Listening Labs
Not sure how many of you out there have been a part of usability studies or testing. My personal opinion is that “studies” put people in contrived situations and expect them to yield real-world data about how they are interacting with products.
This research is inherently faulty. Why? Namely because when asked, the natural response is for people to tell a researcher (or “expert”) what they think they want to hear.
Funny enough, Harry Beckwith covers this very, very well in his book The Invisible Touch.
I just watched one of Robert Scoble’s early interviews at his new FastCompany.tv gig with Mahalo founder Jason Calacanis. It’s not secret I’m a big Jason fan, and I think the Mahalo product is outstanding; in fact, it has replaced Google as my homepage.
The whole interview (parts 1 and 2) are really worth watching. However, about 13 minutes in to the first segment, they interview Mahalo’s Director of User Experience. He talks specifically about what i started this post discussing. His insights about what Mahalo does are fascinating - check it out:
To follow this up, Eric has created a Mahalo page with his insights and information about user testing. This is fascinating stuff, and I hope it can bring some additional depth to your product development process in the future.