Experience Research Best Practices - UX Meet Up Boston 2013 - Dan Berlin
1. September 19, 2013
Dan Berlin
Experience Research Director
dberlin@madpow.net
@banderlin
Mad*Pow
EXPERIENCE RESEARCH BEST PRACTICES
2. Hi! I’m Dan Berlin @banderlin
BA in psychology from Brandeis U.
Studied visual space perception
Seven years in technical support
Sat as a participant for a usability study for a product I was working on
Realized that user experience (UX) work is the perfect combination of computers and psychology
Went to Bentley U. to earn an MBA and MS in Human Factors in Information Design
Two years at an interactive agency performing usability and neuromarketing research
Then did some freelance UX consulting for about a year
Am now an Experience Research Director at Mad*Pow, an experience design agency based out of
Portsmouth, NH
My passion is for research methodology and finding new ways to elicit data from participants
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3. About this Presentation
Understanding your research goals
Formative and evaluative studies
How to choose the right method(s)
Methods chart
Gathering qualitative data
Taking notes and organizing findings
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5. Understanding Your Research Goals
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Preparing to prepare for your study
Technology
User
Needs
Business
Goals
Your overall goal:
To uncover actionable business and
design insights via user data
Start by understanding the business’ goals
What is the overall goal of the interface?
What are the interactions that drive the business?
What are the important calls to action?
Who are the target audiences?
What do they want to know about their users?
What do they think they already know about their users
How did they learn this?
6. Understanding Your Research Goals
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Preparing to prepare for your study
Actionable = the data should indicate what exactly needs to change or be implemented in
the interface to align it with users’ expectations and needs
This means you need to start with actionable (and attainable) goals, such as:
How do perform a certain interaction today?
Does the proposed IA align with user expectations?
Are users able to complete a critical transaction?
Do users understand the pricing schedule?
Goals will depend on the type of study
Formative
Performed at the beginning of a project to learn how the project should proceed
Evaluative
Performed during and towards the end of projects to determine if the design aligns with user expectations
9. How to Choose the Right Method(s)
Make sure your research goals are clear
Know what you want to learn
Know what you will do with the information you gather
Know what decisions the business needs to make
Know your constraints
Timeline?
Resources?
Budget?
Access to Users?
Create a Methods Chart
The answers will become clear
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Know Goals and Constraints
10. How to Choose the Right Method(s)
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Method Pros Cons Candidate
Method 1 • List the advantages for
this method for this
specific project
• List the disadvantages
for this method for this
specific project
Yes / No –
Would this method be a
good candidate for this
specific project
Method 2
Method 3
Etc…
Methods Chart
11. How to Choose the Right Method(s)
Example Project Goals:
Have 3 concepts for behavior change application. Which one is the best to
develop for maximum global appeal?
Client wants answers as quickly as possible
Client wants large numbers to provide confidence behind decision
Client wants data collection in 5 countries around the world
Designers want to know why or why not users chose each concept, to
provide additional design direction
User population – adults who own a smart phone and want to get healthier
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Methods Chart
12. Methods Chart Example
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Method Pros Cons Candidate
Interviews • Good for capturing
motivations for behavior
change
• Can get good qualitative
details on why users
prefer each concept or
not
• Good to explore issues to
fine tune survey
questions
• Can be done via phone
(get broad geographic
sample)
• Can be done quickly
• Small numbers – client
wants large numbers
Y – would be good as a
qualitative method to pair
with a larger quantitative
method
Focus Groups • Good for qualitative
information gathering
• Could generate some
interesting conversations
about behavior change
motivations
• Wouldn’t get as much
detail as interviews
• Concern about group
think when evaluating
concepts
• Concern about not
sharing details of
personal goals in front of
others
N – interviews would be
better for qualitative
Survey • Good for large numbers
• Easily replicated across
different
countries/languages
• Can be done online for
broad geographic
distribution
• Can be done quickly
• Unclear what exact
questions to ask
• Doesn’t provide detailed
insights into qualitative
topics
Y – good paired with
qualitative method
13. How to Choose the Right Method(s)
Example Research Plan:
Conduct telephone interviews in US with 12-15 participants
Create online survey in US for 300 participants
Use international research partners to conduct 12-15 interviews in 4
countries
Use international research partners to conduct survey for 300 participants
in same 4 countries
Why this approach works:
Interviews provide input into questions for survey
Survey provides large numbers; interviews provide in-depth insight
Both are commonly used methods and easy to replicate in different
countries
Both methods can be done quickly
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Methods Chart
15. Gathering Qualitative Data
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Usability Task Creation
Good usability study tasks are:
Non-leading: don’t give away the answer
Single tasks: don’t have users do two things in succession
Realistic: don’t have users do things they would not normally do
Self-explanatory: don’t have multiple sentences explaining the task
Achievable: always document what constitutes a “pass” for the task
16. Gathering Qualitative Data
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Moderator’s Guide
A good study guide:
Conveys the study goals and methodology to clients
Serves as a quick reference to the moderator during the study
Provides the moderator with a template to take hand-written notes, with ample space to
do so
The typical moderator’s guide contains:
Research method: a short paragraph explaining the usability study
Study goals: a short bulleted list of the study goals
Introduction: the moderator’s opening spiel when explaining the study to the participant
Background questions: Typically demographic or product usage questions
Tasks: The task, pass condition(s), notes for the moderator, and post-task questions
Follow-up questions: The questions to be asked after all the tasks are complete
18. Gathering Qualitative Data
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Notes Grid
Proper planning for taking notes is very underrated
The organization and thoroughness of your notes will dictate the ease with which you
will create the final report
Organized, complete notes = easy reporting
Disorganized, incomplete notes = back to the video you go (ewww!)
Make your notes grid once your study & moderator’s guides are complete
Give each question and subquestion its own row
Put each participant in a new column (or vice-versa, if you like)
DO NOT put each participant/task in a new worksheet
Use data validation for quantitative data
Task ease ratings, task success, multiple choice questions, etc.
Always include an extra “Why?” cell for data validated cells (to capture qualitative data related to
the question)
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• Do not include the participant
name in your notes grid
• Include a date/time cell to
best align with the videos
• Visually separate sections of
the study
• Fill data validated cells with a
light color
• Hide columns when you have
moved on to the next
participant
Gathering Qualitative Data
Notes Grid
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Gathering Qualitative Data
Findings Sheet
Scan the notes grid to determine findings
Put these in a spreadsheet and assign and priority and category
21. In Conclusion
Set actionable and attainable research goals
Know where you are in the project
Use a methods chart to weigh factors and choose a method
Time, participants, goals, budget, etc.
Proper documentation = easier qualitative analysis
Study guide notes grid findings spreadsheet report
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