Given the changes to working practices and the focus on remote working since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, it was important for us to adapt our ‘action-oriented approach’ to these new conditions as well.
Observation of real time research enables greater insight into the user issues as it allows staff to gain experiential knowledge of behaviours as well as hearing attitudes. However, observation of the research on its own is not enough: everyone develops their own interpretation of why a user behaved in a particular way based on their own experiences, values and prejudices. Only by getting the client to discuss what they have observed is it possible to challenge these mental models to gain agreement about the issues with the site.
We, therefore, always recommend that at least some of the testing sessions be observed by members of the client team. Following each testing session, we include a 15-minute debrief session to agree issues and actions and make any changes to the testing sessions as required.
This agile, inclusive approach is key for getting the most value out of the research sessions, and for ensuring stakeholder buy-in and full comprehension of the research outcomes.
Obviously, this process is easier to achieve when all the observers are in a room together – which was not possible during Covid-19! Subsequently, in-person observation has become the exception, rather than the norm as well.
Also, observers/back-room staff can only pass a limited amount of information to the facilitator during the sessions – most comes between sessions. While this does ensure that the facilitation approach is flexible and focuses on the key areas, sometimes specific, contextual probes or explanations from the observers at key times can be very useful.
We found that WhatsApp made an effective alternative!
Key observers join a WhatsApp group with the facilitator and Web Usability back-room staff. This allows the observers to discuss points as they arise and feed comments, explanations, additional probes etc. to the facilitator ‘live’, during the research sessions.
It also provides a way of tracking discussion points for further exploration between sessions or at the end of the day, much like you would use post-it mapping in in-person observation.
There are obviously other, more complicated tools available for remote collaborative working (e.g. Miro, Mural etc.), but we have found that WhatsApp has a number of advantages: