Empathy Mapping by Atlassian
Follow these guidelines for Empathy Mapping.
Guidelines for Empathy Mapping
Step 1: Set the stage
5 min
Share 1-3 personas and any user research or data you have.Explain that the group's task for the next hour is to immerse themselves in the target personas. This isn't a sterile tick-the-box exercise you can sleepwalk your way through! Really step into their skin and imagine how they feel.
Step 2: Demonstrate by doing
5 min
Before you break into sub-groups, ensure the team have detached themselves from their biases and are prepared to morph into their customer persona. To get into the mood, choose an example persona that is unrelated to your product or service and run through a quick role play.For example, you could choose "a 42-year old who likes breakfast cereal" and walk through the sections of the empathy map.
Step 3: Fill in the empathy maps
15 min
Divide the group into pairs or trios. Work out which sub-group tackles which persona, and allow 10-15 minutes to fill in their empathy map.Remember, you can create empathy maps for an existing product to better understand how your personas feel about it right now. Or, you can create the map with a new design in mind to help articulate how you want customers to feel about it in its future state.Pay special attention to pain points. Think about what the persona hears from friends or says about the product in terms of the pain they experience when using it.
Step 4: Present the empathy maps
30 min
As each sub-group presents their map, encourage the full group to raise questions or items for discussion.What insights does the map reveal? What assumptions are we making that need to be researched? Where do we have gaps in knowledge?
Step 5: Determine next steps
5 min
Did you stumble on questions that need to be answered before moving ahead? Assumptions that need to be validated? Discuss as a group what you've learned from the empathy maps and how that can be applied as you work on your project or operate and improve your service.Assign tasks, owners, and due dates as necessary.
This template was created by Atlassian.
Get started with this template right now.
Newsletter Template
Works best for:
Design, Marketing, Desk Research
Using a newsletter template allows you to create a structured and eye-catching newsletter for your subscribers. Add images, text, a call-to-action, and anything else that’ll keep your audience engaged. Take a look at Miro’s newsletter template to start creating unique and distinctive emails today.
Storyboard for User Experience Template
Works best for:
Storyboard
The Storyboard for User Experience template helps design seamless, user-friendly journeys. It maps out scenarios, actions, thoughts, and emotions to create a cohesive user experience. This template is perfect for UX designers, product teams, and developers aiming to enhance usability, reduce friction, and improve user satisfaction. Visualize interactions, identify pain points, and iterate designs for a more intuitive and engaging experience.
Empathy Map by Axelle Vanquaillie
Works best for:
Market Research, Research & Design
Empathy Mapping template is a valuable tool for gaining deep insights into user experiences. It helps you understand their motivations and challenges, ensuring your products address real needs. Ideal for UX researchers and designers.
Expanded Service Blueprint
Works best for:
Research & Design
The Expanded Service Blueprint provides a detailed view of your service processes and interactions. This template is ideal for comprehensive service analysis and improvement. Use it to align teams, visualize the customer journey, and identify opportunities for optimization. It's perfect for enhancing service delivery, fostering collaboration, and ensuring a seamless and efficient service experience for your customers.
Research Template
Works best for:
Education, Desk Research, Product Management
Teams often need to document findings from usability testing sessions and customer interviews into a systematic, flexible user research template. Collecting everyone’s observations into a centralized location makes it easier to share insights company-wide and suggest new features based on user needs. Research templates can be used to record quantitative or qualitative data.. When it’s your job to ask questions, take notes, learn more about your user, and test iteratively, a Research Template can help you validate your assumptions, find similarities across different users, and articulate their mental models, needs, and goals.
Zoom Levels Template
The Zoom Level Template is a tool to examine a problem from various perspectives. For more innovative solutions, consider the issue broadly. Ascending the ladder enables you to broaden your perspective (ask, 'How might we?'). When confronted with an overly broad scope that hinders progress, descending the ladder helps narrow your focus (ask 'What if we narrowed?').