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25 Great Questions to Ask in User Interviews 🤔

Learn how to compose intuitive questions for user interview sessions that elicit valuable feedback about your product and UX. Copy our 25+ questions to leverage in your next user interview.

TL;DR

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Welcome—to user interview script writing 101 📝. We're opening our doors to the art and science of crafting great user interview questions. Turns out, it's best to already have them written, and you're welcome to borrow from the resource below.

Yay! Pre-written user interview questions so you can grab-n-go.

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Until this point, you've made sense out of the project parameters when deciding how to craft a UXR project brief. Now, you're amidst the execution stage of UX research. And you need an interview script (AKA protocol, guide, outline). These interview questions will be used to generate raw feedback, which you'll leverage when determining how to analyze user data for insights. Those insights are the gasoline that then fuels the process of synthesizing insights into themes. Out of which comes UX recommendations, and ultimately a UX improvement action plan.


In this article, we strive to make script writing for user interviews a turnkey solution. The trick is to leverage standard frameworks for the general flow of the conversation, while pulling from pre-written, tried-and-true question sets for additional efficiency and speed. Read on to learn what user research tasks are, how moderated (and unmoderated) conversations typically go, 25+ great user interview question sets, and more about the standardization process of user interviewing.

Let's go! Ready-made user tasks to operate 🔥 UXR at the speed of business.

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Summary: 25 Great Questions to Ask in User Interviews 🤔

What are user tasks in UX research?

User tasks are your talking points, key questions, transitions, and more in the heat of research. When successful, they prime the user to share challenges, opportunities, and recommendations to improve the UX.

In their most basic form, user research tasks contain the specific phrasing for how the UX researcher elicits user feedback. They're the detailed questions to be asked in the live research situation. Research tasks are the most important of several core components of the user interview protocol.


User Tasks are the most important of 3 components within a UX research protocol
User Tasks are the most important component within a UXR protocol

Without research tasks, your protocol won't have the specificity required to draw out quality user feedback. Good user feedback comes from asking the right questions. These sets of questions need to be thought through thoroughly 🤪 in advance to ensure all main points are covered. Furthermore, it's very difficult to memorize them all for interviewing later, so the process of writing, editing, and refining can be a crucial step to generate user feedback in a systematic manner.

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How a typical user interview flows

The typical flow of a user interview leverages 6 steps. These steps guide the user through a journey of reflection and sharing in an engaging manner, meant to extract maximum value from each participant.

The flow of user tasks is important to the outcome of the process. Similar to a movie plot line or a song melody, there exists a general pattern to extract a range of emotions. And since UXR is intent on surfacing users’ feelings, thoughts, and perceptions, borrowing from these patterns is useful.


6-step guide for typical Research Tasks outline
6-step guide for typical Research Tasks outline.

The pattern we’ve found that works best in user interviews is a 6-step approach. Several user tasks exist within each step along the arc. We break down this arc in full detail within our article, 6-Step Guide to Drafting UX Research Tasks ✏️. In a nutshell, the flow goes something like: start high-level, narrow in, back up, drill down, zoom out, reflect, and summarize.

In the following section, we leverage these 6-steps to outline 25 go-to user tasks and questions within.



25 Great Questions to Ask in User Interviews 🤔:

Instead of a mere 25 individual/specific questions, we’ve actually built out 25 user tasks, each containing 3–4 questions (totaling ~100 questions examples!). The multiple, related questions within each task allow for brief exploration of the topic from multiple angles. We call this a question set.

Question sets are important because users don’t always register a single, stand-alone question correctly.

Having a short intro statement, followed by 3 associated questions allows users to better understand the gist for what the UXRr is probing after, and to answer accordingly. Utilizing our 6-step UXR interview guide, we’ve laid out respective user tasks, for each step below:

  1. High-level overview questions
  2. Context-setting questions
  3. Prototype share questions
  4. Focused deep-dive questions
  5. Reflection questions
  6. Summary questions


1. High-level overview questions


Step-1: High-level overview questions to get sense of the user
Step-1: High-level overview questions to get general sense of the user

The high-level overview step is meant to build rapport, establish a foundation, and set the tone for the interview. This is your chance get a sense of the user broadly, and from where they’re coming. All the while, setting the stage for where the interview is going. Here’s a few examples from which to draw:


  1. To start, please pull-up [area of interest] on screen...
    • Introduce yourself, and explain what's the nature of your [business / job]?
    • How did you get into this [business / job]?
    • What are some aspects you find most rewarding?

