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Discovering User Needs | SXSW Interactive

View more presentations from Aya Zook

Strategy consultant,  marketer, and product planner in the consumer goods and technology industries, Leslie Feinzaig is the Senior Business Planner of Kinect at Microsoft. She has observed, interviewed, and surveyed thousands of people by conducting more than 100 consumer research studies in dozens of countries around the world. She knows what users need.

Leslie Feinzaig

Sponsored by Bing,  Mind Reading: Seeing Needs Users Don’t Articulate helped to cut through the clutter of research to better understand   how businesses can encourage user feedback and how to meet consumer needs. Using Bing’s insight development practices as a case study, the presentation aimed to discuss techniques for gaining deep understanding of and empathy with customer’s pain to spur product innovations. Among the top lessons of the day were:

  • Find out why a user does something, not why they say they do something
  • You can’t design products without talking to your users
  • You want to observe your extreme users because that is where you can understand the inspiration

Understanding motivation

  • Observe pain points to determine which activities are undertaken to address needs
  • Observe behavior and question the needs behind the behavior
  • Aspirations are generally beyond observable reach, but are highly powerful

Ethnography results from a case study

  • Seeks to manage identity: sense of self and reputation
  • Seeks to manage mood: escapism and “getting going in the morning”
  • Connect with others
  • Be more productive
  • Stay in-the-know

The last few slides are detailed and interesting.

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Mad Men: More lessons to mine for Social Media

Don Draper Mad Men

Don Draper Mad Men

 

Mad Men illustrates our evolution, but have we?

The Mad Men countdown clock is ticking down (too bad there’s no widget to post here), and I’m thrilled. Sadly, no time to use Betty’s party planner, but cheers to AMC for another season of lessons that can be applied to Social Media.

While the social media integration was widely commented on at South by Southwest Interactive 2012 (highlight posts forthcoming BTW), there’s so much more to contemplate.

Mad Men was also mentioned on a panel at the SES (Search Engine Strategies) New York conference yesterday. The panel discussed integrated marketing and mentioned the pitch Don Draper gives to Kodak when the slide “wheel” is introduced.

My Tweet about kicking off the Social Media Strategies course I teach with the Mad Men Carousel clip became a top tweet. Sorry there’s no embed, but click to watch: http://bit.ly/MadMenCarousel

Very evocative, no? This is how I want my students to think of the class: interesting, ever-evolving, which reflects where we are in this industry today.

The Sterling Cooper pitch provides a perfect frame for today’s students — and professionals: It illustrates how technology changes, but the desire for human connection pervades.

Meanwhile,  my 2012 conference circuit is echoing: We’ll soon be dropping all the prefixes: e-marketing, online marketing, search marketing new media. It’ll just be straight-up marketing. I read a recent OMMA post that Social Media staffs are being fully integrated into the marketing departments. This make sense, no? You wouldn’t have an email department all by itself and only thinking about getting into inboxes (then what?)?

In essence, we’re all here to align what the company has to offer with customer expectations.

I can’t help but wonder what’s really going through the minds of the Millennials who’ve signed up for Social Media Strategies when I show them a pitch for a product that took consumers by storm decades before they were born. It’s an ideal starter to a class the focuses on engagement and interaction, and we start practicing these fundamentals on Day 1.

I’m eager to see how Mad Men keeps the conversation going, both in my class and in my mind.

What other lessons have you learned as Mad Men shows us a reflection of ourselves in another time?