Archive for June, 2007
Watch your customers…literally
I find this all so hard to believe, but it isn’t the first time I’ve heard it: most business leaders/owners don’t spend much time watching and listening to their customers. I was a little shocked when Spout’s research firm – Tec-Ed – told us that they were "pleasantly surprised" when we wanted to sit in on user testing of the site. Surprised? If you are serious about the testing, shouldn’t you be there to hear directly from your users/customers? In a recent newsletter from Mark Hurst of Good Experience, he outlines his reasons you should watch your customers and the value it brings to the entire team:
"Why should we hire you?"
A potential client recently asked me – in not quite those words – what sets the "customer experience" method apart from other user experience and usability vendors she was considering.
I went over the basics of the method – setting business context, conducting customer-led research ("listening labs"), creating a customer-focused strategy – and then I added one more thing.
"While I firmly believe in our method," I said, "our ’secret sauce’ is something really simple. It might even sound trivial, if you haven’t tried it."
The potential client said she was all ears.
"OK," I said, "Here it is, the one thing that most vendors ignore, but we insist upon."
And then I told her:
"We get the stakeholders to watch the labs."
In other words, we get all the decision-makers for the website, or product, or service, to take a full day away from the office to sit in a quiet observation room to **watch customers using their service**. They all watch together, and then they discuss what they observed, after each session.
After more than ten years of customer experience consulting, I’ll tell you confidently that there is no better way to build consensus about improving the customer experience than to get stakeholders to observe customers first-hand, in person, in real time, right in front of them.
Consider some of the barriers that come down, just by getting people to sit in a room together to watch customers:
- "Fiefdoms" disappear. No one argues for their pet feature when they see customers failing (or succeeding) in the same way, session after session.
- Departments talk the same language. IT, marketing, executives, designers all see their customer – in the flesh – the person who pays their salary! – as the person to learn from.
- Everyone sees that customer experience is a *strategic* issue to address, across the whole organization, not a collection of tactical tips ‘n’ tricks for Web developers.
- Perhaps most importantly, stakeholders across the organization understand – from first-hand experience – how important it is to conduct customer research. (It continues to amaze me how few companies ever have any contact with real, live customers.)
Of course, not all customer research is equally effective. My experience is that non-directed research (not highly scripted traditional usability tests) gives the customer the best way to show their experience; and one-on-one research is much more effective in getting honest feedback than focus groups, which are subject to group dynamics and the bias of the facilitator.
But *whatever* method one chooses to use – and they all have their place and their effective use – it’s surprisingly helpful to get the stakeholders there to watch.
To subscribe to Good Experience, visit: http://goodexperience.com/signup.php
Teary eyed…
Link: Four Eyed Monsters » Blog Archive » RE: Four Eyed Monsters.
As of the writing of this post, Spout has added over 28,000 members through a single promotion. I wrote about it a couple of weeks ago…and most likely if you are reading this particular post, you already know about it. The embedded video above is the Four Eyed Monster (and hopefully Spout) community/fan response to the film itself. It is really moving and all has a similar theme: even though we have more ways to communicate with one another, making a real connection with someone may have never been harder. You can see it in everyone’s eyes. The quietness of their words. I am so incredibly happy that we had a part in bring this film to a wider audience. Makes me get a little teary eyed when I think about it. Watch it.
He gets us, he really gets us.
iPhone Competitive data…did I make the right choice?
I was the first on my block to get the new Blackberry Curve the day it hit the local Cingular ATT store. But, after seeing this comparison with the iPhone, gotta wonder if I made the right decision? I could have 2 phones in my life…right?
Via Gizmodo:
The future of media – Prometeus
A little far-fetched, but entertaining and thought-provoking nonetheless…
TED 2007 DVD Archive
Yeah! The TED2007 DVD Archive just arrived in my office. Too cool. I had to watch Rives immediately after opening the box…and Lawrence Lessig and JJ Abrams might be next. Keep checking the TED site for updates to the free videos…unless you know me…and I like you enough to borrow my set of DVDs.
Spout.com presents first full length feature film on YouTube
We are exceptionally pleased at Spout to be presenting the first feature length film to run on YouTube: Four Eyed Monsters. Check out our official press release here and read about our promotion with the makers of this film, Arin Crumley and Susan Buice. If you are interested in a little history about this film, check out their video-podcast about making it and trying to get distribution…all 8 episodes. And, if you haven’t signed up on Spout yet, go here immediately: http://www.spout.com/foureyedmonsters.
Busy, busy, busy at Spout
There are a ton of really cool things happening with Spout this week. Let’s go through the list:
- For the 3rd year in a row, Spout is a proud sponsor of the Waterfront Film Festival in Saugatuck Michigan. Tonight we will be hosting the FREE outside screening of Closer Encounters of the Third Kind…which is really cool considering it is the 30th anniversary of the film.
- Spout also has a great promotion going with the filmmakers responsible for Four Eyed Monsters – Arin Crumley and Susan Buice. For every person that signs up for an account on Spout, we will give Arin and Susan $1.00. Spread this one along to your friends and neighbors…this is a budget we’d like to use up because it is for a good cause.
- BIG BIG news tomorrow as well…but I can’t share it yet…but soon…like tomorrow morning.
So, go to the festival, embed this widget everywhere you can and keep an eye out tomorrow for more news from Spout.
Google Maps Street View

A couple of days ago, Google launched the Street View tool for Maps…and it’s friggin awesome. How many times could you have used some sort of visual cue for the address you just mapped directions to? Street View takes care of that (see image for the Hotel Monaco in Denver…stayed there for the Starz Denver Film Fest).
The coolest feature of this tool has to be the 360 rotation of the image. Click on the image and drag it left or right. Check out the view from Times Square to get the feel for what this tool can do. Oh yeah…you can also zoom into the view (just double-click on the image). Check out the demo here.
The only downside is that there are only 5 cities with data for this feature – Denver, San Francisco, Las Vegas, New York and Miami.




