UX flow and user story map

Day 6 of 30 · Generative AI 2026: Build AI Apps and Agents

One-liner: Map the end to end user flow for your MVP.
Time: 20 to 30 min
Deliverable: User Story Map and Flow Steps

Learning goal

You will be able to: Create a clear user flow that matches the MVP scope.

Success criteria (observable)

  • The flow covers start to finish for the main task.
  • The story map includes key steps and outcomes.
  • The flow matches the promise and MVP scope.

Output you will produce

  • Deliverable: User Story Map and Flow Steps
  • Format: Flow list plus story map
  • Where saved: Course folder under /generative-ai-2026-build-ai-apps-and-agents/

Who

Primary persona: Digital nomad designing user flow Secondary persona(s): Target users Stakeholders (optional): Collaborators

What

What it is

A simple path from start to outcome with the steps a user must take. It shows the minimum screens and actions to deliver the promise.

What it is not

It is not a full UI design or pixel perfect mockup.

2-minute theory

  • Clear flows reduce ambiguity for what to build next.
  • Story maps reveal missing steps and gaps in the journey.
  • A short flow improves onboarding and completion.

Key terms

  • User flow: The sequence of steps a user follows to achieve an outcome.
  • Story map: A structured list of steps and tasks.

Where

Applies in

  • UX planning
  • Feature sequencing

Does not apply in

  • Low level styling work

Touchpoints

  • Signup
  • Upload or input screen
  • Results screen

When

Use it when

  • MVP scope is defined
  • You are planning the first build

Frequency

Once per product, update with feedback

Late signals

  • Users get stuck in onboarding
  • You add screens without a clear outcome

Why it matters

Practical benefits

  • Faster implementation
  • Better user experience
  • Fewer missing steps

Risks of ignoring

  • Confusing product flow
  • Rework during development

Expectations

  • Improves: clarity and usability
  • Does not guarantee: conversion

How

Step-by-step method

  1. Define the start state and end outcome.
  2. List the 5 to 8 key steps.
  3. Write a story map with tasks under each step.
  4. Validate each step against the promise.

Do and don't

Do

  • Keep steps simple and sequential
  • Tie each step to a user outcome

Don't

  • Add steps just to show features
  • Skip the validation step

Common mistakes and fixes

  • Mistake: Flow has missing inputs. Fix: Add a step for required input.
  • Mistake: Too many steps. Fix: Remove non essential steps.

Done when

  • Flow has a clear start and finish.
  • Story map includes tasks for each step.
  • Each step maps to the promise.

Guided exercise (10 to 15 min)

Inputs

  • MVP scope list
  • Product promise

Steps

  1. Write the start and end state.
  2. List the steps in order.
  3. Add tasks under each step.

Output format

Field Value
Start state
Steps
End outcome
Risks

Pro tip: If a step does not change the user state, remove it.

Independent exercise (5 to 10 min)

Task

Remove one step and see if the outcome still holds.

Output

Revised flow list with a short note.

Self-check (yes/no)

  • Is the flow start and finish clear?
  • Are steps in a logical order?
  • Is each step needed for the outcome?
  • Does it match the MVP scope?

Baseline metric (recommended)

  • Score: 3 of 4 checks met
  • Date: 2026-02-06
  • Tool used: Notes app

Bibliography (sources used)

  1. User Story Mapping. Jeff Patton. 2024-01-01. Read: https://jpattonassociates.com/user-story-mapping/

  2. Lean UX. Jeff Gothelf. 2024-01-01. Read: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/lean-ux/9781449311650/

Read more (optional)

  1. UX Flow Basics Why: Simple patterns for first product flows. Read: https://www.nngroup.com/articles/user-flows/
Day 6: UX flow and user story map | Generative AI 2026: Build AI Apps and Agents | Amanoba