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Scaling UX Impact with Limited Resources

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Manage episode 489654060 series 2548081
Content provided by Paul Boag and Marcus Lillington. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Paul Boag and Marcus Lillington or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Welcome back. In my previous emails, we explored how to plan and present your UX strategy and gain support from the people who matter. We talked about getting buy-in and navigating the occasional tricky political waters. It was all about setting the stage, wouldn't you say? But I'm also keenly aware that we didn't dive deep into what that strategy should actually contain. We just scratched the surface of how to sell it and discussed the big picture.

Now, it's time to roll up our sleeves and talk about the nuts and bolts. We're going to get into the specific actions and approaches that will define your work as a UX leader. This is where your vision starts to become a tangible reality, shaping how your entire organization thinks about and delivers user experience.

The Big Challenge: Too Much Work, Too Few Hands

Let's address something we all feel in our bones: the elephant in the room. Most of us in UX, and I mean most, operate with teams that are just plain under-resourced. There's always more work to be done than there are people to do it. You look around, and for every UX professional, you often see multiple product owners, project managers, and developers. In my agency days, a 1:2 ratio of UX to developers was our ideal scenario, and it's why so many of us feel stretched thin.

We want to make a difference, right? We want to ensure every digital touchpoint is delightful, efficient, and user-friendly. But if you're like me, you've probably felt that familiar tug of war: the desire to be involved in everything, versus the crushing reality of limited time and energy. Trying to be the "UX person" for every project just spreads you too thin. It often results in hurried, mediocre work, and that's not why we got into this field.

I know what you're thinking. "More people! We need more budget, more headcount!" And believe me, I hear you. I've been there, banging that drum. But the truth is, until your organization truly understands and values UX, getting those extra resources is an uphill battle. It's a bit of a chicken and egg situation, isn't it? You need more resources to show value, but you need to show value to get more resources.

So, how do we break this cycle? We can't keep trying to do all the UX ourselves. It's simply not scalable.

A Powerful Shift: From Implementer to Enabler

This is where we introduce a fundamental shift in how you view your role and, crucially, how your colleagues view UX. We need to stop being the go-to team for simply "doing the UX work." We need to stop being the implementers who just take orders and churn out wireframes or conduct isolated tests.

Instead, your primary role becomes that of a coach, an evangelist, and a guide. Your job is to instill a user-centric culture across the entire organization. It's about empowering and equipping your colleagues; the product owners, developers, marketers, and customer service teams – to do user experience work themselves.

Think about it this way: there are far more of them than there are of you. If you can enable them to do even a small part of UX well, the collective impact on your overall user experience will be enormous. It's about leveraging the entire organization as a force multiplier for UX, rather than trying to handle everything with your small, dedicated team. This frees you up to be more strategic and to tackle the bigger, thornier UX challenges.

This is the very heart of your UX strategy. It's a strategic move that shifts you from tactical execution to widespread influence. And it's precisely what we're going to explore over the next few weeks.

The Three Pillars of Widespread UX Impact

To achieve this widespread impact, there are four key areas we need to focus on. They are like the foundations of a solid house for your UX strategy.

  1. Offering Supportive Services: This is about providing guidance and assistance to your colleagues, helping them implement UX best practices in their own work. It's not about doing the work for them, but helping them do it.
  2. Providing Resources, Tools, and Information: We need to give our colleagues the right instruments and knowledge so they can create great experiences without always needing to come to us for every little thing.
  3. Setting Standards, Policies, and Standard Operating Procedures: This ensures that best practices are consistently applied across all projects, creating a baseline of quality even when you're not directly involved.
  4. Education and Training: This involves developing and delivering structured learning opportunities to help colleagues understand UX principles and apply them effectively in their daily work.

Outies Aside

If you run an agency or work as a freelancer, you might be thinking, "This sounds great for in-house teams, but how does it apply to me?" Well, I'd argue it applies even more so.

Too often, agencies and freelancers can fall into the trap of being seen as just "order takers" or "extra hands." Clients come to you, they tell you what they want built, and you build it. You might deliver a beautiful design or a perfectly functional website, but what if the client's brief was flawed from the start? What if they don't truly understand why they need certain UX elements, or how to maintain them after you've gone?

