SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Maximizing Your Moderating Game!
Susan Mercer!
Senior Experience Researcher!
smercer@madpow.com!
@susanamercer!
What is Usability Testing?!

•  It is NOT:!
     •  Market Research!
     •  The same as a Focus Group!
     •  About user preferences!
     •  “Fluffy”!

•  It is:!
     •  A systematic way to observe user behavior!
     •  A method to discover usability issues!
     •  A ongoing field of scientific inquiry!
!!
2
Topics!

•  What is think-aloud?!
•  Your roles as a moderator!
•  5 rules of great moderating!
•  Keeping sharp!
!




3!
What is think-aloud?!
Think-aloud Protocol!

•    Most commonly-used usability testing method!
•    1 participant / 1 moderator!
•    Participant does tasks and thinks aloud!
•    Origins in Cognitive Psychology!

Original protocol:!
•  To understand short-term memory!
•  Moderator invisible observer!
•  Only comments: “Keep talking”, etc.!
•  Don’t interrupt short-term memory!
5!   Source: Ericsson & Simon, 1980!
Think-aloud Protocol - Problems!

•  Many practitioners feel the strict no-
     comments moderation is not ideal:!
     •  Makes participants feel uncomfortable!
     •  Feels “unnatural” not to respond!
     •  Participants may get stuck and not be able to
       continue!




6!
Think-aloud Protocols!
     Original Think-aloud!                     Usability Testing!
                                                         Study this…!
Study this…!

                …to understand this !



                  Short term
                                        …to understand this !
                  memory!



                                             System
                                             usability




7!
Modified Think-aloud Protocol!

•  Based on Conversational Theory!
•  Set up a conversation!
     •  Participant is main speaker!
     •  Use short, neutral response phrases (continuers) !
        •  “Mhmm”, “Uh-huh”, “And now…?” !
        •  Utter phrases like questions !

     •  Ask for clarifications by repeating a phrase!
             •  Participant: “That was odd…”!
             •  Moderator: “Odd?”!
     •  Provide hints if necessary !
     •  Neutrality is key!

8!   Source: Boren & Ramey, 2000!
The Reality of Think-aloud!

•  Many usability professionals get sloppy:!
     •  Ask leading questions!
        •  Participant: “I would share this article with friends.”!
        •  Moderator: “By printing it?”!

     •  Ask closed-ended questions!
        •    Moderator: “Would you print this?”!
     •  Focus on known problems for “ammunition”!
     •  Use biasing response phrases “Good job”, “Yes,
      that’s a problem.”!
!

9!   Source: Norgaard & Hornbaek, 2006!
The Reality of Think-aloud!

•  Current practice goes beyond neutrality and
      includes probing questions!
      •  Some evidence that probing may influence what
           usability problems are discovered!
      •    Evidence is only suggestive; more research is
           needed!




10!    Source: Krahmer & Ummelen, 2004!
What does this mean?!

•  Current moderating practices are not
      consistent!
•     Moderating is often taught through
      mentorship; so bad habits can easily be
      perpetuated!
•     Moderators should be willing to examine
      their practices and adapt if needed!

•  Therefore, we need to pay attention to our
      moderation and remain neutral.   !!
11!
Your roles as a moderator!
Your Roles (Yes, plural)!

•  Gracious Host!
•  Guide!
•  Neutral Observer!
•  Curious Learner!
•  Technical Support!
!




13!
Structure of a Usability Session!

                     Intro!   Pre-Test     Tasks!   Post-Test Wrap-Up!
                              Questions!            Questions!


Gracious Host!
Guide!
Curious Learner!
Neutral Observer!
Technical Support!




14!
Structure of a Usability Session!

                     Intro!   Pre-Test     Tasks!   Post-Test Wrap-Up!
                              Questions!            Questions!


Gracious Host!
Guide!
Curious Learner!
Neutral Observer!
Technical Support!    ?!          ?!         ?!        ?!        ?!



 Challenge: Navigate the Transitions Smoothly!


15!
5 Rules of Great Moderating!
5 Rules of Great Moderating!

1.    Know your goals!
2.    Stay neutral !
3.    Be responsible!
4.    Be confident!
5.    Be genuine!
!




17!
5 Rules of Great Moderating!

1.  Know your goals!
2.  Stay neutral !
3.  Be responsible!
4.  Be confident!
5.  Be genuine!
!




18!
1. Know Your Goals!

