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blog B|P Livin' Deep Thoughts News

B|P + FB = OMG

b|p + fb = omg

It turns out the Facebook design team is a great place for smart researchers.

For more than ten years, Bolt | Peters has worked with our clients (plus a robot and clay dinosaurs) to improve the design of their sites, apps, devices, video games, and cars. We did that with 238 projects, 24 talks, 18 articles, 11 events, 1 book, 19 weird videos, and 1 app.

But the time has come for our next adventure — at Facebook. The consulting practice of Bolt | Peters will be closing operations on June 22nd, 2012.

While we’ll miss working with our amazing clients, we’re stoked about Facebook’s commitment to user experience, and the design team is a critical part of this.

What about ethnio?

Last week we announced that after five years of growth, ethnio deserved to be its own company. That has not changed. Ethnio remains committed to supporting its customers with real-time research recruiting and more. We know Ethnio is in good hands with some of the people who have worked on it for years at the helm. I will no longer be working there, but will retain ownership. You can find out more about the new team at ethnio and who will be running it by following @ethnio or watching their blog.

User Research Friday and 1197

I’m thrilled to say that our friends at User Interface Engineering will be taking over User Research Friday. They pretty much rule at events. URF lives on. And the fine folks at the New York Soho Gallery for Digital Art will be taking over our mobile photography conference, 1197. Basically, both our product and the events that we’ve enjoyed putting on will live on after Bolt | Peters closes up shop.

Feel free to get in touch with us with any questions, and you can keep up with all of us individually here. Our VP, Cyd Harrell, deserves 100% of the credit for running the consulting side of the business for the past six years. She rules. Thank you, Cyd. And a huge thanks to my co-founder Craig Peters, who has been a friend and advisor for years. But especially, all the team at Bolt | Peters past and present that I’ve had the pleasure of working with – you’ve made our success possible. Thank you guys.

Well. It’s been our privilege to be a part of the the interaction design and UX community as a consulting firm since January, 2002, and we plan to continue to work in that community as part of Facebook. I want to mention that this decision did not come lightly. Our clients, colleagues, team, and advisors are simply the best. They are our partners. They are our friends. And we sincerely thank you.

– Nate Bolt

Categories
blog ethnio Live Recruiting

Ethnio gets shouted out

The fine folks at Conversion Rate Experts have just posted a blog entry about web tools that help you learn why users abandon your site, and both B|P and Ethnio get shout-outs:

Ideally you want to interview your visitors who aren’t customers yet. That’s where Ethnio comes to the rescue…

Ethnio provides an easy way of adding a pop-up survey to your website, which asks your visitors if they’d like to participate in a usability test. You can customize the survey, so you can ask them details about themselves, such as why they visited your site and whether this is their first visit.

This is all about the pragmatic side of remote research: naturally, getting to know your users is critical for understanding why they’re leaving your site. Using a tool like Ethnio helps ensure that the people you’re talking to actually represent your users. Need a refresher course on live recruiting? I got your Ethnio right here, hombre.

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blog Live Recruiting

When Live Really Means Live

A couple weeks ago, we were doing research onsite at a client’s office. We had an audience of about 10 and we were live recruiting. It was a high traffic site and we were catching most users within 5 minutes. The interviews were good, but since the focus was on form filling and error message handling, we decided nothing could replace seeing users encounter the pages for the very first time.

So for the last few, we decided to go really, really live. We wouldn’t call a user more than 30 seconds after they filled out the screener, and instead of scrolling back up the list, we’d sit and wait for a qualified user to come in, each time.

We felt a little funny sitting there not doing anything for minutes at a time…and we found out a lot about our clients’ weekends, kids, and hobbies as we all sat watching the response screen, ready to pounce (actually, that was fun). But the quality of the truly live intercept interviews was unparalleled. Users stumbled, reacted to minor issues, and hardly ever said “I would think this” or “I would do that.” Because they were really doing it, right then.

A great reminder about why we do things this way, and how it’s worth it to wait to catch someone “really” live.

Categories
blog Misc

What We Did On Our Summer Vacation

A month since our last post…you might imagine a bunch of researchers lounging on a beach in an obscure archipelago, unreachable even by IM.

…but no, in the last month we’ve wrapped 8 research projects, including the most technically complex (and probably coolest) project in the history of the firm and the fastest project in the history of the firm. We had a great time.

Now, we just need a few drinks with umbrellas (to make up for what we missed on that unlisted island we didn’t go to) and we’ll be back in the blog saddle very soon!

