{"site":{"name":"Koji","description":"AI-native customer research platform that helps teams conduct, analyze, and synthesize customer interviews at scale.","url":"https://www.koji.so","contentTypes":["blog","documentation"],"lastUpdated":"2026-06-21T23:42:12.041Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"458f3a84-ccd3-42e4-853f-fc96e8db6ff8","slug":"research-strategy-guide","title":"How to Build a UX Research Strategy That Drives Decisions","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/research-strategy-guide","summary":"A research strategy is the connective tissue between user insight and product decisions. This guide explains what a mature strategy contains — a vision tied to business goals, a prioritization framework, a research cadence, defined roles, a findable repository, and impact measurement — and covers continuous discovery versus ad-hoc research, the benefits and guardrails of research democratization, how to measure research ROI, and the common failure modes that keep research from influencing decisions. It includes industry benchmarks and how AI-native research operationalizes continuous, democratized research.","content":"Most teams do not have a research problem — they have a research *strategy* problem. They run studies, but the insights arrive too late, answer the wrong questions, or never reach the person making the decision. A research strategy is the connective tissue that fixes this: it links what you learn from users to the decisions your business actually needs to make.\n\nThis guide covers what a real research strategy contains, how to prioritize and pace research, how to democratize it without sacrificing quality, and how to prove its impact.\n\n## Why Strategy Matters: The Cost of Building Blind\n\nThe evidence that teams build the wrong things is overwhelming. Pendo's 2019 Feature Adoption Report, analyzing 615 subscriptions, found that **80% of features in the average software product are rarely or never used**, and that publicly traded cloud companies collectively invested up to **$29.5 billion** building features that delivered little or no value. The older Standish Group CHAOS research reached a similar conclusion: **64% of features are rarely or never used**.\n\nA research strategy is how you stop paying that tax. The often-cited Forrester estimate puts the return on UX investment at roughly **$100 for every $1 invested** — and while that exact figure circulates secondhand, the underlying logic is sound: research that redirects even one quarter of misplaced engineering effort pays for itself many times over.\n\n## What a Research Strategy Contains\n\nA mature research strategy has six components:\n\n1. **A vision tied to business goals.** What does the organization need to learn this year, and which business outcomes depend on it? Research that cannot trace back to a goal will not survive a budget cut.\n2. **A prioritization framework.** A way to rank research questions by decision-impact and risk — not by who asked loudest. The most valuable research answers the questions where being wrong is most expensive.\n3. **A cadence.** A deliberate rhythm of continuous discovery and periodic deep dives (more on this below).\n4. **Defined roles.** Who are the dedicated researchers, who are the people-who-do-research (PWDRs) on product teams, and who owns research operations?\n5. **A repository.** A findable, reusable home for insights so the same question is not researched twice and past findings inform new decisions.\n6. **Impact measurement.** A way to show that research changed decisions — and the business.\n\n## Continuous Discovery vs. Project-Based Research\n\nThe biggest strategic choice is cadence. **Project-based research** is a discrete study run before a launch or a major decision. **Continuous discovery**, in Teresa Torres's definition, is *\"weekly touchpoints with customers, by the team building the product, where they're conducting small research activities in pursuit of a desired product outcome.\"* It is a standing habit, not a one-off.\n\nThe data shows teams moving toward a blend. In the User Interviews 2024 State of User Research report (759 researchers), **44% conducted continuous research** in the prior six months, and **81% did a mix** of discovery and evaluative work. The mature pattern is not either/or: continuous discovery keeps the team perpetually close to users, while periodic deep dives de-risk the highest-stakes decisions. (See our guide to [continuous discovery](/docs/continuous-discovery-user-research).)\n\n## Research Democratization: Capacity vs. Quality\n\nAs demand for insight outstrips the number of dedicated researchers, organizations **democratize** research — enabling non-researchers to run studies. The upside is real: more capacity, faster answers, and stakeholders who believe the findings because they helped gather them.\n\nBut democratization without guardrails is dangerous. As Nielsen Norman Group's Kara Pernice warns, *\"When no one has explicit responsibility for user research, serious issues can arise,\"* and *\"user research can be conducted at different levels of skill, which lead to a different quality of insights.\"* Bad research done confidently at scale is worse than no research.\n\nThe guardrails that make democratization work:\n\n- **Training** on the fundamentals of unbiased questioning (avoid [leading questions](/docs/survey-design-best-practices)).\n- **Vetted templates and question banks** so non-researchers start from sound designs.\n- **Researcher review** of study plans before they launch.\n- **Clear ownership** — splitting lightweight discovery enablement from strategic, high-stakes studies.\n\nThis split is now standard practice in mature organizations: democratize the easy, frequent research; reserve dedicated researchers for the complex, consequential work.\n\n## Research Operations: The Engine Room\n\nResearch operations (ResearchOps) is the infrastructure that makes a strategy executable — recruiting, tooling, governance, repositories, and templates. It is still surprisingly rare: the 2024 State of User Research report found only **38% of organizations have at least one dedicated ResearchOps specialist**, meaning **62% have none**. If your strategy depends on researchers spending their time scheduling participants instead of analyzing data, ReOps is where to invest first. (See our [research operations guide](/docs/research-ops-guide).)\n\n## Measuring Research Impact\n\nA strategy you cannot measure is a strategy you cannot defend. Impact measurement is maturing fast: in the 2024 report, **50% of teams now use KPIs or quantitative metrics** to track research impact (up from 40% in 2023), **15% have revenue goals** attached to research, and only **13% measure nothing** — down sharply from 32% in 2022. Leadership buy-in rated high or very high rose from 43% to **57%** in a single year.\n\nPractical ways to measure impact:\n\n- **Decisions influenced.** Maintain a log linking each study to the decision it shaped.\n- **Time-to-insight.