•  What are you trying to achieve?!
      •  Formative !
      •  Summative !
•  What topics are highest priority?!
!
These will influence!
      •  Where you focus!
      •  What you skim when time runs short!
      •  How you fine-tune your moderating style!

19!
5 Rules of Great Moderating!

1.  Know your goals!
2.  Stay neutral !
3.  Be responsible!
4.  Be confident!
5.  Be genuine!
!




20!
2. Stay Neutral!

•  Be Quiet!!
•  Don’t insinuate they gave a wrong answer!
    ✘  “Why did you do that?”!
    ✘  “What made you think to click that link?”!
•  Don’t put ideas into their heads!
    ✘  “Does entering your SSN make you feel uncomfortable?”!
    ü “What do you think about entering your SSN?”!
•  Use their words!
    •  If they call the dashboard a “chart area”, then call it a
        “chart area”!
•  Keep your tone naturally curious, not derisive!
      •  “What did you expect here?”!

21!
2. Stay Neutral!

•  Avoid closed-ended (Yes/No) questions !

•  Don’t start with a verb!
      ✘ Did you see that?!
      ✘ Was that difficult?!
      ✘ Is this frustrating?!




22!
2. Stay Neutral!

•  Use Open-ended questions!

•  Start with What, When, Where, Why, How!
      ü What would you change to make this easier?!
      ü When in this process would you be ready to buy?!
      ü Where did you expect to find that information?!
      ü Why did you say this was easy?!
      ü How does that error message make you feel?!


23!
2. Stay Neutral!

•  Use neutral, “continuing” response phrases!

•  Acknowledge that they gave feedback!
•  Don’t imply whether it is good or bad!
      ✘ “Oh”, “Hmm”, “Interesting” - Assessing!
      ✘ “OK”, “Yeah”, “That’s good” - Agreeing!
      ü “Uh huh”, “Mhmm”, “Tell me more” - Continuing!




24!   Source: Boren & Ramey, 2000
5 Rules of Great Moderating!

1.  Know your goals!
2.  Stay neutral !
3.  Be responsible!
4.  Be confident!
5.  Be genuine!
!




25!
3. Be Responsible!

You have responsibilities to:!
!
•  Participant!
•  Company!
•  Future Users !
•  Study Integrity!



26!
3. Be Responsible!

•  Informed Consent:!
      1.  Voluntary!
      2.  Comprehension!
      3.  Disclosure!
        •  The purpose of the study!
        •  Any reasonably foreseeable risks!
        •  Potential benefits !
        •  Notification of recording and observers!
        •  Confidentiality protections !
        •  Ability to withdraw at any time without penalty!




27!
3. Be Responsible!

Situations happen during testing.!
You may need to juggle your responsibilities.!
!
What are your priorities?!
!
•  Study Integrity!
•  Company!
•  Future Users!
•  Participant!
28!
What to do?!

If…!
•  Participant doesn’t want to be recorded!
•  You don’t have time to ask every question!
•  The participant rants about the website and
   calls it “crap”!




29!
5 Rules of Great Moderating!

1.  Know your goals!
2.  Stay neutral !
3.  Be responsible!
4.  Be confident!
5.  Be genuine!
!




30!
4. Be Confident!

•  Project confidence!
•  If you make a mistake, keep going!
•  Don’t over-apologize!
•  Pause if you need to collect your thoughts!
•  “Fake it until you make it”!




31!
5 Rules of Great Moderating!

1.  Know your goals!
2.  Stay neutral !
3.  Be responsible!
4.  Be confident!
5.  Be genuine!
!




32!
5. Be Genuine!

•  Don’t play the notes on
   the page…!
…play the music!
!
•  Don’t just read the
   questions from the page…!
…have a conversation!



33!
5. Be Genuine!

•  LISTEN!
      •  Listen and respond!

•  Stay in the moment!
      •  Don’t worry about past !
      •  Or the future!
      •  Create a conversation!
!


34!
5 Rules of Great Moderating!

1.    Know your goals!
2.    Stay neutral !
3.    Be responsible!
4.    Be confident!
5.    Be genuine!
!




35!
Keeping sharp!
Keep Improving!

1.  Identify your improvement areas!
      •  Watch your videos!
      •  Have colleagues give you feedback!




37!
Keep Improving!

