7 design feedback questions to retire — and what to ask instead
Blog post from LogRocket
In the UI/UX design process, effective design feedback is crucial for iterative improvements and achieving optimal product designs. Designers engage in multiple feedback-driven cycles, starting each new iteration based on the insights gathered from stakeholder demos. The quality of feedback directly hinges on the specificity and clarity of the questions asked during these sessions. Poorly framed questions, such as vague or overly complex ones, often lead to unhelpful responses, while well-crafted questions can initiate productive discussions and gather actionable insights. This guide emphasizes the importance of asking concise, contextful, and flexible questions, avoiding pitfalls like binary or leading questions, and steering clear of complex language and personal inquiries. By focusing on experience-based feedback and refining questions with these characteristics, designers can enhance the efficacy of feedback sessions, thereby improving the design process. Leveraging tools like LogRocket can further streamline this process by automating feedback analysis, allowing designers to concentrate on crafting better user experiences.