
Discover why lean UX emphasizes rapid iteration, real-time collaboration, and continuous learning to deliver user-centered products with minimal waste in agile environments.
Explore how faster collaborative design accelerates time to market, enhances innovation, and enables real-time feedback across remote and distributed teams using cloud-based tools.
Reduce waste and accelerate innovation with Lean UX through early validation, rapid iteration, and cross-functional collaboration, focusing on the minimum viable product (MVP).
Lean user experience is a modern, collaborative approach that emphasizes rapid iterations, continuous user feedback, and minimum viable products to validate design decisions and boost user outcomes in agile teams.
Apply the lean UX process through a build-measure-learn cycle: identify problems and hypotheses, develop a minimal viable product, test with real users, and iterate toward better solutions.
Explore the Lean UX cycle—think, make, and check—to rapidly validate user problems with hypothesis-driven MVP prototypes through collaborative design, experimentation, and learning.
Lean UX empowers teams to design faster and smarter through lightweight deliverables, rapid prototyping, and continuous user validation driven by collaboration and hypothesis-driven development.
Identify assumptions in rapid ideation by capturing raw ideas in a safe, timeboxed session using post-it notes, Figjam, or Miro, then map them by desirability, viability, and feasibility.
Adopt hypothesis driven design and MVP strategies to test ideas, validate assumptions, and reduce wasted effort. Align decisions with user feedback through data-driven testing, accelerate learning, and minimize failure costs.
Define a minimum viable product as a lightweight version with only core features to test a hypothesis, gather user feedback, and learn quickly through rapid deployment and data-driven decisions.
Explore four MVP types—landing page MVP, Wizard of Oz MVP, concierge MVP, and single feature MVP—each designed to validate demand, test usability, and gather real user feedback before full-scale development.
Compare low fidelity prototypes, such as paper sketches and wireframes, with high fidelity, including clickable mockups and coded prototypes, to balance speed, cost, realism, and usability testing.
Discover how hypothesis driven development and the minimum viable product fit into agile and lean ux workflows, enabling fast test-learn-iterate cycles that validate ideas with real users.
Design a low-fidelity MVP—sketches or wireframes—to quickly test a core hypothesis with real users, iterate fast, and gather early feedback before full development.
Learn lean UX research and testing as a lightweight, iterative, user-centered approach that delivers rapid insights through cross-functional collaboration, MVPs, quick prototyping, and continuous feedback.
Apply lean ux research methods such as guerrilla testing, rapid prototyping, A/B testing, and heatmaps to rapidly learn and improve designs from real users.
Compare lean UX research with traditional UX research across approach, testing, and documentation, highlighting speed, just enough research, continuous lightweight testing, and fixed stages versus extensive in-depth studies.
Enable teams to make data-driven decisions quickly by integrating lean ux research into the design and development process, focusing on real user feedback and lightweight agile methods.
Conduct a quick usability test on a prototype to validate early design decisions, covering objective definition, prototype selection, recruiting 3–5 users, realistic tasks, observation, follow-up questions, and iteration.
Learn to facilitate a collaborative design sprint, a five-day, cross-functional workshop that uses prototyping and user testing to rapidly solve problems, reduce risk, and gather real user feedback.
Explore validation methods in lean UX, including hypothesis validation, MVP testing, AB testing, heat maps, and usability testing, to confirm design impact before full-scale development.
Explore how iteration and continuous learning power lean UX and analytics through the build-measure-learn loop, using feedback loops to test, measure, and scale user-centered solutions.
Description
Take the next step in your career! Whether you’re an up-and-coming professional, an experienced executive, aspiring manager, budding Professional. This course is an opportunity to sharpen your Lean UX capabilities, increase your efficiency for professional growth and make a positive and lasting impact in the business or organization.
With this course as your guide, you learn how to:
All the basic functions and skills required Lean UX. Key Reasons to Use Lean UX.
Transform The Need for Faster, Collaborative Design. How Lean UX Reduces Waste & Speeds Up Innovation. Lean UX Principles & Process.
Get access to recommended templates and formats for the detail’s information related to Lean UX.
Learn useful case studies, understanding the Transportation Model (Introduction). Linear programming technique (Introduction). ISO STANDARDS BASICS (Quality Certification). PERT and CPM. (Network Analysis) with useful forms and frameworks
Invest in yourself today and reap the benefits for years to come
The Frameworks of the Course
· Engaging video lectures, case studies, assessment, downloadable resources and interactive exercises. This course is created to Learn the definition of Lean UX, Core Principles, Lean UX Process, Lean UX vs. Traditional UX vs. Design Thinking, Real-World Applications of Lean UX, Benefits of Lean UX. Key Reasons to Use Lean UX, The Need for Faster, Collaborative Design, How Lean UX Reduces Waste & Speeds Up Innovation, Case Studies: How Leading Companies Apply Lean UX and also you will learn about Activities related to Self-Assessment about Your UX Approach and Case Study about Lean UX in Startups & Enterprises. Lean UX Research & Testing, Key Principles of Lean UX Research & Testing, Lean UX Research Methods, Guerrilla Testing, Rapid Prototyping & Testing, A/B Testing, Heatmaps & Session Recordings, 5-Second Tests
· The course includes multiple Case studies, resources like formats-templates-worksheets-reading materials, quizzes, self-assessment, film study and assignments to nurture and upgrade Lean UX in details.