2.  Learn from others!
      •  Watch others moderate!
      •  Be a participant!
      •  Listen to talk radio interviews!




38!
Keep Improving!

3.  Practice skills in everyday life!
      •  People watch (observe) in public!
      •  Be quiet and listen in everyday conversations!
!




39!
The most important thing is…!



PRACTICE!
•  No one is perfect the first time!
•  Do your best and continually improve!
•  You’ll be awesome in no time!!

40!
Questions?

41!
Thank You!
      (Slides will be posted to Slideshare..follow me on twitter for link)


 Susan Mercer!
 Senior Experience Researcher!
 smercer@madpow.com!
 @susanamercer!

42!
References / Photo Credits!
Boren, T. and Ramey, J. (2000) Thinking aloud: reconciling theory and practice. IEEE
     Transactions on Professional Communication, 43 (3), 261-278.!
Dumas, J. and Loring, B. (2008) Moderating usability tests, Morgan Kaufman.!
Dumas, J. and Redish, J. (1999) A practical guide to usability testing, Intellect Ltd.!
Ericsson, K. and Simon, H. (1980) Verbal reports as data. Psychological review. 87 (3),
     215-251.!
Krahmer, E. and Ummelen, N. (2004) Thinking about thinking aloud: A comparison of two
     verbal protocols for usability testing. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication,
     47 (2), 105-117.!
Norgaard, M. and Hornbaek, K. (2006) What do usability evaluators do in practice? An
     exploratory study of think-aloud testing. DIS 2006, 209-218.!
!
!
!
Slide 4: Samantha Louras Photography !
Slide 5: flickr: torgeaux!
Slide 14: flickr: mkorcusa, flickr: Calsidyrose, flickr: marioanima, flickr: breity, flickr: Qole Pejorian!
Slides 27, 29 and 30: flickr: Raphael Quinet, flickr: acme, flickr: betsyweber, flickr: KirkOls!
Slide 32: flickr: bberburb!
Slide 34: flickr: Tulane Public Relations!
Slide 35: flickr: apdk, flickr: marktristan!
Slide 38: flickr: Raphael Quinet!
Slide 39: flickr: l-i-n-k!
Slide 40: flickr: loppear!
!
!



43!

More Related Content

PPTX
Moderating to the Max: Refining Your Interviewing and Moderating Skills
PDF
Keeping Your Moderating Skills Sharp
PDF
Strengthening Design Research Moderating Skills
PPTX
Diving Deep: Uncovering Hidden Insights Through User Interviews
PPTX
Webvisions talk 2015 09252015 final
PDF
Let's Network
PPT
Deep Dive Interviewing Secrets
PPT
Interviewing101
Moderating to the Max: Refining Your Interviewing and Moderating Skills
Keeping Your Moderating Skills Sharp
Strengthening Design Research Moderating Skills
Diving Deep: Uncovering Hidden Insights Through User Interviews
Webvisions talk 2015 09252015 final
Let's Network
Deep Dive Interviewing Secrets
Interviewing101

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Now habit
PPTX
Let's Network!!
PDF
Krueger Focus Group Research
PDF
Ouhk comm6005 lecture 6 effective interview skills
PDF
HHUSA Interviewing Workshop Share
PPTX
Communication workshop cmb_may2016_contentonly
PDF
User Interview Techniques
PDF
Effective Presentation & Communication Skills For Business Leaders
PDF
3. needs identification (tools)
PPTX
Interviewing
PPT
Investigation Interview: Elicitation Techniques
PPTX
RSS 2012 Interview Techniques
PPT
Media Training for Municipal Government Officials
PDF
Conversations and person centred approaches
PPTX
The feedback workshop
PPTX
Communication friday presentation 2
PPTX
How to succeed in Difficult Conversations
PPTX
Public speaking made easy
PPTX
Job Interview
PPTX
Conflict Resolution 07302015
Now habit
Let's Network!!
Krueger Focus Group Research
Ouhk comm6005 lecture 6 effective interview skills
HHUSA Interviewing Workshop Share
Communication workshop cmb_may2016_contentonly
User Interview Techniques
Effective Presentation & Communication Skills For Business Leaders
3. needs identification (tools)
Interviewing
Investigation Interview: Elicitation Techniques
RSS 2012 Interview Techniques
Media Training for Municipal Government Officials
Conversations and person centred approaches
The feedback workshop
Communication friday presentation 2
How to succeed in Difficult Conversations
Public speaking made easy
Job Interview
Conflict Resolution 07302015
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

