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Exploring co-design: a systematic review of concepts, processes, models, and frameworks used in public health research | Journal of Public Health | Oxford Academic
(PDF) Short and extra-short forms of the Big Five Inventory–2: The BFI-2-S and BFI-2-XS
Personality distribution research data - Big five trait scores for 307,313 people from many different countries.
Big five trait scores for 307,313 people from many different countries.
When do we know we have engaged the community well? | LinkedIn
Could this guide us towards a structured approach for assessing the level of community involvement in SBC programmes? At the highest level, “Citizen Control“, communities independently lead programmes with full decision-making authority. “Delegated Power“ and “Partnership“ designate significant community influence on programme decisions, either through majority control or collaborative governance. In contrast, “Placation“, “Consultation“, and “Informing“ indicate lower degrees of participation, where community input may be sought but is not necessarily instrumental in shaping outcomes.
Where Do the 3 Concept Types Come From? | by Indi Young | Inclusive Software | Mar, 2024 | Medium
In my research, I focus on three things that ran through people’s minds when they were working toward something. These three things are: inner thinking, thoughts, pondering, reasoning emotional reactions, feelings, moods guiding principles, personal rules
It’s Time to Change the Way We Write Screeners | Sago
And remember, keeping screeners under 12 questions is the magic number to prevent attrition.
Why the future of Planning is Opera, Only Fans, God, and Low Traffic Neighbourhoods
Ogilvy UK head of strategy, advertising, Matt Waksman, illustrates and interprets the role of the strategist within advertising and wider society
Thinking Styles - Indi Young
Thinking Styles are the archetypes that you would base characters on, like characters in TV episodes. (Try writing your scenarios like TV episodes, with constant characters.) Characters think, react, and made decisions based on their thinking style archetype. BUT they also switch thinking styles depending on context. For example, if you take a flight as a single traveler versus bringing a young child along–you’ll probably change your thinking style for that flight, including getting to the gate, boarding, and deplaning.
Describing Personas: problems with bias and how Thinking Style archetypes can help | Inclusive Software
I sometimes make a further suggestion to client teams who have years of experience working directly (via research) with the diversity of the people their organization supports. I suggest they abandon “persona” (a representation of a person) and replace it with “behavioral audience segment” (a representation of a group). (Note: I have begun calling these “thinking styles” to emphasize that a person can change to a different group based on context or experience.)This change allows those qualified teams to get away from names and photos. I don’t suggest this for everyone. Note: “Behavioral audience segment” is the name I use, although there may be a better one. In its defense, Susan Weinschenk uses “behavioral science” to mean what I am trying to represent. And “audience segment” is a common way to express a group an organization is focused on.
Using Thinking Styles to Look Beyond the “Average User” with Indi Young
But she did explain how researching and designing for the majority or “average user” actually end up ignoring, othering, and harming the people our designs are meant to serve. Indi shared how she finds patterns in people’s behaviors, thoughts, and needs—and how she uses that data to create thinking styles that inform more inclusive design decisions. Indi talked about… Why researchers should look for patterns, not anecdotes, to understand real user needs. What are thinking styles and how to uncover and use them. Why your “average” user often doesn’t exist in the real world, and how we can do better.
JTBD Canvas 2.0
The JTBD Canvas 2.0 is a tool to help you scope out your JTBD landscape prior to conducting field research. It frames your field of inquiry and scopes of your innovation effort. Jobs to be done
How to use a new generation data collection and analysis tool? - The Cynefin Co
This is SenseMaker in its most simple form, usually structured to have an open (non-hypothesis) question (commonly referred to as a ‘prompting question’) to collect a micro-narrative at the start. This is then followed by a range of triads (triangles), dyads (sliders), stones canvases, free text questions and multiple choice questions. The reason or value for using Sensemaker: Open free text questions are used at the beginning as a way of scanning for diversity of narratives and experiences. This is a way to remain open to ‘unknown unknowns’. The narrative is then followed by signifier questions that allow the respondent to add layers of meaning and codification to the narrative (or experience) in order to allow for mixed methods analysis, to map and explore patterns.
Your personas probably suck. Here’s how you can build them better. | by Amber Westerholm-Smyth | Personas are Dead, Long Live Personas! | Medium
A five-step framework In summary, the five steps that we will walk you through are: Ask rich questions, not dumb questions Write a codebook Code your data Map your data Form your personas
Self Assessment: How well is your research engaging target audiences?
Jobs to be Done Insights Canvas
Personas – A Simple Introduction | IxDF
Replacing Personas With Characters | by Alan Klement | down the rabbit hole | Medium
To get the brain to accept a story which explains why a consumer bought a product, it needs information presented in a particular way. The best way to deliver this information is to explain a customer’s anxieties, motivations, purchase-progress events, and purchase-progress situations. When combined, they form what I call Characters.
