This article is a compilation of our articles and videos on topics related to UX mapping methods. Resources cover specific types of UX maps — such as journey maps, service blueprints, and roadmaps — as well as lesser-effort mapping techniques for common UX-related work, such as exploring design ideas and communicating research insights.
Within each category, the resources are shown in recommended reading order.
If you’re totally new to UX mapping methods, start with this short video and cheat sheet comparing various mapping methods, and then make your way to our resources providing deeper guidance for more specific types of UX mapping activities.
- 3-minute video: UX Mapping Methods: When to Use Which
- Cheat sheet comparing 4 common UX mapping methods: UX Mapping Methods Compared: A Cheat Sheet
Journey Maps
Definition: A journey map is a visualization of the process that a person goes through in order to accomplish a goal.
In its most basic form, journey mapping starts by compiling a series of user actions into a timeline. Next, the timeline is fleshed out with user thoughts and emotions to create a narrative. This narrative is condensed and polished, ultimately leading to a visualization used to align stakeholders on the holistic experience and identify opportunities for optimizing and improving the journey.
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Definition of journey maps and differences between journey maps and other types of UX visualizations |
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Guidance on the overall structure and key components of journey maps |
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9 common journey-mapping questions and answers |
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A 5-step process for creating journey maps that can be scaled to any scope or timeline |
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Getting Started with Journey Mapping: 27 Tips from Practitioners |
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Practitioners’ tips for defining scope, conducting research, and creating visualizations for journey maps |
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Journey-Mapping Approaches: 2 Critical Decisions to Make Before You Begin |
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How to choose between mapping the current-state or the future-state experience and between using a research-first or assumption-first approach |
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5 qualitative research methods appropriate for journey mapping and a sample research plan |
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How to Run a Journey-Mapping Workshop: A Step-by-Step Case Study |
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A detailed outline of a journey-mapping workshop facilitated by NN/g |
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7 ways to identify the opportunities revealed in journey maps |
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How and why practitioners create journey maps and the benefits and challenges of the process |
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How to use asset maps (a method for evaluating crosschannel consistency) in combination with journey maps |
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A simple spreadsheet template for virtual customer-journey mapping |
Full-day Course: Journey Mapping to Understand Customer Needs
Service Blueprints
Definition: A service blueprint is a diagram that visualizes the relationships between different service components — people, props (physical or digital evidence), and processes — that are directly tied to touchpoints in a specific customer journey.
Think of service blueprints as a part two to creating customer-journey maps. Blueprinting is an ideal approach for experiences that are omnichannel, involve multiple touchpoints, or require a crossfunctional effort (that is, coordination of multiple departments).
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Definition of a service blueprint and its key components |
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A 5-step process for creating service blueprints that can be scaled to any scope or timeline |
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8 common service-blueprinting questions and answers |
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The most common pain points of service blueprinting and tips for mitigating these challenges |
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How practitioners define service blueprints, their benefits, and when they create them across the design timeline |
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Service Blueprints: How to Choose What Experience to Visualize |
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3 levels of scope for service blueprints and how to decide on the best approach |
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A step-by-step guide for planning, conducting, and synthesizing outputs from a service-blueprinting workshop
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A simple spreadsheet template for virtual service blueprinting |
Full-day Course: Service Blueprinting
UX Roadmaps
Definition: A UX roadmap is a strategic, living artifact that aligns, prioritizes, and communicates a UX team’s future work and problems to solve.
A UX roadmap should act as a single source of truth representing your UX team’s North Star. It helps your designers, researchers, developers, and stakeholders align around a single vision and set of priorities.
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Definition of a UX roadmap and its key components |
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A comparison of product, field, and specialty UX roadmaps and their benefits and challenges |
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A 6-step process for creating UX roadmaps that can be applied to any industry |
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A step-by-step guide for planning, conducting, and synthesizing outputs from a UX-roadmapping workshop |
Full-day Course: UX Roadmaps
Mapping Methods for Design Exploration
Some UX maps are useful for surfacing user pain points and mental models that can be used as prompts for ideation. This section provides resources for 2 UX mapping techniques that can used for design exploration: scenario mapping and cognitive mapping.
Scenario mapping is a group exercise that helps your design team think about how your persona segments might approach an activity using your product or service and ideate around the type of experience you want to provide for them, producing candidate solutions for the future design.
Cognitive mapping is a mapping method used to create a visual representation of a person’s (or a group’s) mental model for a process or concept. It can be a useful tool throughout user research, from gathering data to analyzing findings and articulating similarities and patterns.
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Definition of a scenario map and a step-by-step guide for facilitating a collaborative scenario-mapping workshop |
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Overview of cognitive maps, mind maps and concept maps and when to use each in the UX design process |
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Definition of a cognitive map and a step-by-step guide for facilitating cognitive-mapping research |
Mapping Techniques for Synthesizing Research and Ideas
Some UX mapping techniques help team members make sense out of lots of existing ideas or insights by organizing them into more manageable categories. Affinity diagrams and empathy maps are 2 such techniques.
An affinity diagram is a technique used to organize related items into distinct clusters. This method helps teams collaboratively discuss and analyze research findings, as well as ideas from ideation sessions.
An empathy map is a collaborative visualization used to articulate what we know about a particular type of user. It externalizes knowledge about users in order to 1) create a shared understanding of user needs, and 2) aid in decision making.
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Affinity Diagramming for Collaboratively Sorting UX Findings and Design Ideas |
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Steps for facilitating affinity diagramming activities |
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Definition of an empathy map and guidance for facilitating an empathy-mapping activity |
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