Imagine your design team has a great new idea for a product that you think has the potential to be a real game-changer in the marketplace. For the sake of discussion, let’s say it’s a new app that will let small business owners manage their supply chain, so they know when their products will arrive when they need to restock, and so on. Now, if your design team already works in the supply chain space, they might already know a lot about the user requirements. But what if all of your previous products are corporate enterprise-level software, and you don’t really have a good idea of how that scales down - which features your typical small business owners need, and which ones they will never touch?
When you want to understand how someone uses your product in their day-to-day work, or does whatever it is they do that your app is going to streamline, it’s not enough to interview a bunch of users and assume that will let you sift out the key business requirements. Interviews can be useful for getting the broad strokes, but to really understand how they actually might use your tool at work, with all the demands on their time and attention, you need to see what they do and where they do it. In other words, in-context and on-site. In order to get the full picture, you need to be in the room where it happens.
Contextual Inquiry is a method adapted from ethnographic research which combines interviews, observational research, and task learning sited within the operational (work) environment. Exploring user behavior in the context of their actual work instead of a simulated setting often reveals underlying elements of the work process or environmental constraints that might not surface in a more controlled lab-like setting. It also often prompts users to reflect on their own behaviors and motivations in the moment, often revealing more than mere declarative interviews or simulated task operations would.
A few quick examples of the rich details that can be uncovered:
Contextual inquiry is typically used:
The core elements of contextual inquiry are:
The format is usually as follows:
Contextual inquiry with enough participants for a representative sample of users can be time-consuming and typically requires more time for analysis than more structured methods such as interviews or a usability test, but done right, it can provide a level of rich contextual detail about your users and their work that is impossible to obtain any other way.
In our follow-up article, we will examine three common objections to using contextual inquiry for an exploratory study, and provide potential solutions for each one.
READ MORE: Finding the Best Study Location for Your Situation, 5 Commonly Used Metrics in User Research, What is Conversational UI?, Planning a Better Usability Study