Thursday, March 13, 2008

:: Converting user research participants into brand evangelists

User research has many benefits. Obviously, qualitative behavioral research is intended to yield insights to aid design of intuitive applications. However, many overlook the possible marketing applications of user research studies. Consider, your client is paying you to learn about the brand so that you can effectively market the brand. These two objectives do not have to be siloed. As long as research studies are unbiased, positive results can be turned into marketing opportunities for your client. Research provides opportunities and a platform to reach customers and potential customers. Here are three ways to maximize this reach to convert participants into "brand evangelists:"

1. Carefully screen and target research participants - In order to ensure reliable research studies, participants must be screened to be relevant to client business objectives and likely consumers of your client's business and services. If participants meet target demographics, and are particularly receptive to client brand messages, there is potential to convert these participants into customers. (Note: ethical boundaries should prohibit researchers from biasing or disguising a study as a marketing ploy...however, researchers often hear enthusiastic responses to the brand in conducted studies, and may pursue opportunities to market to participants after studies have concluded)

2. Create a "Beta Test" population for community applications - One effective means of observing user behavior is watching actual community interaction over time. When testing
and launching a "community" it is possible to use research dollars to recruit a "beta community." In essence, you are paying participant to "jump-start" a community (for observational study, at first). Community "uptake" generally starts "grassroots." If you create a compelling and intuitive suite of tools, and community makes sense for your client's brand and business, your beta test population (of carefully screened and targeted test participants) may help the community to succeed.

3. Always ask study participants about their impressions of the brand- It is important to observe how a participant's impressions of a client's brand change pre and post-exposure to the application being tested. A research study provides you, the researcher, a valuable audience to proposed ideas and expression of your client's brand. You must use this platform to inspire your participants to give thoughtful consideration of the brand. This act of "putting brand X into mind" may have the effect of shifting your participant's thinking and changing your participant's behavior "outside of the laboratory."


Jonathan Lupo
VP / Information Architecture - Empathy Lab