Shifting to offering "supportive services" fundamentally changes that dynamic. Instead of just delivering solutions, you become a strategic partner who empowers your clients.

Consider these ideas:

  • Offer UX Audits and Strategic Roadmapping: Beyond building a single product, help clients understand their overall UX landscape and define a long-term strategy for their teams to follow.
  • Provide UX Mentoring and Coaching: Offer your expertise to your client's internal teams. This could be monthly check-ins, ad-hoc consultations, or even helping them onboard a new in-house UX hire.
  • Run Internal Workshops: Facilitate design sprints, user story mapping sessions, or basic usability testing workshops with your client's staff. You guide them through the process, helping them gain skills and ownership.
  • Develop Design Systems or UX Playbooks: Instead of just designing screens, deliver a reusable design system or a "UX playbook" that empowers their developers and marketers to maintain consistency and user focus in future work.
  • Focus on 'Enablement' Deliverables: Instead of just final designs, perhaps you deliver a comprehensive research plan they can adapt, or a framework for A/B testing that their marketing team can run.

This approach transforms your relationship with clients. You move from being a vendor to an indispensable advisor. It builds deeper trust, often leads to longer-term retainer agreements, and ensures your work has a lasting impact beyond the immediate project. It's about helping your clients become more self-sufficient and more user-centric, which in turn makes your partnership more valuable.

Looking Ahead: The Power of Supportive Services

In our next email, we'll dive deep into the concept of "supportive services" - a transformative approach that can help you expand your UX influence across the organization without increasing your team size. We'll explore how shifting from doing all the UX work yourself to enabling others can create a multiplier effect that dramatically increases your impact.

This approach represents a fundamental shift in how UX professionals operate within organizations, and I'm excited to share specific strategies and examples with you next time. For now, though, let's wrap up with an action step.

Take a moment to reflect on your current workload. Where do you feel most stretched thin? Which tasks seem to repeat themselves across different projects? Jot down a few notes - these insights will be valuable when we discuss supportive services in detail next time. As always, I'm keen to hear your thoughts, share them with me.

Find The Latest Show Notes

  continue reading

565 episodes

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Manage episode 489654060 series 2548081
Content provided by Paul Boag and Marcus Lillington. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Paul Boag and Marcus Lillington or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Welcome back. In my previous emails, we explored how to plan and present your UX strategy and gain support from the people who matter. We talked about getting buy-in and navigating the occasional tricky political waters. It was all about setting the stage, wouldn't you say? But I'm also keenly aware that we didn't dive deep into what that strategy should actually contain. We just scratched the surface of how to sell it and discussed the big picture.

Now, it's time to roll up our sleeves and talk about the nuts and bolts. We're going to get into the specific actions and approaches that will define your work as a UX leader. This is where your vision starts to become a tangible reality, shaping how your entire organization thinks about and delivers user experience.

The Big Challenge: Too Much Work, Too Few Hands

Let's address something we all feel in our bones: the elephant in the room. Most of us in UX, and I mean most, operate with teams that are just plain under-resourced. There's always more work to be done than there are people to do it. You look around, and for every UX professional, you often see multiple product owners, project managers, and developers. In my agency days, a 1:2 ratio of UX to developers was our ideal scenario, and it's why so many of us feel stretched thin.

We want to make a difference, right? We want to ensure every digital touchpoint is delightful, efficient, and user-friendly. But if you're like me, you've probably felt that familiar tug of war: the desire to be involved in everything, versus the crushing reality of limited time and energy. Trying to be the "UX person" for every project just spreads you too thin. It often results in hurried, mediocre work, and that's not why we got into this field.

I know what you're thinking. "More people! We need more budget, more headcount!" And believe me, I hear you. I've been there, banging that drum. But the truth is, until your organization truly understands and values UX, getting those extra resources is an uphill battle. It's a bit of a chicken and egg situation, isn't it? You need more resources to show value, but you need to show value to get more resources.

So, how do we break this cycle? We can't keep trying to do all the UX ourselves. It's simply not scalable.

A Powerful Shift: From Implementer to Enabler

This is where we introduce a fundamental shift in how you view your role and, crucially, how your colleagues view UX. We need to stop being the go-to team for simply "doing the UX work." We need to stop being the implementers who just take orders and churn out wireframes or conduct isolated tests.

