Note Taker

What is it? A dedicated attendee in a qualitative research session whose role is to record what the participant(s) is expressing or doing. Note takers ensure everything is captured accurately in an efficient and timely manner. This assists in analysis and synthesis and helps mitigate bias that may be introduced by relying on moderator / stakeholder team memory, or poor / inconsistent moderator note taking, or even a failed recording. 

When is it best used? During all live, in-person or remote, qualitative research sessions including interviews, ethnographies, and group discussions. Note taking can also be used to increase stakeholder engagement, provide new researchers first hand exposure, report writers a head start, and serve as a sounding board for the lead researcher.

What does it entail? Capturing what the participant(s) is expressing or doing either in chronological order or according to a predetermined framework. Both require quick and active observation, concentration, listening and documenting skills to capture the learnings digitally or physically often in real time.

Notes may include quotes and observations of participant’s actions, responses, tone of voice, their environment etc. and may also include photos that document additional information (e.g. outputs from an activity). 

Interchangeable term:  Documentarian, scribe

Use in a Sentence: The note taker captured everything that happened during the session and this work expedited our team’s analysis and synthesis.

Related Terms: Observer, Moderator

Visual: Yes


share this page



What is UX Lex?

An evolving, interactive glossary of UX research terms.

It's ironic. Those of us who work in UX, user researchers included, aspire to create terrific user experiences. That’s what we do. But what we have done with our own terminology is to create a mess. Eighty UXers from around the globe began to address that problem in September 2019. Here is a sneak peek of that work. More details, and full credits, to come. Sign up here to get weekly terms in your inbox >>


Looking to get involved? Great!

Enormous accolades to the dozens of people who have already contributed to this work.

We are actively looking for people to support this initiative!

Share feedback on these definitions and any terms we may be missing. Learn about project sponsorship and advertising.

Have another idea or question? Great! Send us a note.

Previous
Previous

MVP / Minimum Viable Product

Next
Next

Pain Point