  2. In terms of your role / responsibilities...
    • What's a day-in-the-life look like?
    • What does a typical week look like?
    • How is success measured on the long-term?

  3. When it comes to [area of interest]...
    • What are your goals?
    • What are some examples?
    • What's 1 recent challenge or success?

Return to overview ⤴
 

2. Context-setting questions


Step-2: Context-setting interview questions to put user in right mindset
Step-2: Context-setting interview questions to put user in right mindset

The context-setting step is meant to put the user into the right state of mind for the remaining tasks of the study. Now, the user gets a general sense of what/where you're looking for feedback. If done well, it will focus their attention, create necessary guardrails, and give them necessary context. Here’s a few examples from which to draw:


  1. Now, please pull up [current-state experience]...
    • How often do you open [current-state experience]?
    • What's your main reason for using [the current-state experience]?
    • What’s the most valuable feature or area?

  2. Explain your experience with the [current-state experience]...
    • What do you appreciate most about [current-state experience]?
    • What are the main benefits you get from [current-state experience]?
    • What’s one thing that’s been successful?
    • And what's been challenging?
    • What's 1 recommendation to improve [the current-state experience] from your perspective?

  3. Show us where you usually go within [current-state experience]...
    • What are you looking to accomplish here?
    • What challenges do you encounter, if any?
    • What’s 1-recommendation to improve this experience?

  4. Upon first arrival in [current-state experience]...
    • What do you normally look at?
    • What are you thinking?
    • What do you generally do first?

  5. Thinking back to when you originally set up [current-state experience]...
    • Did you do it on mobile phone, tablet, laptop, or desktop?
    • What do you recall from the process?
    • Any specific pain points and/or opportunities could've been improved?

  6. After initial setup of [current-state experience]...
    • What were the most important tasks to accomplish first?
    • What were the things you planned to do next? Why?
    • Did you face any challenges figuring out what to do next?

  7. Show us how you might do [specific task]...
    • Where do you click?
    • What goes into your decision regarding [specific task]?
    • What do you find to be challenging, or counter-intuitive?

  8. In terms of the value you receive from [current-state experience]...
    • In a few words, how would you describe the value you get?
    • What other things do you wish would be done for you, that aren’t currently?
    • Are there any other companies you’ve experienced that do a particularly good job at this experience (who and how)?

  9. Stay on [the experience / product]...
    • In general, what do you appreciate the most about [the product]?
    • What do you find that works well?
    • Which features do you have the most familiarity and confidence in?
Return to overview ⤴
 

3. Prototype share questions


Step-3: Prototype high-level questions to solicit directed reaction(s)
Step-3: Sharing a prototype solicits directed reaction(s)

The prototype step is meant to put a visual/idea in front of the user to solicit directed reaction(s). We've found greater value when the interviewer shares an artifact of some sort (i.e. boundary object) to give the user something with which to engage. The user can see, touch, hold, and respond more clearly when the we literally bring something to the table. Here’s a few examples from which to draw:


  1. Launch [URL]. You’ve been taken to our (semi-functional) prototype concept. Imagine you’ve [brief intro to the experience]. Please look around...
    • What stands out at first glance?
    • What’s your initial reaction to [the future-state experience]?
    • What’s the purpose of the [the future-state experience], in your opinion?
    • Is [the future-state experience] something you’d naturally explore on your own? Why or why not?
    • What do you find most valuable, and why?

  2. Upon first view of [future-state experience]...
    • What’s your first impressions of this experience?
    • What causes you initial confusion or hesitation, if anything?
    • What do you expect can be done with this [product]?

  3. Continue to reflect on [future-state experience]...
    • What do you appreciate/value most about [this experience], if anything?
    • What causes you concern or confusion, if anything?
    • What’s 1 recommendation to improve?
Return to overview ⤴
 

4. Focused deep-dive questions


Step-4: Focused deep-dive questions to get into the heart of the matter
Step-4: Focused deep-dive questions to get into the heart of the matter

The focused deep-dive step is meant to get into the heart of the matter. It's the central focus to which everything has built up. It'll most often contain elements of your core research questions. You understand the user, they understand you, and everyone has a shared understanding... now it's time to uncover the truth (pains, gains, and everywhere in between). Here’s a few examples from which to draw:


  1. Click to move forward, and upon landing at [future-state experience]...
    • What's your first impressions of what you're seeing?
    • How might you briefly explain the purpose of each major section?
    • What would you do first?
    • Is there anything you’d expect to see / do in this [experience] that isn’t shown here?

