User Research : Collective as focus group

Collective as the focus group

Focus group is a powerful tool in qualitative marketing research. A focus group is a form of qualitative research in which a group of people is asked about their perceptions, opinions, beliefs, and attitudes towards a product, service, concept, advertisement, idea, or packaging. Questions are asked in an interactive group setting where participants are free to talk with other group members.

Online focus groups
Online focus group is a survey method to collect the views of users on software products. This marketing method can be applied to software products to understand the motivations of users and their perception of the product.

Online focus groups give market researchers access to superior data quality through means that cannot be accessed with traditional methods, including online anonymity, greater client involvement, immediate transcript access and precise moderator control. Used as a complementary service to traditional focus groups, online focus groups can provide a domestic or international forum more efficiently and at a much lower cost than face-to-face research.

Bulletin Board Focus Groups has the ability to set up online focus group where invited members can respond with information at their convenience (asynchronous), set up a profile page, upload media, fill out a diary, answer opinion polls, respond to or post discussion threads and participate in breakout focus groups, based on their segments or comments. A long range Bulletin Board can last from 3 weeks to 8 months depending on what is being observed, tested, or discussed. The online focus group model does work—but it may be less relevant in a fast-paced online social environment. Focus groups through Social Networking may not be a 100% replacement for focus groups or bulletin boards. There are plenty of good tools available for online focus groups or bulletin boards. A good researcher knows when to make time for the right method, and ends up with the best results.

Collective as the Focus group

Design management enables designers to be involved in all phases of the market research. Design is an integral part of marketing strategy. Analyzing customer needs and market trends are essential competencies for managing complex design projects. Many design-driven projects limit front-end analysis to market research, focus groups, or concept demonstrations. While these approaches are necessary, they overlook the opportunity for designing from understanding the user’s authentic experience. Innovation emerges from truly understanding the fit between product and person.

Design management can address customer and product end-user relevancies in unique and detailed ways, design manager can have a voice in articulating challenges, framing market strategy and designing approaches, thereby influencing outcomes. In tactical context, a design management can enhance product value and influence customer experience. Armed with salient user research, the design manager can offer a unique and valuable strategic perspective to business.

In Google, the organization solely depends on the user needs. Users cannot necessarily articulate to Google, their requirements. Interestingly, this problem gets worse as users become more advanced. Google as part of the user research learned, with too many search features, users suffer due to complexity. Hence, they tend to use Google less for search purpose. Google therefore focuses on providing ease and speed for its users, so that they do not necessarily stay on the website longer , but return to the Google site more frequently for their everyday queries.

Designers tend to focus intently and address deep structural human needs, wants, and desires–a categorical substrate that bridges gender, culture, geography, and time. In Brand design management the brand is the core, which results in a strong focus on the brand experience, customer touch points, and reliability, recognition, and trust relations. It is responsible for the visual expressions of the individual product brand, with its diverse customer–brand touch points and the execution of the brand through design.

With many Web 2.0 applications, companies can now tap into “the collective” on a greater scale than ever before. Indeed, the increasing use of information markets, social networks, collaborative software, and other Web-based tools constitutes a paradigm shift in the way that companies make design related decisions.

The new breeds of leaders in organizations driven by design rely not only on reliable, predictable business-as-usual models. These leaders have also harnessed an ability to be able to interpret anecdotal research, to allow customers insights and comments to influence their product and services design decisions.

Conroy (2008) pointed out that an insight is a statement based on a deep understanding of target consumers’ attitudes and beliefs, which connect at an emotional level with consumer, provoking a clear response .

Design management ensures designers to contribute early in decision-making process of the project. Designers need to make important design related decisions based on insights for consumers. Online social networking communities offer an interactive channel to communicate and develop relationships with customers by engaging them in meaningful conversation through the complete marketing research phases. The collective characteristics are similar to that of online focus group.

As social media continues to evolve, we are seeing a shift in marketing techniques from traditional methods, to interactive techniques. Focus groups are a perfect example of this trend. In the past, focus groups were conducted by companies through gathering together a very targeted group of people (in person, at a physical location) to discuss a brand or product, and then the feedback was then analyzed and passed back along to the company. These focus groups usually took weeks to plan, if not longer, and one of the hardest parts was getting all of the participants together in the same room, at the same time.

Now, with the emergence of social media, more and more companies are turning to social networking tools to create online focus groups, including Walt Disney, Coca Cola, and Proctor & Gamble. Social networks, such as MySpace and Facebook, allow companies to target specific segments of their target market, through demographic profiling.

