A deep dive into questions by @cjforms at UxLx

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dive into question s Workshop at UxLx 2014 led by Caroline Jarrett w to ask better questions, and w to assess user experience using surveys

description

How to ask better questions and how to assess UX using surveys. This workshop at UXLX 2014 in Lisbon was a deep dive into two important topics in survey design for user research. We used the four-step model of how people answer questions to work on better questions, then we focused on two special uses of questionnaires in user research: the post-test assessment of satisfaction, and then how to gather information from users for redesign. Thanks to all the attendees for making this workshop a lot of fun. Caroline Jarrett @cjforms

Transcript of A deep dive into questions by @cjforms at UxLx

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A deep diveinto questionsWorkshop at UxLx 2014 led by Caroline Jarrett

How to ask better questions, andhow to assess user experience using surveys

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Introductions(I’m Caroline Jarrett - @cjforms)Work with your neighbour• Your name and role• A random thing about yourself

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Agenda Introductions

How to ask better questions

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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A survey I saw recently

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• How do we know it’s a survey?

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And it continued….

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• I’ll hand out an invitation I received recently by email• Work in pairs• Decide whether it is a survey or something else

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Agenda

Introductions

What is a survey?

How to ask better questions

The steps to answer a question

Improve step 1: read and understand

Improve step 2: find the answer

Improve step 3: judge the answer

Improve step 4: place the answer

Understand why people answer

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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There are four steps to answer a questionStep1. Read and understand

2. Find an answer

3. Judge the answer

4. Place the answer

Adapted from Tourangeau, R., Rips, L. J. and Rasinski, K. A. (2000)“The psychology of survey response”

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There are four steps to answer a questionStep A good question …1. Read and understand is legible and makes sense

2. Find an answer asks for answers that we know

3. Judge the answer asks for answers we’re happy to reveal

4. Place the answer offers appropriate spaces for the answers

Adapted from Tourangeau, R., Rips, L. J. and Rasinski, K. A. (2000)“The psychology of survey response”

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Are you …?

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Let’s review a question• There is a question coming up on the next slide• I will ask you to think about ONE of these four steps

1. Read and understand 2. Find the answer3. Judge the answer4. Place the answer

• Please think about any problems in that particular step

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Agenda

Introductions

What is a survey?

How to ask better questions

The steps to answer a question

Improve step 1: read and understand

Improve step 2: find the answer

Improve step 3: judge the answer

Improve step 4: place the answer

Understand why people answer

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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Legibility is also important

15 Hermann grid illusion

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Agenda

Introductions

What is a survey?

How to ask better questions

The steps to answer a question

Improve step 1: read and understand

Improve step 2: find the answer

Improve step 3: judge the answer

Improve step 4: place the answer

Understand why people answer

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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In your last five days at work, what percentage of your work time do you estimate that you spend using publicly-available online services (not including email, instant messaging and search) to do your work using a work computer or other device?

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The approximate curve of forgetting

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Agenda

Introductions

What is a survey?

How to ask better questions

The steps to answer a question

Improve step 1: read and understand

Improve step 2: find the answer

Improve step 3: judge the answer

Improve step 4: place the answer

Understand why people answer

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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I saw this question on an employee survey

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• Let’s create a list

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Agenda

Introductions

What is a survey?

How to ask better questions

The steps to answer a question

Improve step 1: read and understand

Improve step 2: find the answer

Improve step 3: judge the answer

Improve step 4: place the answer

Understand why people answer

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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Test with users to make sure youoffer the right answer options

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Offer the right widget to collect the answerKnowledge of what users want to tell you

How many answers? Offer

We know all the answers that users are likely to give us

They only have one answer

Radio buttons

They may have more than one

Check boxes

We’re not sure Text boxes

Allen Miller, S. J. and Jarrett, C. (2001) “Should I use a drop-down?”http://www.formsthatwork.com/files/Articles/dropdown.pdf

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Grids are often full of problems at all four steps

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Grids are a major cause of survey drop-out

35%

20%

20%

15%

5%5%

Total incompletes across the 'main' section of the ques-tionnaire

(after the introduction stage)

Subject MatterMedia DownloadsSurvey LengthLarge GridsOpen QuestionsOther

Source: Database of 3 million+ web surveys conducted by Lightspeed Research/KantarQuoted in Coombe, R., Jarrett, C. and Johnson, A. (2010) “Usability testing of market research surveys” ESRA Lausanne

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But it’s the topic that matters most

35%

20%

20%

15%

5%5%

Total incompletes across the 'main' section of the ques-tionnaire

(after the introduction stage)

Subject MatterMedia DownloadsSurvey LengthLarge GridsOpen QuestionsOther

Source: Database of 3 million+ web surveys conducted by Lightspeed Research/KantarQuoted in Coombe, R., Jarrett, C. and Johnson, A. (2010) “Usability testing of market research surveys” ESRA Lausanne

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Agenda

Introductions

What is a survey?