Why Am I Always Being Researched? - Chicago Beyond
Customer research. Here are 7 places to find exactly what your customers want
7 customer research sources: 1/ Media Kits 2/ Google Scholar 3/ Amazon Reviews 4/ The New Forums 5/ Comment Sections 6/ Customer Data 7/ Interviews
Doing research as if participants mattered | Impact of Social Sciences
Understanding Cultural Issues in Research Design: A Webinar Panel — Methodspace
Covid-19: Identifying and addressing vaccine hesitancy using ‘personas’
Motivating Seasonal Influenza Vaccination and Cross-Promoting COVID-19 Vaccination: An Audience Segmentation Study among University Students | HTML
Using a Translator During Usability Testing (Video)
2020 Census: Many Latinos Identified With 'Some Other Race' : NPR
Growing numbers of Latinos identifying as “Some other race“ for the U.S. census have boosted the category to become the country's second-largest racial group after “White.“ Researchers are concerned the catchall grouping obscures many Latinx people's identities and does not produce the data needed to address racial inequities.
Recruiting ‘hard to reach’ parents for health promotion research: experiences from a qualitative study | BMC Research Notes | Full Text
Working within resource constraints: a qualitative segmentation study: Journal of Strategic Marketing: Vol 0, No 0
Hello, and Thanks for All the Fish: Tips for effective research recruiting
Making Personas Truly Valuable by Making Them Scenario-based
Learning what our target audiences think and do: extending segmentation to all four bases
The aim of this study was to establish if distinct segments were evident in a sexual health context drawing from measures sourced from four segmentation bases extending application of segmentation to all recommended bases [46]. This study indicates how researchers can use two-step cluster analysis to identify segments, which are represented by a group of individuals who share similar characteristics that differ from other groups in the larger heterogeneous target audience. Further, this study demonstrates how available information can be used delivering a dashboard to inform program design and planning.
Find your hot-core early customers Part 1 of 3 (2019) - YouTube
Amy Jo Kim Superfan funnel: 1) Potential customers - who are they? what are their unmet needs? 2) Super fans 3) Job stories - design-ready insights to shape product design - lifestyle and insights re: fans Superfan screener - 3 closed ended multiple choice Q's relevant to topic, plus 3 open ended about what they're doing now, what they want Recruitment via Craigslist, taskrabbit, userinterviews.com, social media ads, friends/family, et al
Demographic differences in search engine use with implications for cohort selection | SpringerLink
Scotland: Mountain Dew’s epic advertising fail
Unfortunately for Mountain Dew The Scotsman didn’t include the fact that “chug” means “masturbation” in this particular part of the UK. And now, as Vice reports, the soft drink brand is being mercilessly ripped on Twitter for inadvertently telling everyone that they’re chronic masturbators. On Monday the company tweeted a .gif of a guy madly downing a bottle of Mountain Dew, with the slogan “epic thrills start with a chug”.
User Research: is more the merrier? – UX Collective
Small, medium or large — what sample size of users fits your study is a composite question. The magic number of 5 users may work magic in some studies while in some it may not. It depends on the constraints put on by project requirements, assumptions about problem discoverability and implications to the design process. Assess these factors to determine the number of users for your study: What’s the nature and scope of research — is it exploratory or validatory? Who and what kind of users are you planning to study? What’s the budget and time to finish the study? Does your research involve presenting statistically significant numbers or inferring behavioural estimates for the problem statement?
Demographics and Dynamics of Mechanical Turk Workers
A simple lil’ Empathy Map template – Appiphony Insights – Medium
Getting to Know People with Empathy Maps – Design for Business – Medium
A New Framework for Customer Segmentation
Peer crowd affiliation as a segmentation tool for young adult tobacco use -- Lisha et al. 25 (Suppl 1): i83 -- Tobacco Control
The Facebook-Loving Farmers of Myanmar - The Atlantic
How to Do an Audience Analysis | The Health COMpass
How to Do Audience Segmentation | The Health COMpass
Ramit Sethi's Delicious links on customer research
Anthropology is so important, all children should learn it - The Ecologist
Cintell – Why Personas Fail
Do Customer Interviews Even If You Don't Think You Need To
"How We Consume Media" cartoon | Tom Fishburne: Marketoonist
"It's taken us 15 years, but we've finally figured out how the teenagers of the 90s think, act and consume media."
trendwatching.com | POST-DEMOGRAPHIC CONSUMERISM
United States Potato Board - Understanding Millennials—How do Potatoes Fit into Their Lives?
New link: http://uspotatoes.com/understanding-millennials-how-do-potatoes-fit-into-their-lives/
