Resource User Research User Experience + Product (UX)

Building a User Research Compensation Process from the Ground Up in Saint Paul: A Digital Service Network Spotlight

The Digital Service Network (DSN) spoke with Ashley O’Brien, user experience designer for the City of Saint Paul, MN, about the flexible and resourceful approach she took to reach people across the city.

DSN Spotlights are short-form project profiles that feature exciting work happening across our network of digital government practitioners. Spotlights celebrate our members’ stories, lift up actionable takeaways for other practitioners, and put the examples we host in the Digital Government Hub in context.

As government teams around the country work toward establishing policies, processes, and practices for human-centered design, a common hurdle many face is reaching constituents for research. This hurdle shows up in different ways across various contexts in government settings, from challenges getting in touch with people generally, to ensuring the organization is reaching vulnerable communities, to simply being able to directly pay people for their time when they participate in research.   

Finding authorization to compensate community members for research participation—commonly referred to as “UX (or user experience) compensation”—has emerged as a universal challenge across all levels of government, and is an area of focus for the Digital Service Network. As we all work to make it easier for governments to better manage research operations internally (recruitment, compensation, etc.), we also need to find ways to reach the people we serve to inform how we design and deliver government services.   

To learn more about practical approaches in government human-centered design, we spoke to Ashley O’Brien, user experience designer for the City of Saint Paul, MN, about the flexible and resourceful approach she took to reach people across the city.

Resident Engagement Resources from the Civic User Testing Group

Articles and resources from the Resident Engagement section of the City Tech's Civic User Testing group (CUTgroup) website. CUTgroup was a 1,600+ member civic engagement program that invited Chicago residents to contribute to emerging technology while providing public, private, and social sector partners with feedback to improve product design and deployment.