An action-orientated review model to convert past experience into practice.
Get to the root cause of an issue by asking "why" repeatedly.
Start from the basics and find a new, more logical way of doing things.
Identify failure modes and prioritize risks.
Protect your emotional boundaries.
Understand users with clarity, even when resources are tight.
Continuously asking “So what might happen next?” to project how one event could trigger another.
Gather comprehensive information and provide clarity in various situations.
A creativity technique designed to generate a large number of ideas.
Allows you to handle challenges with clarity, whether you need to see the big picture or focus on the details.
Developed from human psychology, it help us understand how the conscious and unconscious mind interacts.
A simple yet powerful tool that helps you analyze and solve problems in a structured way.
Generate new ideas by systematically remixing existing products, processes, and assumptions.
Define measurable outcomes and success metrics before you commit to building features.
Move beyond information overload and make truly wise decisions.
Capture feedback, act on it, make changes stick, and report back with clarity.
Turn raw ideas into market-ready products through a disciplined, four-stage innovation pipeline.
Discover the real problem before solving it.
Gives teams a clear way to observe, classify, and interpret user behavior.
Understand users with clarity, even when resources are tight.
No application mappings are available for this framework yet.
Struggling to Do User Research with Limited Resources? You are not alone. Many product managers, designers, and indie developers face this common challenge.
When you're not a professional researcher, it’s hard to know how deep to go, how to break the research into stages, and who the results are for. As a result, people often throw all research activities together—only to end up with no real insight or actionable decisions.
Jane Austin, a well-known design leader, introduced a simple but powerful model to solve this problem: the Research Funnel.

This model helps you structure your research based on how close you are to the problem, so you can make better use of your time, energy, and findings.
The Research Funnel breaks all user research into three categories, arranged from broad discovery to detailed validation. The idea is to match your research method to your current goal.
When you only have a rough idea of the domain or user pain points, exploratory research helps you uncover what really matters.
This stage is about understanding the context.
Once you’ve decided to build something, you need to define your priorities and target audience. Strategic research helps you make those choices.
When your product is in development or already launched, research can help you improve the experience and validate ideas.