A holistic look at social media and its core shows a tremendous amount of value in leveraging its conversations for engaging consumers and cultivating rich insights in the qualitative setting. Rich and candid insights provided in real-time via digital ethnography and social media engagement.

Another benefit to using social networks to develop focus groups, is that by engaging your potential customers, you are not only gaining valuable insight from them, but you are forming a relationship with them, which increases customer loyalty, customer lifetime value, and decreases attrition. Customers are providing ample feedback for the engagement from the companies they purchase products and services.

Another very valuable and growing capability for social media is identification of digital influence and recruiting potential. By thorough observation of conversations, comments, responses, retweets, “likes” and other engagement metrics, designers can begin to identify individuals or groups, portraying influence in the social media channels. Designers look for needs, not solutions. Needs last longer than any specific solution. Needs are a road map for development that make research and design management seamless.

Service Design is the activity of planning and organizing people, infrastructure, communication, and material components of a service, in order to improve its quality, the interaction between service provider, customers, and the customer’s experience.

The activity of service design is analyzed not only from a functional perspective with the aim of optimizing flows and resources and reducing time of operations but also from the emotional perspective which creating meaningful events, motivating customers, communicating the service.

A customer experience in a service context is an ongoing relationship defined by multiple touch points. These touch points, must engage all senses, evolve over time, and contain both functional and emotional elements. Customer experience design shall use well-articulated brand values for the customer experience. This should be expressed in terms of a customer need, not a business need. Gaining empathy hinges on good observation skills and understanding not just fundamental use and usability needs, but also the customer’s meaning-based needs. Social media enables designers to obtain candid insights and probe further among “in the moment” thoughts and reactions to various stimuli from the collective. Social media monitoring and engagement offered new ways to mine insights that have never been available and provided valuable information to help build and design products and services.

Listen
There are so many ways to listen to what is being said about your company, product, brand, service and most importantly, related passions. There are a number of tools like Radian 6, Collective Intellect, or Nielson Buzz Metrics, which will uncover and analyze what people are saying both inside of communities and on the open web. For recently launched Pampers Village community, Critical Mass collaborated with Live world, which helps us both listen to and moderate user interactions in the community. Trending topics on Twitter can also be used as an indicator for what people are talking about is called social sniffing.Designers might use ethnographic research techniques and tools like digital cameras and video recorders to capture insights.

The active participation of customers and other actors traditionally considered as external to a firm’s boundary emphasize the need for a proper design activity that organizes the interaction among those actors, thus planning sequences of events, material and information flows. Listening through the life of a campaign or initiative yields insights toward attitudes and identifies who has influence and where the most fertile grounds are to engage consumers digitally.

Google is now conducting focus groups to gather information about consumers’ social habits. The questions focus around social networking as it relates both to real life (offline) and online. Interestingly, this line of questioning also seems to reflect Google’s social strategy and analysis that was unveiled by Paul Adams, Google’s lead user-experience researcher. Other questions in the survey ask which search engines the participant uses and how often, which instant messaging platforms they use, and which Google products they use.

Learn
Pilot initiatives can be quickly launched using prototype methodologies. We will typically perform “rapid design labs” engaging multiple stakeholders across multidisciplinary teams. Designers can prototype new service delivery methods like an interactive map or questionnaire and test them early when failure may not have massive cost impact. In a class of 53 startups presenting at DEMO’s spring 2011 conference in Palm Springs, Gut Check do-it-yourself qualitative research company took home the People’s Choice award and $1 million in winnings. The startup’s mission is to make focus groups more accessible and affordable. GutCheck customers draw from the service’s pool of five million participants for targeted questioning. Then they interview respondents in a traditional question-and-answer survey format, or something more free form. Interview transcripts are stored and can be shared with co-workers.

Adapt
In order to glean both strategic and tactical insights organizations have to be nimble enough to measure what is working, what is not and make adjustments. Analytics play a big role in this—again throughout the whole process. From helping to identify sentiment to measuring the effectiveness of a campaign or initiative, the science behind marketing provides insights into how to move forward. Real Time social analytics is performed for faster insights and more focused customer engagements. In order to adapt properly the team needs to think like “digital anthropologists” sifting through the quantitative data that analytics can provide and pulling insights from the qualitative inputs as described in social sniffing.

Emotional components in Managing Design

There needs to be an emotional component as well—a source of inspiration that motivates users and has to be managed.

