Tag: Qualitative Research

Read posts about qualitative research on Sentient Decision Science’s implicit market research blog.

Last week’s AQR/QRCA conference in Prague

I’m slowly recovering from the joint AQR/QRCA Worldwide conference on qualitative research in Prague last week: this year’s theme “Inspiration in Action.” The workshop day – with Wendy Gordon, Jay Zaltzman and Ava Lindbergh gave me enough to contemplate for a month, but the next two days were jam-packed with session after session that made […]

Focus group moderating styles

I had the honor of attending a workshop by master moderators sponsored by the Philadelphia / Delaware Valley chapter of the QRCA yesterday. The event’s theme was simple: bring in 3 expert moderators who between them have moderated over 30,000 focus groups in a combined 100+ years of experience, and let professional moderators observe from […]

New evidence of the impact of the unconscious @ SPSP

The Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) had their 11th annual meeting from January 28 to January 30 in Las Vegas NV. This is the premier conference for social psychology and gives a glimpse into the cutting-edge research on a wide variety of topics in social psychology. There were a variety of symposia related […]

Nudging our Way to a Better World

Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein wrote Nudge with optimism and dedication as primary tools while arguing for ways which we could improve our world. And there’s no government policy shift necessary – we only need to pay closer consideration to how we present decisions to individuals. The authors show how small changes in such “choice architecture” can produce big results. You might be surprised, but just by changing the order of food items in a cafeteria can increase or decrease the frequency which certain foods are selected by as much as 25%. Imagine, just from placing the vegetables at eye level in a prominent position in our school cafeterias and placing the Hostess delicacies on a hard-to-reach shelf (or even more sinister, hide them in a cupboard where students must open a door to access them), we could significantly improve our children’s diets.

The Virtues and Vices of Research Empathy

As a qualitative researcher who has conducted literally hundreds of focus groups, interviews and ethnography studies, I’m used to the aftermath of my job: after spending time with a stranger discussing their emotional attachments, decision-making process, and personal values, I can’t help but feel a letdown when I’ve gotten all the data I need and […]

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