Rosenverse

Log in or create a free Rosenverse account to watch this video.

Log in Create free account

100s of community videos are available to free members. Conference talks are generally available to Gold members.

Hopeful Futures for UX Research
Friday, January 30, 2026 • Rosenfeld Community
Share the love for this talk
Hopeful Futures for UX Research
Speakers: James Lang
Link:

Summary

UX research is going through a turbulent time. AI and ‘research democratisation’ are challenging how we work. Layoffs, fear of layoffs and ‘doing more with less’ can add to the pressure. Researchers are questioning their role and their value. And yet… hopeful futures are possible. In fact, the current moment of churn and change offers a window of opportunity for us to address some of the existing issues in our field. Drawing from 50+ articles and insights from 100+ UXRs and tech professionals, this talk reveals clear trends. Amidst all the challenges, there’s reason to believe that our skills have never been more in demand. This event will explore career evolutions for researchers, discuss principles all product team members can apply, and identify actionable steps to shape your future. Join James in rejecting doom, embracing agency, and building hopeful futures together.

Key Insights

  • The opposite of doom scrolling is active hope, which means reclaiming agency in uncertainty.

  • The current tech hiring downturn is largely driven by economic factors such as rising interest rates making headcount expensive.

  • Democratization has increased non-UX researchers doing UX research tasks at a 4:1 ratio compared to those with formal UX research titles.

  • UX professionals bring enduring creative and analytical skills beyond their current job titles, which remain valuable even if roles change.

  • New roles and adjacencies like research ops and knowledge management are emerging organically within UX research.

  • The dominant productivity paradigm shifting from hiring more people to using AI tools and cross-functional collaborators.

  • It is essential for UX professionals to proactively start new initiatives rather than wait for organizational permission.

  • Explore-exploit is a useful adaptive model during times of volatility: now is a time to explore new skills and directions.

  • Job titles are lagging indicators during paradigm shifts, and many current titles will likely change in 5-10 years.

  • Investing in AI capabilities and adjacent skills can differentiate UX professionals in a challenging employment market.

Notable Quotes

"The opposite of doom scrolling is hope. Hope is active. It’s about claiming our agency in a moment that may be difficult."

"Many of us have followed zigzag paths to get where we are today, and that’s one of the wonderful qualities of the UX field."

"Right now, tech hiring is down because interest rates are high and headcount is expensive, not because the skills aren’t needed."

"Democratization means people without 'UX researcher' in their title are doing the research work—a 4:1 ratio compared to formal researchers."

"Next generation tools are being built not for specialists but for the broader population, like product managers and engineers."

"That productivity revolution—the idea we don’t need more headcount but better tools—is more aspiration than reality at the moment."

"You don’t want to wait for permission. If you see something valuable, start doing it and demonstrate its worth."

"Your agency is the thing that can’t be taken away from you. It’s your means to navigate this moment and keep your sanity."

"Job titles are a lagging indicator—it will take a while before the industry renames roles in line with actual work changes."

"This moment is an explore moment. Focus on breadth skills and learning new adjacent capabilities rather than just depth in one area."

Ask the Rosenbot
George Abraham
Design Systems To-Go: Indigo.Design Overview and Exploring the Developer Workflow (Part 3)
2021 • DesignOps Summit 2021
Gold
Ariel Kennan
Theme 2 Intro
2021 • Civic Design 2021
Gold
Ben Reason
Making the system visible: The fastest path to better decisions
2025 • Advancing Service Design 2025
Gold
Sandra Camacho
Creating More Bias-Proof Designs
2025 • Rosenfeld Community
Jeff Sussna
What DesignOps Can Learn From DevOps
2017 • DesignOps Summit 2017
Gold
Peter Merholz
The Trials and Tribulations of Directors of UX
2023 • Enterprise Community
Kyria Stephens
Power to Heal: Civic Design in the Aftermath of Tragedy
2022 • Civic Design 2022
Gold
Frances Yllana
Theme 2 Intro
2024 • DesignOps Summit 2024
Gold
Ned Dwyer
The Intersection of Design and ResearchOps
2024 • DesignOps Summit 2024
Gold
Bria Alexander
Opening Remarks Day 2
2024 • Advancing Research 2024
Gold
Matteo Gratton
Can Data and Ethics Live Together?
2021 • DesignOps Summit 2021
Gold
Louis Rosenfeld
GenAI for UXers: A Rosenbot Demo and Discussion
2025 • Rosenfeld Community
Christopher Noessel
AI of the now: Designing for Agents
2024 • Rosenfeld Community
Daniel Gloyd
Designing From the Inside Out: How Method Acting Can Inspire Design Research
2026 • Rosenfeld Community
Sean Fitzell
Craft of User Research: Building Out Jobs to be Done Maps
2021 • Advancing Research 2021
Gold
Mariesa Lenz
What Beekeeping Taught me about Product Teams
2025 • Rosenfeld Community

More Videos

Rachel Radway

"Once I got my foot in the door, the biggest challenge was learning the vocabulary and culture."

Rachel Radway Katie Bingham Joe Wiertel

The Many Paths Of Design Operations

September 8, 2022

Sam Proulx

"Inclusive design is about one size fits one, not one size fits all, especially in research methodologies."

Sam Proulx

SUS: A System Unusable for Twenty Percent of the Population

September 29, 2021

Dharani Perera

"Co-creation is where the meat of transformation happens; designers facilitate those who hold knowledge and make decisions."

Dharani Perera

The mandala of service design: unlocking alignment and action through service design

November 20, 2025

Paula Bach

"Habit changes sometimes must happen, but measuring and designing to respect them avoids mortifying changes."

Paula Bach

Improving Legacy Software: How Much Better Does it Have to Be?

March 11, 2022

Vanessa Varin

"Feedback is a system. It's not just a pile of comments. It needs to be choreographed, timed, sequenced, and aimed to move the work."

Vanessa Varin

Feedback: The Other F-Word

September 10, 2025

Josina Vink

"Blushing is an inherently systemic reaction to understanding what’s acceptable in a situation or not."

Josina Vink

Navigating the pitfalls of systems thinking in service design

December 4, 2024

Robert Fabricant

"Knowledge sits on a shelf. Understanding is an active way to engage and connect people."

Robert Fabricant

Shifting dynamics: The evolving relationship between researchers, participants, and organizational systems

March 11, 2025

Melinda Belcher

"The agencies don’t often know what happens to their work after they deliver it unless they hear about it third hand years later."

Melinda Belcher

Insider preview of Enterprise Experience 2020

May 28, 2020

Sheryl Cababa

"Today's problems come from yesterday's solutions."

Sheryl Cababa

Expanding Your Design Lens with Systems Thinking

February 23, 2023