  2. If you were interested to interact with [some aspect of the experience] (note: not everything may be fully functional)...
    • What action(s) would you consider taking first, and how?
    • Show how you might do X?
    • How would you expect to change Y?
    • Why, or why not?

  3. When it comes to [some higher-level goal]...
    • Is there different module that would help achieve the goal? How so?
    • What stands out as most meaningful?
    • What other recommendations do you have to [achieve that goal]?
    • What’s one thing you’d change right now?
    • What's one thing you wouldn't change?
Return to overview ⤴
 

5. Reflection questions


Step-5: Reflections questions to see the bigger picture
Step-5: Reflection questions to see the bigger picture

The reflection step is meant to surface the bigger picture. This phase will tie a bow on the concepts being explored. It will help the user stand back and reflect, and the interviewer to receive valuable feedback about the full interview arc. Here’s a few examples from which to draw:


  1. Upon completing the [activity], reflect on the [process]...
    • How did you end up accomplishing [activity]?
    • What challenges were expected, or not?
    • Why did you choose this approach?
    • What’s 1-recommendation to help simplify [the process]?

  2. Reflect on [the experience], in general. As you may have gathered, this is meant to [purpose of experience]...
    • How does the idea resonate with you?
    • What would make you more confident in [higher-level goal]? How so?
    • What's your overall thoughts and reactions to [key aspect]? Why?

  3. In general, consider [key aspects]...
    • How might you prefer to skip over these [key aspects], and why?
    • What would you expect — or hope — [the experience] would do next time you went through [the process]?
    • What’s 1 recommendation to improve?
Return to overview ⤴
 

6. Summary questions


Step-6: Summarization questions to surface the most important points
Step-6: Summarization questions to surface the most important points

The summary step is meant to re-surface the most important parts of the interview. It purposefully re-plays key elements that were most insightful. This gives the user one last chance to dig deeper, and the interview a moment to solidify what they've heard. Here’s a few examples from which to draw:


  1. Considering everything you’ve reviewed so far...
    • What short phrase best describes this [general idea of the experience]?
    • What’s your rationale?
    • How might you describe this general idea to your grandmother?

  2. Consider everything we’ve explored...
    • How did this experience compare to your usual way of [accomplishing goal]?
    • Of everything, what’s your top small/simple recommendation to improve?
    • What’s your top BIG recommendation to improve?
    • From everything you’ve seen, what’s your top specific recommendation to improve?

  3. Lastly, reflecting on this [full process] from start to finish...
    • How clear was it that [goal that the experience is trying to accomplish]? Why or why not?
    • How might we better convey [the main goal of experience]?
    • If you had a magic wand, what would you add or change about this product?

  4. In summary, reflecting on this [general idea of the experience]...
    • What’s your overall thoughts and feelings?
    • What haven't we covered that you think would be important to discuss?
    • What might be even more valuable (if not this concept)?
Return to overview ⤴
 

Why repositories of standard question sets are important

Repositories of standard questions (and question sets) are valuable to the UXR process because they speed up protocol writing and establish a consistent style for users to easily understand. Both of these help to generate more useful data.

As you do more and more user studies, speed and consistency become important 📚. It helps you get to insights faster, and focus on the making meaning, not protocols. Whether you use our approach, or something similar, we recommend establishing a pattern to craft user interview questions. This has worked for us. We may evolve this over time, as we hope you do as well.


Where interview questions fit into the broader UXR process


Execution phase - providing the raw data necessary to generate UXR insights.
Execution phase — within the 5-phase UX research process guide

Writing great interview questions exists in the 'Execution' phase of 5-phases of UXR. The question sets are an essential part of your key deliverable, a research procotocol. And they are used to generate your raw data, which is the critical output of this phase.

Before you've written your interview questions, the research is just an idea. Crafting the specific questions brings that idea to life. Then, all you have to do is get in front of users (i.e. moderated or unmoderated) and present the questions. From which the data is generated, insights can be collected, and themes synthesized.

Having great research questions sets everything up for success. Whether you run the interviews, someone else does, or you have a computer (e.g. unmoderated) do it for you, great research questions are your currency 💸.


Templates to assist in research planning


UX research template toolbox for guided approach to projects
UX research template toolbox for guided approach to projects.

Check out our backlog of UX research templates to help with planning. Protocols, plans, outlines, and more to help guide your overall UXR process. We use these ourselves, and make them available to all, because we love this stuff! We want to help make more, successful user research in the world. Doing so culminates in greater job satisfaction, better end-user experience(s), and a stronger economy for all 😊.

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