Designers, design researchers, and design thinkers suggest that role of emotions in design is vital component in the design management discipline. All products affect the emotions of users—emotionally neutral products do not exist. A steady growth in design research has been published that focuses on understanding the emotions of product users, and on the development of tools and techniques that facilitate an emotion-focused design process. Consumers are buying products to the experiences and emotions conveyed by products. Any design will elicit emotions from users, or convey emotions from its designer. The objective is to identify tools, methods, or insights that would help designers to design better by understanding and dealing with the effects of design on the emotions of the user. Any design decision can create a kind of unexpected and unwanted emotional side effect. An understanding of user emotions can help the designer to anticipate these emotional effects and therefore to avoid the ones that are unwanted.

While in the past design focused on products, our new challenge is to focus on people. An understanding of perceptions and the emotional connections people form with products and services is critical factors in advancing the practice of design.The first motivation in managing emotional component was to prevent unwanted effects and the second was to stimulate intended user responses. Organizations shall manage to stage rich and compelling user experiences as part of design management. Consumers shift from buying products to the experiences and emotions conveyed by the products. Users feel inadequate and frustrated by poor design (poorly developed user interfaces)

Schmitt (1999) introduced the concept of experiential marketing, transforming the then-popular features-and-benefits approach into one that focused on sensory responses and emotions. Schmitt stressed that emotions are key to developing new products, communicating with costumers, and in creating business partnerships as part of design management. Gaver, Dunne, and Pacenti (1999) introduced cultural probes, a research method that enables designers to obtain contextualized and rich insights into the experiences of difficult-to-reach user groups. Design management Research and Strategy shall be designed to model and understand the users who purchase and use the product whether it is a physical product, a software application, or a website.

Methods and deliverables as part of the managing emotions in design are

  • Competitive Analysis
  • Experience Maps
  • Personas
  • Stakeholder Interviews
  • Usability Testing
  • User Interviews
  • User Research

The overall user experience is a function of a mix of different types of positive and negative emotions. Therefore, it is important for the designers to understand the relationship between the benefits they design into a product and the nature of the user experience as determined by its emotional content.
Teague is celebrating its 80-year anniversary as well as the legacy of founder Walter Dorwin Teague. Walter Teague was dedicated to furthering the role of design in everyday life and played a pivotal role in establishing design as it has become today.
Walter Dorwin Teague was a true pioneer; He understood the importance of emotion and believed the ultimate goal was to create a pleasurable experience for the users of the objects we design.

As the President and CEO of Teague, John Barratt is responsible for positioning the company for future success and building upon Teague’s rich heritage. When it comes to the product, sparks should fly. People make purchase decisions instantaneously. In a matter of seconds, they have a good idea of whether there is right fit. . Today, understanding the sense behind the sparks requires new thinking, new techniques, and new ways of getting close to your audience in order to come up with breakthrough ideas and strategies.

787-interior
787-interior

The new interior design for the new Boeing 787 Dream liner was done by Teague. It looks like something completely out of the ordinary airplane interiors. Passenger well-being, on both an emotional and physical level, relies heavily on collaborative and research-orientated design practices. In designing the highly anticipated 787 Dream liner, Teague and Boeing employed a variety of design research techniques to determine the needs and desires of commercial travelers the world over. Defining and responding to the collective needs and desires of air travelers fueled the design process, permitting new, unconventional ideas to flourish and succeed in an industry renowned for strict standards. The results surpassed expectations.
Teague endlessly validated and iterated full scale models, it sent teams across the globe in flight to directly connect to the current experience, Teague employed new research techniques across cultures, engaged in cross-team integration. Teague considered every single element that consumers would meet and we did it persistently with passion over a period of many years.
The Dodge Super8 Hemi’s interior conveys a certain nostalgic optimism expressed in a modern, purposeful. The design team borrowed design cues from cars of the ’50s, but other evocative aspects from that era, such as jukeboxes and diners. The concept’s bold, in-your-face design shows ability to embrace love for the sedan and meld it with invigorating execution and technological advancement.

DODGE SUPER 8 HEMI
DODGE SUPER 8 HEMI

The Dodge Super8 Hemi embodies the culture and essence of American optimism, said Freeman Thomas, Vice President – Advanced Design Strategy, DaimlerChrysler Corporation. One big trend again is retro, or nostalgia, going back to the past, and detail oriented. The other direction is going back-to-basics. Basics means very clean, very structured. The concept’s high-tech interior features stand in accord with its expressive exterior. The Dodge Super8 Hemi is equipped with an internet-based, multi-passenger Infotronic system, which accommodates data and information needs for driver and passengers. The goal of the Infotronic system is to provide information and entertainment services that meet the lifestyle of each individual driver or passenger.