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UPCOMING EVENTS:UX, Product & Market Research Afterwork23. Apr.@Packhaus WienDetailsInsights & Research Breakfast16. Mai@Packhaus WienDetailsVibecoding & Agentic Coding for App Development22. Mai@Packhaus WienDetails

Core Methods

The three primary UX research methods built from Building Blocks: the UX Test, the User Interview, and the Survey. Each represents a different combination of asking, observing, and testing activities.

Definition: The three primary UX research methods built from Building Blocks: the UX Test, the User Interview, and the Survey. Each represents a different combination of asking, observing, and testing activities.

Core Methods are the three primary research methods at the heart of UX research: the UX Test, the User Interview, and the Survey. Each is built from different combinations of the fundamental Building Blocks (Asking, Observing, Testing).

The Three Core Methods

The UX Test is the most comprehensive method, combining all three Building Blocks. You test a user's ability to complete a task (effectiveness) and measure resources expended (efficiency), observe their behavior along the way, and ask questions to understand their experience. This can happen during the session (probing) or at the end (wrap-up).

The User Interview is a method of asking designed for deep exploration. Unlike a UX test where you observe interaction with a product, an interview involves observing how people respond through their non-verbal cues and reactions. Sessions can be conducted one-on-one or as group interviews (sometimes called focus groups in market research).

The Survey is a method of asking at scale using standardized or specifically formulated questions. It sacrifices depth for breadth, allowing you to gather data from larger samples.

Why This Framework Matters

No matter how complex a method sounds—contextual inquiry, diary study, ethnographic research—it can almost always be broken down into a combination of these Building Blocks. Thinking in these abstract terms first simplifies planning and execution, and prevents you from being intimidated by jargon.

Core Methods - Definition | UX Research Glossary | Busch Labs