// description
User-Centered Design (UCD) is a philosophy and process that places the end user's needs, limitations, and context at the center of every design decision. Rather than expecting users to adapt to the product, the product adapts to the users. UCD involves iterative cycles of understanding users (through research), specifying requirements, producing design solutions, and evaluating those solutions against user needs.
// history
Don Norman, a cognitive scientist, introduced the term in his influential 1986 book User Centered System Design and expanded on its principles in The Design of Everyday Things (1988). Norman later became the first person to hold the title of "User Experience Architect" at Apple Computer. The International Organization for Standardization codified UCD as ISO 9241-210.
// example
A creator selling digital planners applies UCD by asking ten buyers to screen-record themselves downloading and using a new planner PDF for the first time. She discovers that most struggle with the same task: finding the instructions for the hyperlinked tabs. Instead of assuming buyers will read the instructions page, she redesigns the first page as a visual "start here" guide with numbered arrows, and renames the file to include "start here" in the title. Return requests drop immediately because the most common friction point — first-use confusion — was removed based on actual observed behaviour.
// katharyne's take
For digital product sellers, UCD is fundamentally about watching what people do with your product rather than asking what they want. The gap between what customers say and what they do is enormous, and it's responsible for most "I thought this product would sell" disappointments. If you sell digital downloads — planners, templates, Lightroom presets, Procreate brushes — ask three buyers to share a screen recording of their first five minutes with the product. The problems you find will surprise you every time.
// creative uses
- Before redesigning a KDP interior, do one round of UCD observation: ask three buyers to show you (via Loom or Zoom screen share) how they use your current book in practice. You will almost always discover they use it differently than you intended — and that gap is your most important design brief.
- Apply UCD to your Etsy shop navigation by asking five people who don't know your shop to share their screen while they try to find a specific product type. Watch where they click, where they hesitate, and where they give up. These friction points are invisible to you because you know the shop; they're obvious to a first-time visitor.
- Use UCD for course platform design: have three students share their screen while navigating your Kajabi or Teachable course for the first time. The places where they pause, squint, click the wrong thing, or ask "where is X?" are your navigation redesign priorities — far more valuable than any platform-provided analytics.
// quick actions
- Send a message to three recent buyers of your best digital product this week: "I'm improving this product — would you be willing to share a quick screen recording of your first time using it? 5 minutes, no preparation needed." The recordings you get back will be the most useful product research you've done all year.
- For your next product launch, add a "watch them use it" step to your pre-launch process. Before you finalise the product, give a beta version to three people and watch them try to use it without your guidance. Any confusion they express is a design problem to fix before launch, not a support issue to manage after.
- Re-read your three most critical or confused reviews through a UCD lens: what did the buyer try to do that the product didn't support? That's a user need your design missed. Add it to your next iteration, not to a FAQ.
// prompt ideas
I sell [type of digital product — e.g. printable planners / Procreate brushes / Canva templates] on [Etsy / Gumroad]. Help me design a simple user research session I can run with 3 recent buyers: write a 5-question interview script focused on how they actually use the product versus how I intended it to be used. Then suggest what I should watch for in their screen recordings that would reveal design problems.
Here are the three most common complaints or confusions in my [digital product / course / Etsy] reviews: [paste them]. Analyse each using a user-centered design lens — what user need did the design fail to anticipate, and what change to the product (not a better FAQ) would prevent each complaint from recurring?
I'm designing a new [digital planner / template pack / course module] for [describe your target user]. Using UCD principles, help me write a one-page design brief that specifies: who the user is in concrete detail, what they're trying to accomplish, what their biggest frustrations are with existing solutions, and what a successful first-use experience looks like for this specific product.