Pay Attention To Your “Extreme
Consumers”
Jill
Avery and Michael Norton explain what marketers can learn from consumers whose
preferences lie outside of the mainstream.
What
do Porsche fanatics, a video game hater, and a person who cooked two weeks'
worth of meals in a rice cooker have in common? They are all "extreme
consumers"—those whose tastes are so out there that mainstream market
researchers tend to dismiss them as "noise" when trying to figure out
how typical consumers think.
That's
fine if you only want to keep making incremental improvements to your products,
says Jill Avery, senior lecturer at Harvard Business School and a former brand
manager at Gillette, Samuel Adams, and AT&T. "Traditional market
research is all about studying the average consumer, which gets rid of the
noise in an effort to study the majority of customers, but also gets rid of
people who are potentially leading the category," she says.
“OFTEN THE LOVERS OR HATERS OF
A PRODUCT CAN BE THE CANARY IN THE COAL MINE”
By
understanding those consumers who lie "in the tails" of the bell
curve, says Avery, product designers can discover truly innovative
breakthroughs. "Only by looking at consumers who fall within those tails
of the normal distribution can you understand the extremes," she says.
"And they often influence the middle, spilling over into what the average
consumer believes."
Along
with Michael Norton, professor of marketing, Avery explores those extremes in a
recent HBS teaching note, Learning from Extreme Consumers. The
researchers developed the concept as part of the Field Immersion Experiences
for Leadership Development (FIELD) course, a required course for first year MBA
students , which immerses them in global research projects to produce a new
product or experience, often in an emerging market country.
To
prepare students for their global immersion and help them practice market
research techniques, FIELD professors first asked students to interview
consumers of their type of product in neighborhoods near the Harvard Business
School campus. Boston. Frequently, however, they found that students would only
seek out people much like themselves, such as middle-class students in Harvard
Square. The insight derived from these conversations was often predictable. The
concept of talking to extreme consumers was developed to push students out of
their comfort zone.
"There
is an enormous gap between chatting with your friends and chatting with people
on the streets in Vietnam," says Norton. "This exercise creates a
bridge for talking to people who are very unlike you."
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SAYING
AND DOING
As
former marketing manager for female shaving products at Gillette, Avery often
utilized principles of "design thinking," moving beyond surveys and
focus groups to do ethnographic research into how people really interacted with
products. Often, she saw a big disconnect between what people said they
did and what they actually did.
In
focus groups, for example, women would say they changed their razor blades
regularly. Only when researchers visited consumers in their homes, however, did
reality—and a product opportunity—come to light. Women frequently forgot to
keep their blade supply restocked in the shower.
"The
last thing you want to do in the middle of a shower is get out and look for a
razor blade," says Avery, who spearheaded the launch of the Venus razor
with in-shower blade dispenser, making it more convenient for consumers—and
selling a lot more razor blades.
Such
hidden opportunities can become even more apparent by investigating
"extreme consumers," since they can overemphasize thoughts and
behaviors that all consumers of a product may share. Avery has studied extreme
Porsche fanatics-men who might keep four Porsches in the garage and who join
online brand communities to share in their love for the brand. When Porsche
tried to appeal to female consumers with its Porsche Cayenne SUV, these
fanatics howled in protest about the
"feminizing" of the brand.
Such
protest risks endangering the brand identity if it spills over to general
consumers. "Often the lovers or haters of a product can be the canary in
the coal mine—an early warning system that can alert managers to problems or
identify areas where a competitor could come in and take away the bulk of the
market," says Avery.
By
investigating what extreme adherents of a brand like about a product, designers
can identify features to emphasize for all consumers. "A lover of a
product can help identify aspects that are providing value, helping managers
understand what's working and what's not," says Norton. At the same time,
designers can gain valuable insights into a product by talking to those who
hate it—or even don't use it at all.
Such
was the case with Nintendo when developing its Wii game console system. In
interviewing people who hated playing video games, researchers found that they
tended to avoid games that were too complicated, and found controllers too
difficult to maneuver. In response, they designed a game system with
intentionally simplified graphics and controllers that mimicked real-life
motions. Wii was an instant hit, revolutionizing video games and forcing
competitors to play catch-up with their own systems.
EMBODIMENTS OF ETHNOGRAPHY
Another
way designers can gain fresh insights into their products is by observing
consumers whose physical impediments make using them difficult. Engineers with Ford
wore bodysuits that mimicked the vision and range of motion of the elderly to
redesign the Ford Focus. "One of their biggest insights was how difficult
it was to reach up across their bodies to reach the seatbelt," says
Norton. "Until you are actually in the car in that situation, it would
never occur to you."
By
donning the suits, designers essentially turned themselves into extreme
consumers. "The suits are the physical embodiments of ethnography,
immersing the engineers in their customers' life experiences," says Avery.
The resulting redesign of the car not only made it easier for those impaired
consumers to use, but it also improved accessibility and visibility of
important features for everyone.
This
past year, when it came time for students in the FIELD course to perform market
research in advance of their trip overseas, Avery and Norton urged them to look
for their own extreme consumers in order to obtain out-of-the-ordinary
insights. Some students investigated websites of extreme lovers or haters of
their products. A project developing new menu items for a fast food restaurant
chain in Malaysia, for example, used websites that were critical of the fast
food industry to design healthier alternatives.
Others
sought out more extreme users in person. A team researching ways that a
Vietnamese bank could encourage customers to save more went to the mall on a
weekday to interview "unbanked" consumers—those without bank accounts
at all. "They would cash their paycheck and spend it on basic needs,"
says Norton. "If they had an extra five dollars, it seemed like such
little money, it wasn't worth saving." What these consumers did do,
students found, was spend those extra few dollars on the lottery.
When
it came time to develop the strategy for their client, the students
experimented with including elements of gambling into the savings—giving
customers a very slight chance to win a jackpot, which increased as they saved
more money. "They had not thought before that gambling might be a way to
get people to save," says Norton. "Their insight was that you might
be able to combine risk and savings in a way that people who were mainstream
users of banks might appreciate as well."
A COMPLEMENTARY RESEARCH
METHOD
Finally,
some teams went the extra mile by making themselves extreme
consumers. A group of students working on developing a new rice cooker
conducted the usual surveys of consumers in Harvard Square and found only mild
interest in using the product. For some families in Asia, however, a rice
cooker is often the only means of cooking meals. To simulate that the
experience, one student went two weeks eating only what he could cook in a rice
cooker—breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
After
only a few days, he got sick of eating rice, and began experimenting with different
recipes and ways of cooking to improve his culinary offerings. "He not
only identified the problems with existing rice cookers, but also opened up new
opportunities to think about what else you could cook in a rice cooker,"
says Avery. As a result, the students developed a more multipurpose rice cooker
that featured a revolutionary design.
Research
into extreme consumers doesn't have to stand in opposition to traditional
research methods. In fact, it can be a valuable complement. "I get a lot
of pushback from people who say this is a biased sample, and that you can't
generalize," Avery says. But that misses the point. Rather than helping
researchers estimate the habits of ordinary consumers, the data from extreme
customers can uncover new consumer motivations, promoting different ways of
looking at how products can be used.
"We
spent too much time in our market research on answering the what, where, and
when questions associated with consumer behavior, and not enough on the how and
the why questions," says Avery. By looking at the hows and whys of those
consumers on the fringes, we can discover new ways to think about the hows and
whys of the rest of us.
by
Michael Blanding.
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/7570.html
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