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How to Conduct Stakeholder Interviews for Product Discovery

Auteur n°4 – Mariami

By Mariami Minadze
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Summary – Without structured interviews, product discovery rests on shaky assumptions and lacks direction. By carefully selecting stakeholders (executives for strategic vision, the product trio for feasibility, marketing and support for real-world use), preparing a semi-structured guide and clear logistics, fostering trust, and documenting then qualitatively analyzing feedback, you maximize the relevance and viability of your insights.
Solution: formalize a complete interview process to align vision, anticipate risks, and prioritize efforts on genuine needs.

A robust product discovery relies on stakeholder interviews that go beyond mere formality. These interviews capture key players’ expectations, constraints, risks, and success criteria from the very start of the project. Without structured input from the right stakeholders, discovery all too often depends on fragile assumptions and lacks clear direction.

By conducting well-prepared interviews, you can guide research, align the business vision, anticipate objections, and effectively prioritize efforts. This article outlines how to select, prepare, facilitate, and leverage these interviews to enhance the relevance and viability of your product discovery.

Identifying and Selecting Essential Stakeholders

The value of stakeholder interviews depends on choosing the right participants. Prioritizing internal and external profiles that provide strategic insights helps frame the discovery.

Defining the Scope of Stakeholders

The term “stakeholder” covers a broad scope. Not everyone with an interest in the product is necessarily needed at the initial stage of discovery. To avoid diluting the focus, start by listing the roles directly involved in design, distribution, and support.

An initial list might include executive leadership, the product team, marketing, sales, and customer support. Each profile brings a different perspective to discovery: long-term strategy, market understanding, field objections, and actual usage patterns.

By focusing on these profiles, you can structure the discussions and obtain high-value feedback rather than collecting anecdotal opinions.

Role of Executive Leaders and the Product Team

Executives provide the strategic vision and business objectives. They shed light on how discovery aligns with the overall roadmap, available resources, and financial or regulatory considerations.

The product team—particularly the product trio (product manager, product designer, lead engineer)—guides methodological choices and steers discovery toward testable hypotheses. Their involvement ensures technical feasibility and UX alignment.

Involving this strategic pairing from the outset prevents silos and reduces blind spots, while maintaining consistent alignment throughout the research phase.

Case Study: A Swiss Logistics SME

In a Swiss logistics SME, only the product and marketing teams were initially consulted. This approach uncovered significant gaps between the commercial strategy and operational expectations.

After bringing in a customer support manager, the team discovered recurring on-the-ground friction points that had been overlooked. This inclusion allowed them to prioritize error-prevention features over cosmetic options.

This example demonstrates that comprehensive stakeholder mapping prevents scope creep and grounds discovery in genuine needs.

Preparing the Interview Guide and Organizing Logistics

A successful interview is won before the first question. Designing a semi-structured guide and meticulously planning the sessions ensures productive, comparable discussions.

Creating a Semi-Structured Interview Guide

The interview guide should combine a core set of open-ended questions with role-specific targeted questions. This balance allows you to compare responses while exploring details unique to each stakeholder’s expertise.

The framework can be organized by themes: business objectives, perceived risks, user journey, and technical constraints. Each theme includes open-ended questions to stimulate thinking and uncover blind spots.

It’s essential to also prepare follow-up questions to delve into sensitive or unexpected topics, rather than sticking rigidly to a fixed list.

Anticipating Logistics and Format

Informing participants in advance about the duration, themes, and format of the interview creates transparency. A one-hour time slot remains ideal for in-depth discussion without being overly demanding.

In-person meetings foster connection and non-verbal cues, but the format should adapt to availability and preferences. When remote meetings are unavoidable, ensure high-quality audio and video to maintain engagement and flow.

Finally, grouping interviews within a short time frame preserves analytical coherence and limits scattered feedback.

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Fostering a Trusting Environment and Active Listening

The success of an interview depends on the quality of the exchange and the interviewer’s stance. A supportive environment and active listening elicit honest and profound feedback.

Building a Supportive Psychological Climate

The interview begins with an introduction: the interviewer’s role, discovery objectives, and how the insights will be used. This transparency builds trust and aligns expectations with the process.

A stance of genuine curiosity, non-judgment, and ample time demonstrates empathy. Stakeholders feel respected and are more inclined to share their concerns, including negative ones.

Valuing criticism as constructive input uncovers risk areas and improvement opportunities—essential to enlightened discovery.

Optimizing the Physical and Virtual Setting

Choosing a quiet, private, and distraction-free location fosters concentration. In video calls, ensure a neutral background, good lighting, and clear audio to prevent misunderstandings.

Settling the participant comfortably, without distracting screen shares, allows for sustained eye contact and captures non-verbal cues. This fosters the sense of a privileged exchange.

When possible, offer coffee or an informal break before the interview to help relax the atmosphere and build trust.

Structuring Documentation, Analysis, and Leveraging Insights

Methodically documenting and qualitatively analyzing feedback turns verbatim responses into actionable decisions. A rigorous process ensures stakeholder interviews effectively fuel discovery.

