Ideas from UXLibs on Building UX Maturity

Rebecca presenting at UXLibs in front of a slide that reads: Generate ideas

At the close of my UXLibs keynote earlier this year, I asked the audience to share their ideas on building UX maturity at their library organizations. The specific prompt was:

How might we…

  • Advance what people care about?
  • Address what’s frustrating people?
  • Collaborate with people?
  • Leverage our systems?

I’ve grouped and compiled the 86 responses in hopes they’ll provide some inspiration for others. The patterns that emerged:

  1. Build UX knowledge and make it visible. Let’s hold workshops, form learning communities, bring senior staff and colleagues along, advocate, and sell by doing.
  2. Break down silos. Let’s collaborate across departments, bring people together, and foster relationships with our colleagues.
  3. Do some lightweight UX. Let’s do small things often and celebrate small wins; let’s create pop-up stations and cafés, install graffiti walls and talk-back boards, and do rapid prototyping and ideation.
  4. Put UX to work. Let’s unpack pain points and frustrations, identify specific projects, get creative, and get to work.
  5. Use UX on ourselves. Let’s harness our UX skills to explore problems, listen, ideate, and analyze what we find out.
  6. Look beyond our own libraries. Let’s get inspiration from other libraries, other departments, and other organizations.
  7. Bend the rules and get creative. When other things fail, maybe we can carve our own paths, breakout from the predictable, or just ask for permission later.
  8. Use food and drink to recruit. Let’s build relationships and recruit others with food and beverages. [This one might seem silly or trivial, but some of the best ideas can emerge over a cup of tea or a pint].
  9. Improve documentation and process. Let’s improve efficiency by creating templates and repositories and speeding up our processes.

Other ideas? Successes to share? Post them in the comments!