
Every Sunday, you'll get a new lesson about product, design & startups to your inbox. Researched, heavily user focused & without fluff.