Summary
An effective research report prioritizes clarity and actionability over comprehensiveness. Structure it with an executive summary first (the only part many will read), followed by goals, methods, insights organized by themes, and specific recommendations. Never just email a report, always accompany it with a video walkthrough to add tone, emphasis, and context that static documents cannot convey.
You have done everything right. You created a solid research plan, curated a high-quality sample, executed your study with systematic rigor, and performed a structured, defensible analysis.
None of it matters if you cannot communicate your findings in a way that your stakeholders can understand, trust, and act upon.
The Purpose of a Report
The research report is the bridge between your data and the team's decisions.
A bad report, one that is too long, too academic, or unfocused, will be ignored.
A good report can be a powerful tool for change. It can settle debates, challenge long-held assumptions, and provide a clear, evidence-based path forward.
The Structure
A good report tells a story, but it starts with the ending. Your stakeholders are busy people who need to know the bottom line first.
1. Executive Summary
This is the most important part of your entire report.
It should be no more than a few short paragraphs and must stand on its own. Assume it is the only thing your CEO or head of product will read.
It must concisely cover:
- Goals of the study
- Methods used
- Key findings
- Main recommendations
Frame the insights in relation to the research questions (tied to business goals) you established in your plan.
2. Introduction & Goals
Briefly restate the "why" from your research plan:
- What were the core business questions?
- What decisions did this research need to inform?
This reminds everyone of the shared purpose and frames the results to come.
3. Method & Sample
You do not need a full academic methodology section, but you need enough detail to build trust in your process:
- Method used: "Moderated UX tests conducted remotely via Microsoft Teams"
- Sample characteristics: "12 participants, all active online shoppers who have made at least 3 mobile purchases in the last month"
This transparency helps stakeholders understand the context of your findings.
4. The Insights
This is the main body of your report. Do not present a raw list of every single thing you found.
Organize findings into key themes, often structured around:
- The user journey
- Your core research questions
- Severity and frequency of issues
For each theme, provide:
- A clear, concise description of the insight
- The scope of the problem (how many participants affected)
- Direct quotes that illustrate the point
The Insight Structure
Use this four-part formula for every major finding. It ensures each insight is complete and actionable:
-
Title the Problem: Give it a catchy, descriptive name that stakeholders will remember.
- Bad: "Issue #3"
- Good: "The Invisible Checkout Button"
-
Show the Evidence: One powerful quote or video clip + one key metric.
- "I kept looking for a way to pay but I couldn't find it." — P4
- 7 of 10 participants failed to locate the checkout button on first attempt.
-
Write the Insight: A single, clear sentence interpreting the why.
- "The checkout button blends into the footer, violating users' expectation that primary actions appear above the fold."
-
Give the Recommendation: A specific, actionable step.
- "Move the checkout button to a fixed position in the bottom navigation bar and increase its visual prominence with a contrasting color."
Bringing the User's Voice to Life
A single sentence from a frustrated user is often more impactful than a paragraph of your description:
"I did it, but I'm not sure if I did it right."
Do not cherry-pick. Select quotes that represent at least 50% of observed issues, or any issue that causes significant frustration.
5. Recommendations & Next Steps
Translate your findings into clear, actionable recommendations. This is where you shift from researcher to strategic partner.
| Type | Example |
|---|---|
| Bad | "Improve the checkout flow" |
| Good | "Increase the size of the 'Apply Coupon' button and move it above the final payment field to improve visibility and reduce errors" |
Where possible, illustrate recommendations with simple mock-ups or visual examples.
Conclude by outlining suggested next steps:
- Another round of design iterations
- A follow-up study
- A decision to move forward with current design
Beyond the Deck: The Power of the Walkthrough
Never assume your report will speak for itself.
The Problem: Stakeholders are busy. They will skim your deck and miss the nuance. Worse, you suffer from a cognitive bias known as the "Curse of Knowledge" [1]—it is difficult to imagine what it is like for someone who does not have your level of context. Details that seem obvious to you are invisible to them.
The Solution: Never just email a report. Record a 5-10 minute Loom or video walkthrough. Guide stakeholders through the key findings personally. This turns a static document into a personal briefing.
Creating the Walkthrough
Using a tool like Loom, Vimeo, or a simple screen recording:
- Keep it focused: 5-10 minutes maximum. Respect their time.
- Narrate the story: Walk through key findings and recommendations in your own voice.
- Add emphasis: Your tone conveys what matters most in ways text cannot.
- Humanize the data: This is not a static document; it is you, the expert, giving them a personal briefing.
This simple addition dramatically increases the likelihood that your insights will be understood and acted upon. A stakeholder who watches your walkthrough is far more likely to champion your recommendations than one who skims a PDF.
Report Checklist
Before finalizing, verify:
- Executive summary stands alone and contains all key points
- Findings are organized by themes, not chronologically
- Each insight includes supporting quotes or data
- Recommendations are specific and actionable
- Next steps are clearly defined
- Video walkthrough is recorded
Common Mistakes
Too long: Stakeholders will not read a 50-page report. Ruthlessly edit.
Too academic: Avoid jargon and formal language that distances you from readers.
No prioritization: Not all findings are equal. Help stakeholders know what matters most.
Missing the "so what": Every finding should connect to a recommendation or implication.
No human voice: A report full of statistics without user quotes feels disconnected from real people.
What This Means for Practice
The report is not the end of your research, it is the beginning of driving change. Structure it for maximum impact and minimum friction.
Start with the ending. Organize by themes. Use the user's voice. Make recommendations specific. And always, always do the walkthrough.
Your insights deserve to be heard. Make sure your reporting gives them the best chance of being acted upon.
References
- [1]