Krakenstein Designer - Mind the user

Empathy Maps in UX

Your Secret Weapon for Understanding Users

When it comes to designing outstanding user experiences, there’s one tool that stands out for its simplicity and effectiveness: the empathy map. If you’re in UX, you’ve probably heard the term tossed around in workshops or design sprints. But what exactly is an empathy map, and how can you use it to create products people love?

Let’s dive in!

Other UX stories

What Is an Empathy Map?

Imagine you’re trying to step into your user’s shoes. An empathy map is your cheat sheet for doing just that. It’s a collaborative visualization tool that helps teams understand and articulate what users are thinking, feeling, seeing, hearing, saying, and doing.

Think of it as a window into your user’s mind—minus the mind-reading superpowers.
A typical empathy map is divided into sections:

  • Says: What does the user say out loud in interviews or usability tests?
  • Thinks: What might the user be thinking? What occupies their thoughts?
  • Does: What actions does the user take?
  • Feels: What emotions is the user experiencing?

Some versions also include “Sees” and “Hears” to capture environmental influences.

Why Use Empathy Maps?

Empathy maps are more than just sticky notes on a wall. Here’s why they’re awesome:

  •  Builds empathy: They help teams focus on real user needs, not assumptions.

 

  • Uncovers insights: By mapping out user attitudes and behaviors, you spot pain points
    and opportunities.

 

  • Aligns teams: Everyone gets on the same page about who the user is and what matters
    to them.

 

  •  Quick and collaborative: They’re easy to create and encourage input from
    everyone—designers, developers, marketers, you name it.

How to Create (and Use) an Empathy Map

Ready to get mapping? Here’s how to do it right:

1. Gather Your Data

Start with real user research—interviews, surveys, observations. The more authentic your
data, the better your map.

2. Assemble Your Team

Empathy mapping is a team sport. Bring together people from different roles for diverse
perspectives.

3. Draw the Map

On a whiteboard or digital tool, sketch out the empathy map sections. Don’t worry about
making it pretty—focus on content.

Empty empathy map

4. Fill It In

Using your research, jot down user quotes, behaviors, and emotions in the relevant sections.
Be specific! “Frustrated by slow loading times” is better than just “frustrated.”

5. Discuss and Reflect

Talk through the map as a group. What surprises you? What patterns emerge?
This is where the magic happens.

6. Put It to Work

Use your empathy map to guide design decisions, prioritize features, and create user
personas. Refer back to it often—it’s a living document!

Pro Tips for Fun and Effective Empathy Mapping

Get visual: Use colors, doodles, and icons to make the map engaging.

  • Stay user-focused: Avoid projecting your own feelings—stick to what users
    actually say and do.

 

  • Keep it fresh: Update the map as you learn more about your users.

 

  • Make it a ritual: Use empathy maps at the start of projects, during sprints, or
    whenever you need a user reality check.

 

Wrapping Up

Empathy maps are a simple, powerful way to keep your users at the heart of your design process. They turn abstract data into vivid stories and help teams build products that really connect. So next time you’re kicking off a UX project, grab some markers (or your favorite digital tool), rally your team, and start mapping. Your users—and your products—will thank you!

Remember: Great design starts with empathy. And empathy starts with listening.
Happy mapping!