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Mar 14, 2023

What we've learned about talking to users

Andy Vandervell
Andy Vandervell

This post is from our Substack newsletter, Product for Engineers. It's all about helping engineers and founders build better products by learning product skills. We send it (roughly) every two weeks.

Welcome to our new newsletter, Product for Engineers. We launched it because (1) there’s a real dearth of resources for engineers (and technical founders) who want to level-up their product skills; and (2) we believe embracing product engineering (i.e. engineers who do product) is a vital ingredient for successful startups.

This week’s theme is: Talking to users

💬 10x engineers talk to users

In traditional tech companies, product managers (PMs) talk to users, and write tickets for engineers to ship. It looks something like this:

PM to engineer

As Luke Harries explains in 10x engineers talk to users, this is an anti-pattern for any successful startup:

“At each stage, important context is lost. Information flows one way, so you can’t go deeper on the important areas, and engineers lose agency in what they're building and why.”

When engineers start talking to engineers:

“Information moves quickly and in both directions, boosting the signal. By increasing the signal you can quickly cut scope, realize you’re tackling the wrong problem, or come up with a more elegant solution.”

Luke’s tips for engineers who want to talk to users:

  1. Automation is crucial. Use targeted in-app prompts to identify users to talk to.

  2. Think about your goals. There are two basic interview types: problem exploration and solution validation.

  3. Build async feedback loops. Zoom calls are just one way to talk to users; Slack can be just as (if not more) effective.

📸 User interviews + snapshots = action

If you’re talking to users, you need a quick and repeatable way to share what you learn. Annika Schmid shares our solution, interview snapshots:

interview-snapshot

Why do we like interview snapshots? 3 simple reasons:

  1. They're easy to create – 30 minutes if you do them right after an interview.
  2. They're easy to digest – no scrolling necessary, just drop a screenshot into Slack.
  3. They're conversation starters – each snapshot triggers lively debate and ideas.

Read her post for more user interview tips, and to download an editable snapshot template.

📚 Further reading on talking to users

Talking to users for founders / CEOs by YC-partner Eric Migicovsky

Eric’s talk is a foundational text in how CEOs should lead by example, and includes this nugget of wisdom:

"Some of the worst bad data that you may encounter is compliments. People may say, "Oh, I love the new design." Or, "Man, this thing is really useful." You may love that during the course of your user interviews but they actually are not useful information because it's not specific."

How game developer Gearbox “outwitted” tester feedback

The “Truth Team” at game developer Gearbox have three rules when interpreting feedback from game testers:

  1. “Testers try to speak in fact, but they speak in emotion”

  2. Testers do not like features they don’t understand but “the truth is [they] may not fully grasp what it is they're looking at or experiencing.”

  3. Testers have expectations that may not match the developer's. “They speak about their experience, not what actually exists in the game.”

How to identify users with the most valuable feedback by a former Director of Product Analytics at Hubspot

Dan Wolchonok outlines why it’s important to seek out hard to find users:

“Even worse, in my opinion, is taking the existing feedback as representative of your user base, and only solving for the loudest segment of the customers or the customers that are most convenient to interact with.”

🦔 Useful guides for PostHog users

🤔 More good reads

  • What I Learned At Stripe by Zack Steinkamp: A great collection of learnings on how Stripe works, including why their engineers behave like product managers, and how Stripe automates a culture of gratitude.

  • How Acquirers See Your Company by StaySaasy: “Getting acquired is like meeting the world’s worst in-laws.” This post discusses the questions acquirers ask themselves beyond “do we like the team”.

  • The myth of exponential hypergrowth by Jason Cohen: “Hypergrowth” companies don’t grow exponentially. Jason Cohen goes in-depth on how fast-growing companies actually grow using real data. Essential reading.