DOC
My experience with english
PPTX
Universidad de san bueneventura –cartagena2
PDF
Tizen native application
PDF
93867681 ninos-mayo
PPT
PPTX
Darlena pagan dot com power point short version
PDF
Doma natural: Esteban Labari i Lucy Rees
PPT
Компанія UDS
PPTX
Sensorize FreeRehab
PPT
Silabus Pengabis Mr. Hidayat
DOCX
Yoselin barrera los lideres nacen o se hacen
PPT
Stephen presentation
PDF
Proven Oilfield Cost Reduction & Environmental Results
PDF
One pressure too many?
PPTX
Agriculture and sustainable cultivation
PPT
New test
PPT
Website usability ideas for business growth
PPTX
사진 앨범
PPTX
Secrets to Building a Stellar Research Program
My experience with english
Universidad de san bueneventura –cartagena2
Tizen native application
93867681 ninos-mayo
Darlena pagan dot com power point short version
Doma natural: Esteban Labari i Lucy Rees
Компанія UDS
Sensorize FreeRehab
Silabus Pengabis Mr. Hidayat
Yoselin barrera los lideres nacen o se hacen
Stephen presentation
Proven Oilfield Cost Reduction & Environmental Results
One pressure too many?
Agriculture and sustainable cultivation
New test
Website usability ideas for business growth
사진 앨범
Secrets to Building a Stellar Research Program
Ad

Similar to Maximizing your moderating_game (20)

PDF
Think epic be epic
KEY
Be Amazing: 5 Rules for Great Presentations
PPTX
Public speaking
PPTX
Doing Customer Interviews Right
PPTX
Soc semmcte
PDF
Seek #DIGNC Digital Non-Conference Conversation starter
PDF
Seek #CincySM Conversation Starter
KEY
Oak Hill's Sr Projects Res Step By Step PPT#3
PDF
Instrumentation in social science studies
PPTX
Bus370
PPT
Busniess communication
PPT
Bus370
PPTX
Jim DeLorenzo: Public Speaking-Media Training Presentation July 2012
PPTX
Cesif week 2
PDF
How to Effectively Lead Focus Groups: Presented at ProductTank Toronto
PPTX
UX Research Moderation Best Practices & Using Your Psychologist Voice
PPT
PPT
Presentation skills for managers
PDF
Active listeningandtalkingtousers
PPTX
569326.pptx
Think epic be epic
Be Amazing: 5 Rules for Great Presentations
Public speaking
Doing Customer Interviews Right
Soc semmcte
Seek #DIGNC Digital Non-Conference Conversation starter
Seek #CincySM Conversation Starter
Oak Hill's Sr Projects Res Step By Step PPT#3
Instrumentation in social science studies
Bus370
Busniess communication
Bus370
Jim DeLorenzo: Public Speaking-Media Training Presentation July 2012
Cesif week 2
How to Effectively Lead Focus Groups: Presented at ProductTank Toronto
UX Research Moderation Best Practices & Using Your Psychologist Voice
Presentation skills for managers
Active listeningandtalkingtousers
569326.pptx

