Growth Marketing Glossary

Usability Testing

us·a·bil·i·ty test·ingnoun

Watch real people try to use it - usability testing finds where users actually struggle, which observation reveals and surveys never do.

watchreal user, real taskwatching real people use the productfind where they struggle, not what they say
Schematic — Usability Testing
Term
Usability testing
Method
Users attempt real tasks, observed
Reveals
Where people struggle, get confused, fail
Beats
Asking opinions — watch behavior

Forms & parts of speech

usability testing · noun
Observed task-based user research.
"Usability testing showed users couldn't find the signup button - something no survey had ever surfaced."

Definition in plain terms

Usability testing is a research method for evaluating how easy a product, website, or prototype is to use, by having real users attempt realistic tasks while a researcher observes.

Rather than asking people what they think, usability testing watches what they actually do: where they hesitate, get confused, make errors, give up, or succeed.

A typical session gives a participant a task ('find and sign up for a plan') and observes how they go about it, noting every point of friction.

The power of usability testing is that it reveals real problems through behavior - issues people often can't articulate in a survey and that the team, too close to the product, can't see. Even a handful of sessions reliably surfaces the most significant usability problems.

It can be done on finished products, live sites, or early prototypes, and is a cornerstone of user-centered design and conversion optimization.

Why it matters to growth leaders

Usability testing is one of the highest-value, most underused tools for a growth leader, because friction in a product or flow directly costs conversions, and usability testing is the most reliable way to find that friction.

People drop off where they get confused or stuck, and those exact points are often invisible to a team that knows the product too well - but obvious the moment you watch a real user struggle.

For a growth leader optimizing signup flows, onboarding, checkout, or any key path, a few usability testing sessions can reveal precisely why users aren't converting, in a way that analytics (which show where people drop but not why) cannot.

It embodies a principle central to good growth: observe real behavior rather than rely on opinions or assumptions.

Building usability testing into the team's habits - watching real users attempt real tasks regularly - is a cheap, fast way to continuously find and fix the friction that suppresses conversion, grounding optimization in how people actually behave.

Worked example. A growth leader sees analytics showing heavy drop-off on the signup flow but no explanation of why, and turns to usability testing to find the cause.

Rather than guessing or surveying, the team runs a handful of sessions: real users are given a realistic task - find and sign up for a plan - and observed as they attempt it. Watching their behavior is revealing in a way no dashboard or survey had been.

Several participants hesitate, hunt around the page, and can't locate the signup button, which blends into the design; one gives up entirely. The friction point - invisible to the team, who knew exactly where the button was - is obvious the instant a real user struggles with it.

The growth leader fixes the specific problem the testing surfaced, and the signup drop-off improves. Recognizing usability testing as the most reliable way to find the friction that costs conversions, the leader builds it into the team's habits - watching real users attempt real tasks regularly

to continuously surface why users aren't converting, something analytics (which show where people drop but never why) cannot.

Grounding optimization in observed behavior rather than opinions or assumptions, the growth leader turns usability testing into a cheap, fast engine for finding and fixing conversion-killing friction.
Failure modes to watch. Relying on analytics that show where users drop but not why; asking opinions in surveys instead of observing behavior; assuming the team's familiarity with the product reflects a new user's experience; and skipping usability testing on key flows where friction costs conversions.

Synonyms & antonyms

Synonyms

usability testinguser testing

Antonyms

opinion surveyanalytics-only

Origin & history

Usability testing observes real users attempting real tasks to surface where they struggle; a cornerstone of user-centered design and CRO, it reveals friction through behavior that surveys and analytics alone cannot explain.

Etymology: source.

Usage trends

Search interest for this term over the last five years:

View interest-over-time on Google Trends →

Common questions

What is usability testing?
A research method where real users attempt real tasks with a product or prototype while observed, to find where they struggle, get confused, or fail — revealing usability problems through behavior.
Why is usability testing better than surveys?
It watches what people actually do rather than what they say; many usability problems can't be articulated in a survey and are invisible to a team too close to the product, but obvious when you watch a real user struggle.
How many sessions do you need?
Even a handful of sessions reliably surfaces the most significant usability problems — usability testing is cheap and fast relative to the friction it uncovers.

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Resources & people to follow

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Disciplines

Areas of marketing where usability testing is a core concern:

Sources

  1. trendsGoogle Trends — "usability testing"