** How fast can the team get a reliable answer? Faster cycles mean research keeps pace with decisions.\n- **Outcome metrics.** Tie research to the activation, retention, or revenue numbers it was meant to move.\n\n## Common Failure Modes\n\n- **The service desk.** Research operates as an order-taker, fulfilling requests with no prioritization. Teams end up studying the trivial while major risks go unexamined.\n- **Insights that never land.** Research is done well, then dies in a slide deck no decision-maker reads. Distribution and a living repository are part of the strategy, not an afterthought.\n- **No prioritization.** Without a framework, the loudest stakeholder sets the agenda.\n- **The unused-feature tax.** Standish's 64% and Pendo's 80% rarely-or-never-used both signal the same thing: building without validated demand. A strategy's whole job is to prevent it.\n\n## The Modern Approach: AI-Native Research Strategy\n\nThe hardest part of any research strategy is making it *continuous*. Traditional research is too slow and too scarce to keep pace with product decisions — which is why so much shipping happens on assumption. While legacy survey tools like SurveyMonkey collect responses, they leave recruiting, moderation, and synthesis as manual bottlenecks. AI-native platforms like Koji remove them.\n\n### How Koji Helps\n\n- **Democratization without the quality drop.** AI-moderated interviews let any product manager or designer launch a rigorous, unbiased study — the AI interviewer asks consistent, well-structured questions and probes follow-ups automatically, so you do not need a research PhD to get reliable insight.\n- **Time-to-insight in minutes.** Automatic thematic analysis turns hundreds of conversations into ranked themes instantly, making the continuous cadence Teresa Torres describes operationally realistic.\n- **A living evidence base.** Every interview, transcript, and report becomes part of a searchable record — the foundation of the repository your strategy needs.\n- **Six structured question types.** Koji's [structured questions](/docs/structured-questions-guide) — open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, and yes_no — let you standardize study designs across a democratized team while keeping data clean and comparable.\n- **Voice and text interviews, customizable AI consultants, and real-time reporting** so research scales with the organization instead of bottlenecking on a handful of specialists.\n\nA research strategy is ultimately about pace: can you learn fast enough to decide well? AI-native research is what makes \"yes\" affordable.\n\n## A 90-Day Plan to Stand Up a Research Strategy\n\nYou do not build a research strategy in a workshop — you build it in a quarter. A pragmatic sequence:\n\n**Days 1–30: Map and prioritize.** Inventory the decisions on the roadmap for the next two quarters and the assumptions each one rests on. Score those assumptions by two axes: how costly it would be to get them wrong, and how confident you currently are. The high-cost, low-confidence cell is your research backlog — and your first prioritization framework. Resist the urge to research everything; the goal is to research what matters.\n\n**Days 31–60: Establish cadence and infrastructure.** Stand up a lightweight weekly discovery rhythm so the team is never more than a few days from a customer conversation. In parallel, create the connective infrastructure: a shared, searchable place for insights (your repository), a small set of vetted question templates, and a simple intake process so requests are triaged against the prioritization framework rather than served first-come-first-served. This is also when you decide what to democratize and what stays with dedicated researchers.\n\n**Days 61–90: Prove impact and institutionalize.** Start a decision log that links every study to the decision it informed. Pick one or two impact metrics — time-to-insight and decisions-influenced are the easiest to start with — and report them to leadership. Nothing protects a research function in a budget review like a documented trail of decisions it changed.\n\nBy the end of the quarter you have the three things a strategy actually needs: a prioritized backlog, a sustainable cadence, and evidence of impact. Everything else — maturity models, dedicated ResearchOps headcount, revenue-linked goals — is an extension of this foundation, not a prerequisite for starting.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [The UX Research Process](/docs/ux-research-process) — the end-to-end workflow your strategy orchestrates\n- [Continuous Discovery for User Research](/docs/continuous-discovery-user-research) — build the weekly-touchpoint habit\n- [Research Operations Guide](/docs/research-ops-guide) — the infrastructure behind an executable strategy\n- [Research Democratization Playbook](/docs/research-democratization-playbook) — scale research without losing rigor\n- [User Research Maturity Model](/docs/user-research-maturity-model) — benchmark where your org stands\n- [Measuring Research ROI](/docs/research-roi-guide) — prove the value of research\n- [Structured Questions Guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide) — the six question types that standardize a democratized team","category":"Research Operations","lastModified":"2026-06-21T03:24:12.375758+00:00","metaTitle":"How to Build a UX Research Strategy That Drives Decisions | Koji","metaDescription":"Build a research strategy that consistently shapes product decisions: prioritization frameworks, research cadence, roles, repositories, democratization, and measuring research impact and ROI.","keywords":["research strategy","ux research strategy","user research strategy","research operations","research democratization","continuous discovery","research roadmap","measuring research impact"],"aiSummary":"A research strategy is the connective tissue between user insight and product decisions. This guide explains what a mature strategy contains — a vision tied to business goals, a prioritization framework, a research cadence, defined roles, a findable repository, and impact measurement — and covers continuous discovery versus ad-hoc research, the benefits and guardrails of research democratization, how to measure research ROI, and the common failure modes that keep research from influencing decisions. It includes industry benchmarks and how AI-native research operationalizes continuous, democratized research.","aiPrerequisites":["ux-research-process","generative-vs-evaluative-research"],"aiLearningOutcomes":["Define the components of a research strategy tied to business goals","Prioritize research questions by decision-impact instead of volume","Choose between continuous discovery and project-based research","Democratize research with the right guardrails","Measure and communicate research impact and ROI","Avoid the service-desk and unread-insights failure modes"],"aiDifficulty":"advanced","aiEstimatedTime":"12 min read"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}