Did you know that users are more likely to choose, buy and use products that meet their needs as opposed to products that just meet their wants? An Empathy map will help you understand your user’s needs while you develop a deeper understanding of the persons you are designing for. There are many techniques you can use to develop this kind of empathy. An Empathy Map is just one tool that can help you empathise and synthesise your observations from the research phase, and draw out unexpected insights about your user’s needs.
An Empathy Map allows us to sum up our learning from engagements with people in the field of design research. The map provides four major areas in which to focus our attention on, thus providing an overview of a person’s experience. Empathy maps are also great as a background for the construction of the personas that you would often want to create later.
An Empathy Map consists of four quadrants. The four quadrants reflect four key traits, which the user demonstrated/possessed during the observation/research stage. The four quadrants refer to what the user: Said, Did, Thought, and Felt. It’s fairly easy to determine what the user said and did. However, determining what they thought and felt should be based on careful observations and analysis as to how they behaved and responded to certain activities, suggestions, conversations, etc.
S. Oviatt, R. Coulston, and R. Lunsford. Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Multimodal interfaces, page 129--136. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2004)
A. Jameson, and K. Klöckner. Spoken Multimodal Human-Computer Dialogue in Mobile Environments, volume 28 of Text, Speech and Language Technology, chapter 19, Springer-Verlag, Berlin/Heidelberg, (2005)
J. Chang, and M. Bourguet. Proceedings of the 22Nd British HCI Group Annual Conference on People and Computers: Culture, Creativity, Interaction - Volume 2, page 123--126. Swinton, UK, UK, British Computer Society, (2008)
E. Law, V. Roto, M. Hassenzahl, A. Vermeeren, and J. Kort. Proceedings of the 27th international conference on Human factors in computing systems, page 719--728. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2009)
E. Schwarzkopf, M. Bauer, and D. Dengler. Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces, page 287--289. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2003)
D. Traum, and S. Larsson. Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue, volume 22 of Text, Speech and Language Technology, Springer Netherlands, (2003)
D. Traum, and S. Larsson. Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue, volume 22 of Text, Speech and Language Technology, Springer Netherlands, (2003)