Management Tools
Related topics
  • Corporate Anthropology
  • Day-in-the-life Ethnographies
  • Observational Research
  • Slice-of-Life Research
  • Voice of the Customer

Description

Consumer Ethnography, a qualitative research technique, uses a variety of methods to study behavior, attitudes and culture to better understand what customers want and how they make their purchasing decisions. Ethnography, a branch of anthropology, is viewed by a growing number of experts across industries as a core marketing competency and an alternative or supplement to traditional focus groups. Instead of asking consumers to discuss products or services while sitting in a room, researchers, who are trained in ethnographic fieldwork, observe people (openly or secretly) and interview them where they live, work, play and shop. A detailed analysis of observations reveals consumer motivations and interactions with brands, and enables companies to discover new segments and design more satisfying offerings and more effective marketing campaigns.

Methodology


Consumer Ethnography has the greatest impact when used at the start of product development, where findings can spark innovation that translates into a winning product or service. A trained ethnographer should oversee the step-by-step research process:

  • Create a focused research proposal;
  • Allow time for thorough observation;
  • Develop an interview outline;
  • Select field techniques: one-on-one interviews, audio/videotapes, photographs, team observations;
  • Conduct fieldwork: at homes, stores, work, recreational sites, or a combination of locations;
  • Analyze findings.

Common uses

By chronicling the cultural trends and lifestyles that influence consumer decisions?habits, annoyances, desires, unfulfilled needs of emerging markets?Consumer Ethnography can help companies:

  • Break into new markets;
  • Refresh established products;
  • Transform a corporate culture?for example, transition from a technology to consumer-product focus;
  • Create brand image or re-brand a company or product;
  • Validate a new product concept.
Selected references

Abrams, Bill. Observational Research Handbook: Understanding How Consumers Live with Your Product. NTC Business Books, 2000.

Ante, Spencer E., with Cliff Edwards. "The Science of Desire: As more companies refocus squarely on the consumer, ethnography and its components have become star players." Business Week, June 5, 2006.

LeCompte, Margaret D. Designing and Conducting Ethnographic Research (Ethnographer?s Toolkit, Vol. 1). AltaMira Press, 1999.

Mariampolski, Hy. Ethnography for Marketers: A Guide to Consumer Immersion. Sage Publications, 2006.

McFarland, Jennifer. "Margaret Mead Meets Consumer Fieldwork: The Consumer Anthropologist." Harvard Management Update, September 1, 2001.

Schensul, Stephen, L., Jean J. Schensul, and Margaret D. LeCompte, Essential Ethnographic Methods: Observations, Interviews, and Questionnaires (Ethnographer?s Toolkit, Vol. 2). AltaMira Press, 1999.

Sherry, John F. (ed.). Contemporary Marketing and Consumer Behavior: An Anthropological Sourcebook. Sage Publications, 1995.

Underhill, Paco. Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping. Simon & Schuster, 1999.

Zaltman, Gerald. How Customers Think: Essential Insights into the Mind of the Market. Harvard Business School Press, 2003.