In the first part of the course, you’ll learn the details of the definition of Lean UX, Core Principles, Lean UX Process, Lean UX vs. Traditional UX vs. Design Thinking, Real-World Applications of Lean UX, Benefits of Lean UX. Key Reasons to Use Lean UX, The Need for Faster, Collaborative Design, How Lean UX Reduces Waste & Speeds Up Innovation, Case Studies: How Leading Companies Apply Lean UX and also you will learn about Activities related to Self-Assessment about Your UX Approach and Case Study about Lean UX in Startups & Enterprises.
In the middle part of the course, you’ll learn how to develop a knowledge of Key Principles of Lean UX, Lean UX Process, The Three Pillars of Lean UX, Design Thinking, Agile Methodology, Lean Startup, think: Problem Hypothesis & Assumptions, Make: Collaborative Design & Prototyping, Check: Experimentation & Feedback. Activities related to Identify Assumptions in Rapid Ideation Exercise. Key Principles of Lean UX, Lean UX Process, The Three Pillars of Lean UX, Design Thinking, Agile Methodology, Lean Startup, think: Problem Hypothesis & Assumptions, Make: Collaborative Design & Prototyping, Check: Experimentation & Feedback. Activities related to Identify Assumptions in Rapid Ideation Exercise.
In the final part of the course, you’ll develop the knowledge related to Capstone Project & Certification: Enhancing E-Commerce Checkout Experience Using Lean UX.
Course Content:
Part 1
Introduction and Study Plan
· Introduction and know your Instructor
· Study Plan and Structure of the Course
Module 1: Introduction to Lean UX
1.1 What is Lean UX?
1.1.1. Definition
1.1.2. Lean UX Process
1.1.3. Lean UX vs. Traditional UX vs. Design Thinking
1.1.4. Real-World Applications of Lean UX
1.1.5. Benefits of Lean UX
1.1.6. Conclusion
1.2. Why Lean UX?
1.2.1. Key Reasons to Use Lean UX
1.2.2. The Need for Faster, Collaborative Design
1.2.3. How Lean UX Reduces Waste & Speeds Up Innovation
1.2.4. Case Studies: How Leading Companies Apply Lean UX
1.2.5. Conclusion
Activities:
· Self-Assessment: Your UX Approach
· Case Study: Lean UX in Startups & Enterprises
Module 2: Lean UX Principles & Process
2.1 Key Principles of Lean UX
2.2. Lean UX Process
2.3. The Three Pillars of Lean UX
Design Thinking
Agile Methodology
Lean Startup
2.4. The Lean UX Cycle
Think: Problem Hypothesis & Assumptions
Make: Collaborative Design & Prototyping
Check: Experimentation & Feedback
2.5. Conclusion
Activities:
Identify Assumptions in
• Rapid Ideation Exercise
Module 3: Hypothesis-Driven Design & MVPs
3.1 What is Hypothesis-Driven Design?
3.2. Steps in Hypothesis-Driven Design
3.3. Defining Assumptions & Hypotheses
Writing & Testing Hypotheses
Prioritizing Hypotheses for UX Experiments
3.4. What is a Minimum Viable Product (MVP)?
3.5. Types of MVPs
3.6. Building Minimum Viable Products (MVPs)
3.6.1. What Makes a Good MVP?
3.6.2. Low-Fidelity vs. High-Fidelity Prototypes
3.6.3. Examples from Real Products
3.7. HDD & MVP in Agile Development
3.8. Conclusion
Activities:
Develop a UX Hypothesis for a Product
Build a Low-Fidelity MVP for User Testing
Module 4: Lean UX Research & Testing
4.1 Key Principles of Lean UX Research & Testing
4.2Lean UX Research Methods
• Guerrilla Testing
• Rapid Prototyping & Testing
• A/B Testing
• Heatmaps & Session Recordings
• 5-Second Tests
4.3. Lean UX Testing Process
4.4 Collaborative Design & Cross-Functional Teams
· Working with Developers, Product Managers & Stakeholders
· Running Design Sprints
4.5. Lean UX Research vs. Traditional UX Research
4.6. Conclusion.
Activities:
· Conduct a Quick Usability Test on a Prototype
· Facilitate a Collaborative Design Sprint
Module 5: Lean UX Metrics & Validation
5.1. Key Lean UX Metrics
5.2. Lean Analytics for UX
5.3. Validation Methods in Lean UX
5.4. Lean UX Metrics & Validation in an Agile Workflow
5.5. Iteration & Continuous Learning
· When to Pivot, Iterate, or Scale
· Using Customer Feedback Loops
5.6. Conclusion
Activities:
· Define UX Metrics for a Lean Product
· Apply an Iterative Improvement Cycle
Part 2
Module 6: Capstone Project & Certification: Enhancing E-Commerce Checkout Experience Using Lean UX
6.1. Capstone Project & Certification: Enhancing E-Commerce Checkout Experience Using Lean UX
• Project Overview
• Project Objective.
6.1.1. Applying Lean UX to a Real-World Challenge
Choose a Problem & Develop Hypotheses
Design, Prototype, & Test an MVP
6.1.2. Presentation & Feedback
Peer & Instructor Review
Iterating Based on Feedback
6.1.3. Final Certification
Submit & Present Your Project
Earn a Lean UX Certification