skills/conducting-user-interviews/SKILL.md
Help users run better customer and user interviews. Use when someone is preparing for user research, planning discovery interviews, writing interview questions, analyzing interview findings, or trying to understand customer needs.
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Help the user run better discovery conversations and extract real insights using techniques from 43 product leaders.
When the user asks for help with user interviews:
Teresa Torres: "Interviewing is a grossly underestimated skill. If you're not collecting rich stories, you won't identify opportunities." Don't ask "What do you like?" Ask "Tell me about the last time you..."
Bob Moesta: "I only talk to people who've already tried to make progress. What made them try? Ignore 'bitching' (complaining)—look for 'switching' (actual behavior change)."
Gustaf Alstromer: "The best way to understand problem intensity isn't asking—it's watching. Have them screen share and walk through their daily workflow. Look for pain they've normalized."
Jeff Weinstein: "Don't start with 'Hi, I'm the CEO of X, we do Y, let me show you a demo.' What a wasted opportunity. Listen first. Use silence to let them open up."
Judd Antin: "We don't validate, we falsify. We look to be wrong. Many PMs want to be right—they do user-centered performance, not real research."
Judd Antin: "A researcher who asks customers what they want is a bad researcher. Focus on understanding behaviors and problems—not having users design your solution."
Nan Yu: "My goal is to feel bad the same way customers feel bad. Dig past the feature request to find the underlying negative emotion motivating it."
Bob Moesta: "Not having a script drives people crazy, but rigid guides prevent you from following meaningful threads. Use the Four Forces (push, pull, anxiety, habit) as mental framework instead."
Shaun Clowes: "Between 7-14 interviews, you stop learning new things. Less than 7, not enough data. More than 14, diminishing returns."
Gustaf Alstromer: "90% of people aren't early adopters. You need to reach 10 to find 1. Rejection isn't failure—it's filtering for the right users."
Marty Cagan: "I wasn't allowed to make product decisions until I'd visited 30 customers. Those visits changed my life—I thought I knew our customers and I really didn't."
Jeff Weinstein: "When a customer goes out of their way to share a problem, that's a gift. I'll leave a meeting to reply. Be 'text message friendly' with 5-10 power users."
Mihika Kapoor: "The most insightful conversations are with non-users. Ask why they're not using your product—you'll find perception gaps users can't see."
Jeff Weinstein: "Have them send you a $1 invoice right now. The gap between 'willingness to pay' and actually paying is massive. This tests real commitment."
Tanguy Crusson: "Work with 10 'lighthouse' users over months. Put them in Slack with your team. Involve engineers directly so they build empathy."
For all 64 insights from 43 guests, see references/guest-insights.md
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