HCD Guide Series

Discovery operations guide

Step-by-step guidance on how to conduct discovery research
Illustration of a man taking a survey and a woman providing a testimonial

Finding insights

Finding insights means converging the data in your research to expose commonalities or gaps.

Reading time: 6 minutes

In design research, the word “insights” means patterns, recurring ideas, or gaps you and your team find during the process of looking at your research as a whole. The synthesis process serves as the data parse or analysis of your work. You are no longer looking at this work as the words from individual interviews, but instead as a group or whole. This is where you move from a collection of facts to an understanding of those facts.

This means sitting down as a group, reading all the notes from all the interviews your team has conducted, and discussing, arguing over, and organizing the contents of those notes and interviews into the patterns and recurring ideas that have emerged, as well as identifying gaps in the system or your understanding of the system. This data parse process is the first step toward the final phases of your project: 

  • Deliverables (identified at the beginning of the project)
  • Immediate actionables (items that don’t need more research)
  • Recommendations (items that merit further study).

Insights checklist

Use this checklist as you move through the Insights portion of Synthesis.

Review the synthesis section of the HCD Discovery Concepts Guide
Book a private conference room with a closing door and exterior windows.
Gather your supplies: sticky notes, blank computer or notebook paper, markers, painters’ tape (aka paper tape or blue tape. Masking tape also works), and camera, either on-phone or separate.
Each team member should prepare for this Synthesis session by reading all the notes from the interviews they did not attend.
Each team member should print multiple copies of all the notes you took for each interview for which you acted as Notetaker.

Reading, questioning, jotting notes

  1. Read notes. Once the team is gathered, each team member chooses notes from an interview they did not attend, and reads them through. If the team has read all the notes before the synthesis session, use this time for clarification of any questions regarding the notes. The Project Lead keeps a clock for the reading time. Time: 4 - 6 minutes

  2. Questions. After 4 - 6 minutes, the Product Lead asks everyone if they have any questions for the person whose notes they’re reading. If there is a question, the person whose notes are being queried should provide a clarification. Examples of possible questions are: “What was the context of this statement?” or “What do you mean when you use the word ____?” or “Can you explain this to me? I don’t really get it.” The Project Lead continues the rounds of reading and questioning until everyone has read all of the notes from all of the interviews. It’s important to read as much as possible before getting into the room, so you can have questions ready to ask and move efficiently through this part of the day.

  3. Rapid recall: On sticky notes, one idea per note, each team member should write the most vivid words and phrases they remember from their own research as well as from the research notes. Team members may also jot down words or phrases that merge common themes across the research, like “Scheduling conflicts” to signify a lot of notes on how scheduling is a common pain point heard from multiple interviewees. The Project Lead should repeat this interval as many times as the team needs. Time: 4 minutes / round.

Primary clustering exercise

Now that you’ve created lots of sticky notes, it’s time to group and organize them into clusters of related topics.

  1. Team members gather their sticky notes and place them on a single wall or the windows of the room.
  2. Team members should step back from the wall and start looking for the ideas, words, and phrases that seem to go together. Make meaningful clusters by the concept(s) written on the sticky note; don’t just put similar or the same words together. This is called “clustering”. Time: 10 minutes.
  3. Do not be silent! Talk out loud to one another; ask questions, ask opinions.
  4. After 10 minutes, the Project Lead should ask if the team needs more time.
  5. Repeat the 10 minute intervals as many times as it takes until all or most of the stickies are clustered.
  6. Use this framework to record the names and justifications for each cluster the team finds.
  7. One by one, each team member acts as the leader as the group names each cluster. Everyone on the team must participate both as a group member as well as the leader. To understand how to name the cluster, ask yourselves out loud “What is this cluster about?” or “What does this cluster really mean?” What the clusters are actually saying is your insight, and that’s what you should name the cluster.
  8. Take photos of the entire wall. Take some wide shots, take some of the clusters, and some up close up. Make sure you can see all the sticky notes in the photos. If some overlap, move them around so that you can read the writing in the photo.
  9. Document your work.

Doing, saying, thinking, feeling analysis

Use a grid framework to reorganize the stickies into four sections: Doing, Saying, Thinking, and Feeling. Then take the following actions: 

  1. Take all the stickies down from the wall, including themes. Set the themes aside.
  2. Use the Painters’ tape to mark off a large quadrant on the wall.
  3. Label each quadrant one of the following: Doing, Saying, Thinking, Feeling.
  4. Rotating the leadership as before, go through the stack of stickies individually and place them into the quadrants that seem most appropriate. Record these clusters (beyond just taking photos) so you can follow your own logic later and take action from your work.
  5. As before, do not be silent! Team members should ask each other questions in order to land on the most accurate possible interpretation of the stickies in terms of origin and context.
  6. Take photos of the entire wall when you are done, ensuring that you can see each sticky in at least one photo.
  7. You can repeat this exercise or the previous one to surface different themes and connections between your data points. This information has a lot of depth and dimension; some concepts have multiple meanings that can be associated with it.
  8. Use this space to write down the names of the clusters you and the team find during this analysis. Keep the names as close to their original position in the quadrants as possible, as the spatial position of each name can be a key part of the logic you and team use in this exercise, even if some of the names span more than one quadrant.