Recording and Focused Note-Taking

To stay focused on the conversation, it’s recommended to record interviews—with the participants’ explicit consent and in compliance with GDPR. Requesting consent reinforces trust and clarifies data usage.

When recording isn’t possible, designate a dedicated note-taker to capture key points. The interviewer can also add a few live annotations to avoid losing track.

Transcribing recordings afterward facilitates qualitative analysis and insights categorization.

Four-Step Qualitative Analysis Methodology

Step one: familiarize yourself with the data by reviewing transcripts and notes, then annotate significant passages. This immersion allows you to quickly identify key points.

Step two: categorize feedback by themes (technical risks, business needs, adoption, organizational constraints). This step structures the material for cross-sectional analysis.

Step three: identify recurring patterns, convergences, and tensions. For example, the same technical risk raised by multiple stakeholders justifies a priority action.

Step four: formulate actionable conclusions by answering key questions: which risks to address immediately, which vision to align, and which hypotheses to validate or invalidate.

Case Illustration: A MedTech Company

A MedTech company had accumulated raw verbatim responses without any methodology. This lack of structure wasted time and diluted the value of the insights.

After applying the four-step logic, the team identified three major adoption barriers and adjusted the discovery roadmap accordingly. Prioritization became clear and ROI-driven.

This case shows that organized analysis turns stakeholder interviews into strong decision-making levers.

Optimize Your Product Discovery with Stakeholder Interviews

Stakeholder interviews, when conducted with care, lay the foundation for solid discovery: selecting the right participants, preparing an appropriate guide and logistics, establishing a trusting environment, asking open-ended questions, and documenting and analyzing rigorously. These best practices refine the product idea, reveal risks, and align vision around shared objectives.

Our experts are available to support you in structuring and facilitating your interviews—from stakeholder identification to insights utilization. Together, let’s build a more informed and effective product discovery.

Discuss your challenges with an Edana expert

By Mariami

Project Manager

PUBLISHED BY

Mariami Minadze

Mariami is an expert in digital strategy and project management. She audits the digital ecosystems of companies and organizations of all sizes and in all sectors, and orchestrates strategies and plans that generate value for our customers. Highlighting and piloting solutions tailored to your objectives for measurable results and maximum ROI is her specialty.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions about stakeholder interviews in product discovery

How do I identify and prioritize the key stakeholders for product discovery?

To choose the key stakeholders, start by mapping out the roles that directly impact the product's design, distribution, and support. Then prioritize those whose strategic vision and on-the-ground feedback will inform the project: executives, the product team, marketing, sales, and customer support. A focused list prevents dispersion and ensures actionable insights, grounding your discovery in real needs rather than assumptions.

What steps should I follow to create a semi-structured interview guide customized for each stakeholder?

Develop a core set of open-ended questions covering business goals, risks, user journeys, and technical constraints. Add targeted questions based on the stakeholder's profile (executive, operational, technical) and prepare follow-up prompts to dive deeper into critical areas. This balanced framework lets you compare feedback while exploring each person's unique perspective, ensuring a comprehensive and insightful analysis.

Which format is best for interviews: in-person or remote?

The choice between in-person and remote interviews depends on your objectives and availability. In-person sessions facilitate reading body language and foster a more natural connection, while remote interviews offer flexibility and faster scheduling. In either case, ensure high-quality audio/video and a distraction-free environment to keep the conversation focused and smooth.

How can I build trust and encourage active listening?

Start each interview with a transparent introduction of your role, the discovery objectives, and how insights will be used. Adopt an empathetic, non-judgmental stance and allow for pauses so the interviewee can fully express themselves. A warm welcome—perhaps over coffee or a brief informal chat before the interview—helps set a relaxed tone and elicits candid feedback.

How do I effectively document and analyze the collected verbatim responses?

Record interviews with GDPR consent or assign a dedicated note-taker. Then transcribe the discussions to facilitate analysis. Use a four-step methodology: familiarization, thematic categorization (risks, needs, adoption), identification of recurring patterns, and formulation of actionable conclusions. This rigorous approach turns raw insights into concrete decisions.

Which KPIs should I track to measure the impact of stakeholder interviews?

To assess impact, track the number of validated or invalidated hypotheses, the coverage rate of identified needs, decision-making speed, and the alignment level observed among teams. You can also measure stakeholder satisfaction and the reduction of negative feedback during testing phases to quantify your interviews' effectiveness.

What mistakes should I avoid in these interviews to preserve their value?

Avoid engaging too many stakeholders without prioritization, asking closed-ended questions, or sticking to a rigid guide. Failing to prepare follow-ups or overlooking each stakeholder's context can skew results. Finally, don't limit the discussion to positives—welcome criticism as well to uncover real risks.

How can I integrate the gathered insights into the product roadmap?

Present your findings in thematic cards for each feature, outlining the associated risks and benefits. Then prioritize actions based on business and technical impact, and hold workshops with the product trio to finalize the plan. This process ensures that interviews inform the roadmap in a structured, aligned manner.

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