empathy-mapping
Create structured visualizations of stakeholder perspectives (says, thinks, does, feels) to build deep understanding. Use when conducting user research or validating assumptions.
When & Why to Use This Skill
This Claude skill automates the creation of structured empathy maps to synthesize user research and stakeholder interviews. By organizing qualitative data into the four key quadrants—Says, Thinks, Does, and Feels—it helps product teams and researchers uncover deep-seated pain points, behavioral contradictions, and unmet needs to drive human-centered design and better product-market fit.
Use Cases
- Synthesizing raw interview notes and observation data into a visual framework to align team understanding of a target persona.
- Identifying 'Say-Do' gaps where stakeholder verbal feedback contradicts their actual behavior to validate or debunk product assumptions.
- Conducting deep-dive analysis during the 'Empathize' phase of Design Thinking to discover emotional triggers and frustrations.
- Generating actionable insights for product roadmaps by extracting specific 'Pain Points' and 'Gains' from stakeholder perspectives.
| name | empathy-mapping |
|---|---|
| description | Create structured visualizations of stakeholder perspectives (says, thinks, does, feels) to build deep understanding. Use when conducting user research or validating assumptions. |
Empathy Mapping
Overview
Create a structured visualization of what a stakeholder says, thinks, does, and feels to build deep understanding of their perspective.
When to Use
- During the Empathize phase
- After conducting observations or interviews
- When synthesizing user research
- When validating assumptions about stakeholder needs
How to Apply
1. Choose Your Subject
Identify the specific stakeholder or stakeholder group to map.
2. Gather Data
Review observation and interview notes for this stakeholder.
3. Create the Map
Organize findings into four quadrants:
SAYS — Direct quotes, what they verbalize
- What exact words do they use?
- What do they tell others?
- What have you heard them say?
THINKS — Beliefs, concerns, interpretations
- What might they be thinking?
- What matters to them?
- What are their concerns?
- What occupies their thoughts?
DOES — Actions, behaviors, observable activities
- What actions have you observed?
- What do they do today?
- How do they behave?
- What workflows do they follow?
FEELS — Emotional states, frustrations, aspirations
- What emotions have you observed?
- What frustrates them?
- What excites them?
- What are their fears and aspirations?
4. Identify Insights
Look for:
- Contradictions — Where SAYS differs from DOES or THINKS
- Pain Points — Negative emotions or frustrations
- Gains — Positive emotions or aspirations
- Unmet Needs — Gaps between what they do and what they want
5. Document
Save the empathy map in projects/[project_name]/insights/ and link it from the stakeholder's profile in currentstate.json.
Example Structure
# Empathy Map: [Stakeholder Name]
## Says
- "I don't have time to learn new systems"
- "It needs to just work"
## Thinks
- Worried about making mistakes
- Believes current tool is holding them back
- Wants to be more efficient
## Does
- Uses workarounds to avoid broken features
- Checks work multiple times
- Stays late to complete tasks
## Feels
- Frustrated when tools fail
- Anxious about deadlines
- Proud when delivering good work
## Insights
**Pain:** Lack of reliability creates anxiety and extra work
**Need:** Simple, reliable tools that don't require extensive training
**Opportunity:** Reduce cognitive load and improve confidence
Tips
- Use the stakeholder's own words in SAYS
- Infer THINKS and FEELS from observations and context
- Focus on behaviors, not just self-reported actions
- Look for emotional patterns and intensity
- One empathy map per distinct stakeholder type