not talking about “Once upon a time” here. User experience stories aren’t made up. They are based on data from listening and observing in formal and informal settings. They are just as valid as scientific research papers or business reports.
Nothing says that talking about user research can’t be engaging, or that brainstorming has to be so formal that you can’t relax and let the ideas flow. Stories are a form of communication built deeply into the human psyche. Because of this, you can use them to pack a lot of information into a small space. This makes stories an easy way to learn and an effective way to teach. In a presentation, you may take notes on the bullet points, but it’s the illustrations, examples, and anecdotes that help you remember the key points or grasp a new concept on an emotional level. A few well-chosen stories might be just the thing to get everyone to put down their Blackberries and join the conversation.
Because stories are such a natural way to communicate, anyone can create and use them well. You don’t have to be a great presenter, actor, or stand-up comic. Sure, storytelling can be awkward at first. Conducting a user interview or running a card sorting exercise can be difficult the first time, too. But once you start thinking about stories as a way of describing a user experience, with characters, motivation, context, and emotions driving their actions, you may find it easier than you think.
All it takes is a little practice. Just dive in and try it.
Summary
Stories are more than just a way of broadcasting information. They are interactive, and come to life in the imaginations of the audience members.
Stories are as much a part of the audience as of the storyteller. The Story Triangle describes the relationships between storyteller, story, and audience.
Stories have many roles in user experience design:
They explain research and ideas.
They engage the imagination and spark new ideas.
They create a shared understanding.
They can persuade.
Chapter 3
Stories Start with Listening (and Observing)
UX design requires good listening skills
Listening and observing leads to better understanding
Being listened to is addictive
Our world is full of things to listen to: theatre, books, movies, radio, recordings, and television. The World Wide Web has brought new ways to listen to radio, watch movies and TV, read books, and read blogs all over the Internet. YouTube and podcasts let you talk to people all over the world using video and audio. With all this media, all this expression, all this need for people to read, watch, and listen, you might think that listening to one another would be second nature, and that we would all be very good listeners. Instead, all of these possibilities have sometimes encouraged us to express more and listen a little bit less.
Don't get us wrong. Expression is important. But in user experience design, a great idea can often start from a quiet moment of listening or observing how people act and interact.
Think about the last time you had free rein to say whatever you wanted to say, taking as long or as short a time as you needed to say it, absolutely sure that you were not going to be interrupted, redirected, or distracted. It may have been a long time ago, perhaps never. That sort of listening not only allows people to say what they need to say, but it also gives you an opportunity to listen deeply—what we call really listening.
This careful attentive listening has valuable benefits: it holds space open to allow other people to form their thoughts and express their minds. When you really listen, you may hear or see things that surprise you, like emotions or ideas that you haven't considered in your design process yet.
Listening can tap into emotions
In 2005 I taught a workshop on Listening for Creativity at a design conference. It was the first time I had focused on the listening section of my Beginning Storytelling workshop. I really wasn't sure if it was going to work. I knew the 18 people in the room were all designers and design students, and I knew that a large part of design is story listening and storytelling. But I wasn't sure if a session on listening would touch people in a way that made a difference. Would they think that listening was just an idle task?
After an hour, I could tell that many of them weren't convinced of the importance of listening. But to my delight, all but a couple of people came back from the break! As we continued, each exercise was designed to be a little more intense and challenging. One challenge was that simply being listened to can bring up unexpected emotions. In our culture, we are chronically un-listened-to, both at work and home.
After the fifth exercise, a woman raised her hand to make a comment and started crying. She said the exercises helped her see how little she had been listened to in her life, and remarked how strange it was that she was crying in the middle of a conference. As she was speaking and crying, I glanced around the room at the other people. The few remaining cynics sat stunned. I could almost hear them thinking, "Wow! You mean this listening stuff is for real?"
UX design requires good listening skills
As user experience designers, we have a lot of people to listen to. One of our jobs is connecting different groups of people: users, business stakeholders, and our colleagues.
The users
A lot of our work involves listening to the people who will use what we create. Maybe your company calls this "The Voice of the Customer." The users of your product are experts in what they do and how they do it. Perhaps you spend time with them understanding their complex tasks. Or observing their activities and interactions to discover gaps that you can turn into new product ideas. Learning to really listen to users is important if you want to discover what they need, not just what they say they want.
Listening is a critical part of user research and usability testing. Almost all user research activities involve paying attention to other people: listening to what they say and watching what they do. Whether you are working in the field or in a lab, your goal is to understand someone else's perspective. You may be in the first phase of learning about their world, or seeing how people you know well react to a new product or concept. Either way, you are gathering their stories. You can't hear the stories the participants are telling you, or see stories playing out in front of you, unless you are paying attention, not just checking off answers to questions.
If you have listened carefully to users' stories, you can weave that understanding into your design presentations, showing that you not only heard their words, but also understood their perspectives.
Business stakeholders
For a user experience designer, the business organization provides many listening opportunities, especially in larger organizations with many different people and roles involved, from your clients to your boss. Each of these groups tells different kinds of stories:
The money stakeholders who directly approve budgets and tell stories of cost versus benefit.