Overview
Diary studies capture what no other research method can: how behavior changes over time. A usability test shows how a new user interacts with a product on day one. A diary study shows how that same user's behavior evolves over 2 weeks — which features they stop using, which workarounds they develop, and at what point they decide the product is or is not worth continuing.
The Diary Study Research Framework Prompt builds a longitudinal research program that produces temporal behavioral data — with a prompt design system that captures in-the-moment experience rather than retrospective reconstruction, a retention strategy that maintains participant engagement over the study period, and an analysis method that identifies the behavioral inflection points that predict long-term adoption or churn.
What you get: - Study design: duration, cadence, and participant count for different research questions - Prompt design system: the question types and formats that produce rich, actionable entries - Participant retention strategy: the incentive model and engagement techniques that prevent dropout - Entry analysis framework: how to code and analyze diary entries across participants and time - Longitudinal pattern identification: the analysis that reveals behavioral change over the study period - Synthesis and reporting: how to convert diary data into temporal insights
Built for: UX researchers designing longitudinal studies to understand product adoption, behavioral change, and long-term user experience.