How to ask better questions

The steps to answer a question

Improve step 1: read and understand

Improve step 2: find the answer

Improve step 3: judge the answer

Improve step 4: place the answer

Understand why people answer

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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Response relies on effort, reward, and trust

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Trust

Perceivedeffort

Perceivedreward

Diagram from Jarrett, C, and Gaffney, G (2008) “Forms that work: Designing web forms for usability” inspired by Dillman, D.A. (2000) “Internet, Mail and Mixed Mode Surveys: The Tailored Design Method”

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An interesting subject helps in all the areas

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Shared interestsinspire trust

Interestingtopicstakeless effort

Interesting subject =

intrinsicallyrewarding

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What about response here?

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Your answers to this survey are important for our work

But what’s in it for me? And I’m really ready for a coffee.

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Agenda Introductions

What is a survey?

How to ask better questions

Break

How to assess user experience using surveys

Wrap up

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Let’s start with a standard option: SUS• The System Usability Scale

(SUS) was created in 1986• It has been shown to be

valid and reliable• You get a score between

0 and 100• You can compare your SUS

score with other systems

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Brooke, J. (1996). SUS: A "quick and dirty" usability scale. In Usability Evaluation in Industry. P. W. Jordan, B. Thomas, B. A. Weerdmeester and A. L. McClelland. London:, Taylor and Francis.

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Jeff Sauro (@measuringux) has done a lot of work with SUS

38 http://www.measuringusability.com/sus.php.

• Jeff provides tools for scoring SUS

• He has adapted it to websites

• “SUS scores are not percentages”

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There are other commercial products with wider concepts of UX

• SUPR-Q – includes credibility and loyalty– licenced product– http://www.suprq.com

• WAMMI– online service– includes access to standard

databases (extra for SUPR-Q)– http://www.wammi.com

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• Your task: find an explanation of the difference between the European Commission and the European Union

• Use this site: http://ec.europa.eu• Decide whether you had a good or bad experience

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• I will ask you to fill in SUS (original) or SUS (Sauro)

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My journey into user experience started a long time ago, with usability

The extent to which a product can be used by specified users to achieve specified goals with effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction in a specified context of use

(ISO 9241:11 1998)

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Working mostly in government, we were interested in effectiveness and efficiency

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The extent to which a product can be used by specified users to achieve specified goals with effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction in a specified context of use

(ISO 9241:11 1998)

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But what about user experience?What about satisfaction?

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The extent to which a product can be used by specified users to achieve specified goals with effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction in a specified context of use

(ISO 9241:11 1998)

Picture credit: Flickr jek in the box

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Satisfaction is a complex matterCompared experience to what? Resulting thoughts(nothing) Indifference

Expectations Better / worse / different

Needs Met / not met / mixture

Excellence (the ideal product) Good / poor quality (or ‘good enough’)

Fairness Treated equitably / inequitably

Events that might have been Vindication / regret

Adapted from Oliver, R. L. (1996) and (2009)“Satisfaction: A Behavioral Perspective on the Consumer”

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Example: bronze medal winners tend to be happier than silver medal winners

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Nathan Twaddle, Olympic Bronze Medal Winner in Beijing

Photo credit: peter.cipollone, Flickr

Matsumoto D, & Willingham B (2006). The thrill of victory and the agony of defeat: spontaneous expressions of medal winners of the 2004 Athens Olympic Games.

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• The first question was about rating satisfaction• What were they asking us to rate?

– Just a guess from what you recall

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The challenge of UX and surveys: which bit to measure?

The extent to which a product can be used by specified users to achieve specified goals with effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction in a specified context of use

(ISO 9241:11 1998)

???

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Some ideas about what we could measureIn the definition GoDaddy customer

supportGoDaddy as a provider of domain names

Product This contact with help desk Overall experience of moving a domain to GoDaddy

Users What proportion of customers contact support

Demographics (example: type of job)

Goals Reason for contacting help Reason for looking at GoDaddy

Effectiveness Whether support fixed the problem

Whether GoDaddy offers the right products

Efficiency Whether it took a reasonable time

Whether the product is priced correctly

Satisfaction Helpfulness of support person

Likely to purchase again / recommend

Context of use Home/office; alone/helped Business / personal

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In the definition Information to help the European Commission design a better website

Product

Users

Goals

Effectiveness

Efficiency

Satisfaction

Context of use

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• Write questions for each topic• Then get another team to try your questionnaire

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Find out about users’ goals

Tip

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Ask about recent vivid experienceTip

Image credit: Fraser Smith

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Interview first

Tip

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Test everything

Tip

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Caroline JarrettTwitter @cjforms

http://www.slideshare.net/cjforms

[email protected]

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More resources on http://www.slideshare.net/cjforms

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