Instead, your primary role becomes that of a coach, an evangelist, and a guide. Your job is to instill a user-centric culture across the entire organization. It's about empowering and equipping your colleagues; the product owners, developers, marketers, and customer service teams – to do user experience work themselves.

Think about it this way: there are far more of them than there are of you. If you can enable them to do even a small part of UX well, the collective impact on your overall user experience will be enormous. It's about leveraging the entire organization as a force multiplier for UX, rather than trying to handle everything with your small, dedicated team. This frees you up to be more strategic and to tackle the bigger, thornier UX challenges.

This is the very heart of your UX strategy. It's a strategic move that shifts you from tactical execution to widespread influence. And it's precisely what we're going to explore over the next few weeks.

The Three Pillars of Widespread UX Impact

To achieve this widespread impact, there are four key areas we need to focus on. They are like the foundations of a solid house for your UX strategy.

  1. Offering Supportive Services: This is about providing guidance and assistance to your colleagues, helping them implement UX best practices in their own work. It's not about doing the work for them, but helping them do it.
  2. Providing Resources, Tools, and Information: We need to give our colleagues the right instruments and knowledge so they can create great experiences without always needing to come to us for every little thing.
  3. Setting Standards, Policies, and Standard Operating Procedures: This ensures that best practices are consistently applied across all projects, creating a baseline of quality even when you're not directly involved.
  4. Education and Training: This involves developing and delivering structured learning opportunities to help colleagues understand UX principles and apply them effectively in their daily work.

Outies Aside

If you run an agency or work as a freelancer, you might be thinking, "This sounds great for in-house teams, but how does it apply to me?" Well, I'd argue it applies even more so.

Too often, agencies and freelancers can fall into the trap of being seen as just "order takers" or "extra hands." Clients come to you, they tell you what they want built, and you build it. You might deliver a beautiful design or a perfectly functional website, but what if the client's brief was flawed from the start? What if they don't truly understand why they need certain UX elements, or how to maintain them after you've gone?

Shifting to offering "supportive services" fundamentally changes that dynamic. Instead of just delivering solutions, you become a strategic partner who empowers your clients.

Consider these ideas:

  • Offer UX Audits and Strategic Roadmapping: Beyond building a single product, help clients understand their overall UX landscape and define a long-term strategy for their teams to follow.
  • Provide UX Mentoring and Coaching: Offer your expertise to your client's internal teams. This could be monthly check-ins, ad-hoc consultations, or even helping them onboard a new in-house UX hire.
  • Run Internal Workshops: Facilitate design sprints, user story mapping sessions, or basic usability testing workshops with your client's staff. You guide them through the process, helping them gain skills and ownership.
  • Develop Design Systems or UX Playbooks: Instead of just designing screens, deliver a reusable design system or a "UX playbook" that empowers their developers and marketers to maintain consistency and user focus in future work.
  • Focus on 'Enablement' Deliverables: Instead of just final designs, perhaps you deliver a comprehensive research plan they can adapt, or a framework for A/B testing that their marketing team can run.

This approach transforms your relationship with clients. You move from being a vendor to an indispensable advisor. It builds deeper trust, often leads to longer-term retainer agreements, and ensures your work has a lasting impact beyond the immediate project. It's about helping your clients become more self-sufficient and more user-centric, which in turn makes your partnership more valuable.

Looking Ahead: The Power of Supportive Services

In our next email, we'll dive deep into the concept of "supportive services" - a transformative approach that can help you expand your UX influence across the organization without increasing your team size. We'll explore how shifting from doing all the UX work yourself to enabling others can create a multiplier effect that dramatically increases your impact.

This approach represents a fundamental shift in how UX professionals operate within organizations, and I'm excited to share specific strategies and examples with you next time. For now, though, let's wrap up with an action step.

Take a moment to reflect on your current workload. Where do you feel most stretched thin? Which tasks seem to repeat themselves across different projects? Jot down a few notes - these insights will be valuable when we discuss supportive services in detail next time. As always, I'm keen to hear your thoughts, share them with me.

Find The Latest Show Notes

  continue reading

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