I’ve learned that the biggest mistake teams make isn't skipping research—it’s failing to visualize it. Data in a spreadsheet is hard to act on; data on a map becomes a strategy.

However, not all maps are created equal. Depending on where you are in the product lifecycle, you need a specific lens to look through. Here is a breakdown of the essential UX mapping techniques every designer should master.

The Discovery Phase: Empathy and Affinity

Before you build, you must understand.

  • Affinity Map: This is your primary tool for synthesizing raw research. It helps you categorise data and extract key themes from chaos.
  • Empathy Map: A summary of the user experience. By documenting what users say, think, do, and feel, you create a shared understanding of their emotional state.

The Journey Phase: Mapping the Path

Once you know the user, you must map their movement.

  • Customer Journey Map: A step-by-step visualization of a customer achieving a task while interacting with your specific product.
  • Experience Map: A broader view that captures the entire experience a user goes through while solving a specific problem, even outside your product.

The Structural Phase: Architecture and Logic

Now, we define the product's bones.

  • Site Map: A visual tool to organize content and structure. This is the foundation of a clean and navigable product.
  • Flow Map: A diagram showing the exact path a user takes from the starting point to the final interaction. It’s the ultimate logic check for your UI.

The High-Level Strategy: Ecosystems and Blueprints

For senior-level complexity, we zoom out.

  • Ecosystem Map: A visual of all people, products, and services a user interacts with.
  • Service Map (Blueprint): This connects the front-stage (what the user sees) with the back-stage (the internal processes and technology that make it happen).

The Senior Perspective: Don't just map for the sake of mapping. Choose the technique that answers your most pressing question.

Whether it's a Cognitive Map to understand mental perceptions or a Roadmap to align the team on the future, these visual tools are what turn "designers" into "product strategists."