Hello Indiana, As we step into 2025, it's time for some honest reflection about our roles as design leaders. Despite our best intentions, too many of us still get caught up in the day-to-day minutiae of individual projects, leaving little time to demonstrate our strategic value to the organization.
With UX teams under increasing pressure from economic uncertainty and budget cuts to prove their worth, 2025 needs to be the year we take action. While delivering great user experiences remains crucial, we must also excel at promoting our work and demonstrating its concrete business impact. That's why I've created this checklist of essential activities.
Drive results and build the credibility with colleagues
As I say in this newsletter, we need to be able to demonstrate the benefits of UX in tangible ways. There is none better than by showing that we can improve website conversion.
With that in mind, I will be hosting a workshop in February focused on improving the conversion rate of any website. It is just the kind of workshop to get senior management and clients excited.
Here's your essential to-do list for the year ahead:
Schedule Stakeholder Deep-Dives
Start the year by booking one-on-one meetings with key stakeholders. These aren't just status updates – they're opportunities to understand their goals, demonstrate how UX can help achieve them, and conduct what I like to call "stakeholder user research." The insights you gain will be invaluable for aligning your work with organizational priorities.
Craft a Business-Aligned UX Strategy
Take time to create a UX strategy that explicitly connects your team's work to company objectives. Find your organization's strategic plan and draw clear lines between improved user experiences and business outcomes. This document will become your north star for prioritization and a powerful tool for stakeholder communications.
Establish Clear Operating Policies
Well-defined policies might not sound exciting, but they're crucial for working smarter, not harder. Document your team's ways of working, decision-making frameworks, and standard procedures. This will help you avoid common pitfalls, work more efficiently, and importantly, demonstrate your team's professionalism to the wider organization.
Develop an Internal Communications Strategy
Your team's great work deserves visibility. Create a comprehensive plan for internal communication that might include:
Regular newsletters highlighting UX wins and their business impact
Lunch-and-learn sessions to share knowledge
An internal blog documenting your process and successes
Design communities to engage interested colleagues
Create Self-Service UX Resources
Empower your colleagues to handle basic UX activities independently. This isn't about making your team redundant – it's about scaling your impact and creating UX advocates across the organization. Consider developing:
Self-paced training materials
Access to user testing platforms
Basic analytics dashboards
Design system documentation
Build Your UX Playbook
Bring everything together in a comprehensive playbook that serves as your team's central repository. Include your strategy, policies, resources, and success stories. Make it publicly accessible if possible – external validation can significantly boost your internal credibility.
I understand this might feel like a lot to tackle alongside your regular project work. But remember: demonstrating and communicating your value is just as important as delivering it. Without proper visibility, even your best work might go unrecognized.
If you'd like to discuss implementing any of these suggestions in your organization, I'd be happy to have a chat. Just drop me an email." Sometimes it helps to talk through these challenges with someone who's been there.
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