Usability testing is one of the most effective ways to evaluate how real people interact with your product. By observing users as they complete tasks, you can identify pain points, improve efficiency, and increase overall satisfaction.
In this 2025 guide, you’ll learn:
Usability testing is a research method where participants use your product while researchers observe and take notes. The aim is to uncover usability issues and improve the design based on real behaviour, not assumptions.
1. Moderated Testing, A facilitator guides participants through tasks and asks follow-up questions.
2. Unmoderated Testing, Participants complete tasks on their own, often remotely and recorded for later review.
3. Remote Testing, Conducted online, allowing for a geographically diverse participant pool.
4. In-Person Testing, Takes place on-site, giving researchers more control and the ability to observe non-verbal cues.
5. A/B Testing, Compares two design variations to see which performs better.
Userlytics, Remote usability testing with video, voice, and screen recording.
ContentSquare, Visual analytics to spot hesitation points, engagement patterns, and drop-offs.
Hotjar, Heatmaps, click tracking, and session recordings to identify friction areas.
Optimal Workshop, Card sorting and tree testing to validate information architecture.
Miro / FigJam, Collaboration platforms for mapping findings and running remote workshops.
Usability testing in 2025 is faster, more accessible, and more insightful than ever — but its core value hasn’t changed: learning directly from real users. Whether remote or in-person, it remains a vital step in creating user-centred products.