#HxR2016
Don’t Fear the Small Numbers
Why a Few Design Research Participants
Can Provide Big Insights
Dan BerlinVP, Experience Research, Mad*[email protected]@banderlin
Susan MercerExperience Research Director, Mad*[email protected]@susanamercer
#HxR2016
Topics
Prevalent requests for large numbers of participantsHow small numbers provide big insightsDetermining the “right” number of participants
#HxR2016
Five to eight users for usability
finds 80-90% of problems
Proportion of Usability Problems Found by Number of Participants
#HxR2016
Usability studies are qualitativePositive: Users were able to find the “Buy Now” button.
3 out of 8 participants mentioned that the picture had no relevance to them.Consider: replacing this with an infographic or another picture that may draw in users.
6 out of 8 participants mentioned that the text in the buttons was hard to read.Consider: increasing the contrast of the text to ease readability.
#HxR2016
Priority Finding RecommendationMedium Participants said that the text was hard to read Increase the contrast of the text
High Participants were unable to locate the product; they said they expected it under Products & Services
Move XYZ product to the Product & Services area
High Participants were unable to discern the top from the bottom of the vial
Include a visual cue as to which is the top and bottom of the vial
Medium Participants were able to figure out how to use the insulin pump, but said that the instructions were very hard to follow
Add detail throughout the instruction manual
Typical Usability Study Results
#HxR2016Source: http://howiechang.com/post/3045331253
Segment Users by Needs
Transactional Informational
#HxR2016
• 12-16 participants per project segment & user group
Discovery Interviews
• 8-10 participants per project segment
Usability Studies
Very General Rules of Thumb