
A Complete List Of UX Deliverables
by Nick Babich
The list below contains most common deliverables produced by UX Designers as they craft great experiences for users. For better readability, I’ve combined the deliverables according to UX activities:
- User Research
- Market Research
- Design
- Testing
For each item in the list you’ll find additional links or video with detailed explanation or best practices.
Let’s start!
User Research
Personas
Persona is a fictional character created to represent a user type that might use a product in a similar way. Personas make it easier for designers to create empathy with users throughout the design process.

Related links:
User Flow
A visual representation of the user’s actions to complete tasks within the product. Visualized user flow makes it easier to identify which steps should be improved or redesigned.

Related links:
Experience Maps
A diagram that explores the multiple steps taken by users as they engage with the product. Experience map allows designers to frame the user’s motivations and needs in each step of the journey, creating design solutions that are appropriate for each.

Related links:
Use Cases
A use case is a written description of how users will perform tasks in your app. It outlines, from a user’s point of view, an app’s behavior as it responds to a request. Each use case is represented as a sequence of simple steps, beginning with a user’s goal and ending when that goal is fulfilled.
Related links:
Storyboards
Storyboards are illustrations that represent shots that ultimately represent a story. In UX this stroy illustrates the series of actions that users need to take while using the product. Translating functionalities into real-life situations, helps designers create empathy with the user.

Related links:
Market Research
Competitive-analysis report
Analysis of products competitors that maps out their existing features in a comparable way. Report helps you understand industry standards and identify opportunities to innovate in a given area.

Related links:
Design
Moodboards
A collaborative collection of images and references that will eventually evolve into a product’s visual style guide. Moodboard allows UX desigenrs to show stakeholders and teammates a proposed look for the product before investing too much time or money on it.

Related links:
Sketches
Sketching is a quick way of visualizing an idea (e.g. new interface design) by using paper and pen. Sketches are useful to validate product concepts and design approaches both with team members and users.

Related links:
Wireframes
A visual guide that represents the page structure, as well as its hierarchy and key elements. Wireframes are useful when UX designers need to discuss ideas with team members/stakeholders, and to assist the work of visual designers and developers.

Related links:
Prototypes
A prototype is a simulation or sample version of a final product, which is used for testing prior to launch. The goal of a prototype is to test products (or product ideas) before spending lots of time and money into the final product.


Related links:
Testing
Quantitative Survey
Questions that provide numbers as result. Quick and unexpensive way of measuring a level of user satisfaction and collecting feedback about the product. Survey is a quick way to collect information from a large number of users but their obvious limitation is lack of any interaction between the researcher and the users.
Related links:
Usability report
Usability report summarize usability findings in a clear, precise and descriptive way that helps the product team identify the issue(s) and work toward a solution. When reporting results from a usability test, UX designer should focus primarily on the findings and recommendations that are differentiated by levels of severity.

Related links:
Analytics report
Numbers provided by an analytics tool on how the user interacts with your product: clicks, user session time, search queries etc. Analytics report can also “uncover the unexpected”, surfacing behaviors that aren’t explicit in user tests.

Related links: