| name | playback-preparation |
| description | Create clear leadership presentations that communicate findings and enable good decisions. Use at end of each phase or before major commitments. |
Playback Preparation
Overview
Create clear, concise presentations for leadership that communicate findings and enable good decisions.
When to Use
- At the end of each design phase
- Before major resource commitments
- When needing strategic direction or approval
- At key decision points
How to Apply
1. Know Your Audience (LT)
Remember what leadership cares about:
- Pat (Product): Strategy, market fit, competitive advantage
- Casey (Operations): Feasibility, resources, risks, timeline
- Morgan (User Advocate): Customer impact, quality, brand
2. Structure the Playback
Essential sections:
# Playback: [Phase] - [Project Name]
## Context (2 minutes)
- Where we are in the process
- What we've done since last playback
- What decision we need today
## Key Findings (5 minutes)
- Top 3-5 insights/results
- Supporting evidence (not overwhelming detail)
- Surprises or changed understanding
## Recommendations (3 minutes)
- What we recommend doing next
- Why this is the right direction
- What resources/timeline needed
## Decision Needed (2 minutes)
- Specific ask
- Options if applicable
- What happens next based on decision
3. Show, Don't Just Tell
- Use visuals (empathy maps, journey maps, prototypes)
- Include direct quotes from users
- Show data, not just interpretations
- Demonstrate prototypes if relevant
4. Be Clear About Confidence
For each finding or recommendation:
- What's our confidence level?
- What evidence supports this?
- What assumptions remain?
- What would increase confidence?
5. Frame Decisions Clearly
Good: "We recommend prototyping Idea B because it addresses the #1 user pain point (offline access) with high feasibility. We need 2 weeks and 1 designer. Alternative is Idea A (more features, but 6 weeks)."
Bad: "We have three interesting ideas. What do you think?"
6. Anticipate Questions
Prepare for:
- "How many users did you talk to?"
- "What would this cost to implement?"
- "How confident are you?"
- "What are the risks?"
- "What alternatives did you consider?"
7. Document Everything
Save playback in playbacks/ and capture:
- What was presented
- Questions asked
- Decisions made
- Next steps and timeline
Playback by Phase
Empathize Playback
Present: User research findings, validated/invalidated assumptions, stakeholder needs Ask: "Should we proceed to Define phase?" LT evaluates: Research depth, strategic fit, confidence level
Define Playback
Present: Synthesized insights, problem framing, opportunity areas Ask: "Is this the right problem to solve?" LT evaluates: Problem value, definition clarity, alignment
Ideate Playback
Present: Range of ideas, impact/feasibility grades, recommendation Ask: "Which ideas should we prototype?" LT evaluates: Strategic value, feasibility, resource needs
Prototype Playback
Present: What we built, fidelity, iteration plan Ask: "Approve iteration plan?" LT evaluates: Learning value, investment level, timeline
Iterate Playback
Present: User feedback, validated/invalidated findings, path forward Ask: "Proceed to implementation / more iterations / pivot?" LT evaluates: Evidence strength, business case, user enthusiasm
Tips
- Keep it concise (10-15 minutes)
- Lead with the most important information
- Use leadership's language (business value, not design jargon)
- Show user voice (quotes, videos)
- Be honest about gaps and risks
- Make a clear recommendation
- Document decisions immediately after