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blog Live Recruiting

Peering into the Users’ Technological Ecosystem

Of course by now everyone knows what we mean by “Live Recruits” – they’re usability recruits that we snag when they’re in the midst of visiting the website we’re testing. It’s most often done through mini-surveys on a DHTML overlay (not a popup!). If someone fills out our survey and they’re a match for our target quotas, they’re contacted and interviewed immediately. There’s no scheduling participants and no lag time between the time when a participant is on a site and when they’re interviewed. We talk to them about the tasks they were already doing: no make believe required. It’s the closest way we’ve figured out to observing users interact with a design in their real life circumstances, without artificial barriers of the lab.

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Best Practices blog

Product Detail is King

Just this week, we’ll be presenting the same usability finding that has come out of three separate studies. We’ve been calling the finding “Product Detail is King.”

Crown!It may sound obvious, but when users are looking at products online — whether it’s software, healthcare, or crockpots – detailed information about the products is of utmost importance. And a user’s success in finding that fine level of detail can truly make or break whether they have a positive experience on the site.

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blog Live Recruiting

This is Not a Dress Rehearsal

In this business we like to say that the person with the freshest eyes has a perspective that is the least tainted. So as the new kid at Bolt | Peters, I thought I’d talk about my take on this whole remote usability thing.

When I first talked to Cyd about how B|P recruits participants in real time, while they’re in the midst of the task we’re actually looking to test, it was a total eureka moment for me. I realized that live recruiting was a brilliant answer to a pain point I hardly realized I had as a usability moderator.

The way it works is, we throw up a DHTML overlay inviting users to participate directly from the website we’re testing. If we’re testing just a single page or sub-section of a site, we recruit from there. Without moving away from what they’re doing, users answer a little questionnaire, which we use to pre-qualify them. We only call users who meet the recruiting requirements. If we’re fast, we can have users on the phone for the study within minutes of filling out the questionnaire. It’s the ultimate in low maintenance recruiting!

Not only is there no pre-session phone interview, no phone tag, no scheduling users, no emailing out confirmations to remind them to show up where and when they said they would. But you actually get real users, who have experience with the site you’re dealing with. They don’t have to fake it.

I can’t tell you how many marginally-qualified people I’ve moderated in the past and what a drag it can be. In the past, whenever I’ve recruited users to bring them into a lab, I would spend the first part of every session getting the user “in the zone.” “Have you ever posted pictures on the Internet? No? Well, could you imagine a situation where you might want to post pictures some day??” It was like being an acting coach, trying to warm up the user and get them into their role. “Imagine you’re an IT manager and you actually do care about purchasing enterprise software.”

A lot of the users I tested were a little too good at getting into role. Since most of the recruiting was done using Craigslist ads, I’m afraid I had some professional participants on my hands. There seems to be an entire population that’s earning a livelihood from the ETC section of Craigslist. Their unique skill is in working the focus group and usability testing system; the higher the incentive offered, the more they would be able to elaborate on their “qualifications.”

Of course there is something to be said for the adage that any average Joe should be able to navigate your site. And testing with a Craigslist professional is better than no testing at all. But it’s a very different game when you test with real users. Especially when you catch them very close to the task you’re most interested in learning about. People are relaxed and at ease, and their behaviors are an open book. They don’t need to rehearse; they just need to be themselves.

When we call them up, users often seem pleasantly surprised at actually “winning” something off one of those pop-up boxes (We do offer 75 Amazon bucks for participating). It’s like they’re the subject of a reality TV spot for the duration of the interview. Since they’re in their own space, users sometimes try to multi-task while they’re on the line with us. We see this as a definite plus. We’re peeping into the messiness of their everyday lives and unpredictable online habits. This gives us insights into their actual experience that we just couldn’t get any other way.

One question I did have at the beginning was about whether people would really drop everything, in the middle of their work day to do a 45-minute usability session? What I learned after just a few sessions is that the answer is almost always: “For 75 bucks? You betcha.” That much hasn’t changed. “Lemme just close my office door here, and I’d be glad to talk with you…”

Categories
blog ethnio

No More Ethnio Trials or Demos … for Now.

We’ve stopped issuing new Ethnio accounts for the next six months while we make the product amazing instead of promising but buggy. We’ve had an amazing amount of interest, and three million people have viewed Ethnio live recruiting screeners, but we’re not content with selling a product that’s mediocre. We want more. Mike and Nate want to build the best moderated research web app ever. So we’re taking time to fix bugs and incorporate new functionality. This army of two people has been focusing on support, sales, and maintenance instead of our ideals, and so we’re taking this break to give you a new Ethnio. Read the bloggy blog for updates on our progress, and as always, we’d love to hear from you.