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Cost-effective UX strategies for 2025

Impacting product and business

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Photo by Razvan Chisu on Unsplash

As we're approaching the end of the year, the rush has begun to impact your product and show your value to the Business. Especially this year, when budgets have been tight, it's difficult to conduct primary research. But don't fret! You have many options to set yourself up for impact.

Here are three effective strategies UX Researchers & Designers can use to impact your Product for the good of your customers, prove your value to the Business, and set yourself up for success in 2025.

I'm using the metaphor of looking in vs. looking out of your organization or company and using that data to look forward. (See the Impact Problem, linked above, and Eva Schicker's model for reference).

Both of these are retrospective approaches — looking backwards to find what was true in the past (Strategies 1 and 2). Then, you can look towards the future and prioritize testing (Strategy 3).

Strategy 1—Looking In: Existing Data

I like to think of utilizing existing data as, "Low-hanging fruit." This is one of the easiest places to start and you can do it without incurring additional cost. Simply look for data that exists already and see what hasn't been acted upon.

The next step is to summarize all the existing research on a project or theme and then share the summary. Many years ago, there was one product I was working on over the course of several studies, and I started counting up the number of times that a certain recommendation came up for participants: nine times! Can you believe it?

I created a table, hyperlinked the findings, and articulated the nuances of each time the feature recommendation was discussed as a solution to a pain point that our customers had.

What happened?

The team finally believed that the problem was big enough to solve and it got fixed.

Research doesn't exist in a vacuum. Just because the finding or insight came before doesn't mean it's not still accurate. Most of the time, it still will be—this is what some folks call, "durable findings." Or, put another way, Kai Wong discusses the importance of preserving your findings.

Where to look and Whom to talk to

There are also several places you can look for existing data:

If you're picking up a theme here already, good. I'll be more explicit:

What you are looking for is a cohesive story across your studies, surveys, customer feedback, and social media.

Is everyone saying the same thing? And if so, is that on the radar of your leadership team? See Strategy 3, below, for planning.

Strategy 2—Looking Out: Secondary Research

Conducting secondary research is similar in nature to internal primary research in that it's retrospective, only, it's external to your company, conducted by someone else (and thus perhaps more "objective,"), and collected in such a way that likely your product or service nuances aren't specifically accounted for. Mayya Azarova summarizes as follows:

Secondary research is an essential foundation for UX work, necessary to explore the problem space and scope of prior projects and to identify important questions and best practices in the field of study. It also helps to focus the scope of your own project and often saves money. (Source: NN/g)

This doesn't mean it's not valuable—it's actually incredibly valuable. Especially in the cases where this is a premise to your work. While acknowledging that there are nuances between the following terms, I'm going to use them collectively: Desk Research, Lit Review, Academic Lit Review, as each of them involves doing research on the internet for secondary sources and not collecting primary data or doing primary research.

Types of Secondary Research

A little curiosity goes a long way! Just be sure to cut yourself off when you've found,"Enough," (yes, I know this is difficult for many of us!). Time box it so you can keep moving forward to the next strategy, Looking Ahead.

Strategy 3 — Looking Ahead: Triangulate, Plan, and Prioritize the Future

The point of all of this is to make better decisions about your customers and your product going forward. By understanding what you know, what your team knows, and what the industry knows, you can get a complete, or "holistic" picture of where your product is at in your market. Knowing all this, the story should clearly emerge.

Here are some questions to ask yourself:

"Strategy" is really just a fancy word for, "This is what we should do next."

Based on all we know, here's a path forward. And, if there's something you don't know, that's part of that path.

This process should bring you closer to your product team. They will see you in a new light. And you will start being seen as someone who understands "The Business." Which means you'll be promoted.

Benefits of this Approach

Concluding Thoughts

In business and UX, knowledge is far more than just power — it’s the lever that drives profit, multiplies impact, and fuels advancement. When you strategically capitalize on untapped insights and align them with your most critical business objectives, you don’t merely save resources — you unlock momentum. This approach propels you ahead of your competitors and positions you as a market leader with speed and precision.

Business people want solutions to problems, not just identification of problems. UX People hold the key: solutions to those problems validated with customers.

What have you tried? What success stories do you have employing these methods? I'd love to hear about it!

Josh LaMar is the Co-Founder and CEO of Amplinate, an international agency focusing on cross-cultural Research & Design, based in the USA, France, Brazil, and India. As the Chief Strategy Officer of JoshLaMar Consult, he helps Entrepreneurs grow their business through ethical competitive advantage.


Cost-effective UX strategies for 2025 was originally published in UX Collective on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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