Stakeholders
Anyone who influences, is affected by, or makes decisions based on your research. Managing stakeholders is not overhead—it determines whether your findings actually change anything.
Definition: Anyone who influences, is affected by, or makes decisions based on your research. Managing stakeholders is not overhead—it determines whether your findings actually change anything.
Stakeholders are the people who commission, consume, or are affected by your research. Product managers, designers, executives, engineers, marketing leads—anyone whose decisions your findings should inform.
Why Stakeholder Management Matters
The most rigorous research in the world is worthless if no one acts on it. Research impact depends less on methodological perfection and more on whether the right people heard the right findings at the right time.
Key Stakeholder Activities
- Alignment before the study: Agree on research questions, success criteria, and what decisions the findings will inform. If stakeholders do not agree on the question, they will not agree on the answer
- Involvement during the study: Invite stakeholders to observe sessions. A product manager who watches five users struggle with their feature is more convinced than any report could make them
- Delivery after the study: Tailor your output to your audience. Executives need a one-page summary. Designers need detailed findings with screenshots. Engineers need specific, actionable recommendations
The Common Failure
Researchers often treat stakeholder management as politics—something beneath the "real work." This is backwards. Understanding what your stakeholders need, what decisions they face, and what evidence would change their minds is itself a research skill.
Research that sits in a slide deck no one reads did not fail at methodology. It failed at stakeholder management.
Related Terms
UX Maturity
A diagnostic framework for assessing how deeply UX research and design is integrated into an organization, ranging from absent to user-driven across multiple levels.
ROI (Return on Investment)
A financial metric that measures the profitability of an investment relative to its cost, expressed as a percentage.
Insight
The interpretation of analysis and synthesis, connected directly to business goals and user needs. The answer to 'So what?'—what the patterns mean and why they matter.