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
High-frequency high-voltage transformer outline drawing
PDF
SEVA- Fashion designing-Presentation.pdf
PDF
The Advantages of Working With a Design-Build Studio
PDF
Trusted Executive Protection Services in Ontario — Discreet & Professional.pdf
PDF
Interior Structure and Construction A1 NGYANQI
PPTX
Tenders & Contracts Works _ Services Afzal.pptx
PDF
UNIT 1 Introduction fnfbbfhfhfbdhdbdto Java.pptx.pdf
DOCX
actividad 20% informatica microsoft project
PPTX
mahatma gandhi bus terminal in india Case Study.pptx
PPTX
HPE Aruba-master-icon-library_052722.pptx
PDF
Quality Control Management for RMG, Level- 4, Certificate
PDF
Urban Design Final Project-Site Analysis
PDF
Urban Design Final Project-Context
PDF
Phone away, tabs closed: No multitasking
PDF
Design Thinking - Module 1 - Introduction To Design Thinking - Dr. Rohan Dasg...
PPTX
Special finishes, classification and types, explanation
PPTX
ANATOMY OF ANTERIOR CHAMBER ANGLE AND GONIOSCOPY.pptx
PPTX
AD Bungalow Case studies Sem 2.pptxvwewev
PPT
Package Design Design Kit 20100009 PWM IC by Bee Technologies
PDF
Emailing DDDX-MBCaEiB.pdf DDD_Europe_2022_Intro_to_Context_Mapping_pdf-165590...
High-frequency high-voltage transformer outline drawing
SEVA- Fashion designing-Presentation.pdf
The Advantages of Working With a Design-Build Studio
Trusted Executive Protection Services in Ontario — Discreet & Professional.pdf
Interior Structure and Construction A1 NGYANQI
Tenders & Contracts Works _ Services Afzal.pptx
UNIT 1 Introduction fnfbbfhfhfbdhdbdto Java.pptx.pdf
actividad 20% informatica microsoft project
mahatma gandhi bus terminal in india Case Study.pptx
HPE Aruba-master-icon-library_052722.pptx
Quality Control Management for RMG, Level- 4, Certificate
Urban Design Final Project-Site Analysis
Urban Design Final Project-Context
Phone away, tabs closed: No multitasking
Design Thinking - Module 1 - Introduction To Design Thinking - Dr. Rohan Dasg...
Special finishes, classification and types, explanation
ANATOMY OF ANTERIOR CHAMBER ANGLE AND GONIOSCOPY.pptx
AD Bungalow Case studies Sem 2.pptxvwewev
Package Design Design Kit 20100009 PWM IC by Bee Technologies
Emailing DDDX-MBCaEiB.pdf DDD_Europe_2022_Intro_to_Context_Mapping_pdf-165590...

Maximizing your moderating_game

  • 1. Maximizing Your Moderating Game! Susan Mercer! Senior Experience Researcher! smercer@madpow.com! @susanamercer!
  • 2. What is Usability Testing?! •  It is NOT:! •  Market Research! •  The same as a Focus Group! •  About user preferences! •  “Fluffy”! •  It is:! •  A systematic way to observe user behavior! •  A method to discover usability issues! •  A ongoing field of scientific inquiry! !! 2
  • 3. Topics! •  What is think-aloud?! •  Your roles as a moderator! •  5 rules of great moderating! •  Keeping sharp! ! 3!
  • 5. Think-aloud Protocol! •  Most commonly-used usability testing method! •  1 participant / 1 moderator! •  Participant does tasks and thinks aloud! •  Origins in Cognitive Psychology! Original protocol:! •  To understand short-term memory! •  Moderator invisible observer! •  Only comments: “Keep talking”, etc.! •  Don’t interrupt short-term memory! 5! Source: Ericsson & Simon, 1980!
  • 6. Think-aloud Protocol - Problems! •  Many practitioners feel the strict no- comments moderation is not ideal:! •  Makes participants feel uncomfortable! •  Feels “unnatural” not to respond! •  Participants may get stuck and not be able to continue! 6!
  • 7. Think-aloud Protocols! Original Think-aloud! Usability Testing! Study this…! Study this…! …to understand this ! Short term …to understand this ! memory! System usability 7!
  • 8. Modified Think-aloud Protocol! •  Based on Conversational Theory! •  Set up a conversation! •  Participant is main speaker! •  Use short, neutral response phrases (continuers) ! •  “Mhmm”, “Uh-huh”, “And now…?” ! •  Utter phrases like questions ! •  Ask for clarifications by repeating a phrase! •  Participant: “That was odd…”! •  Moderator: “Odd?”! •  Provide hints if necessary ! •  Neutrality is key! 8! Source: Boren & Ramey, 2000!
  • 9. The Reality of Think-aloud! •  Many usability professionals get sloppy:! •  Ask leading questions! •  Participant: “I would share this article with friends.”! •  Moderator: “By printing it?”! •  Ask closed-ended questions! •  Moderator: “Would you print this?”! •  Focus on known problems for “ammunition”! •  Use biasing response phrases “Good job”, “Yes, that’s a problem.”! ! 9! Source: Norgaard & Hornbaek, 2006!
  • 10. The Reality of Think-aloud! •  Current practice goes beyond neutrality and includes probing questions! •  Some evidence that probing may influence what usability problems are discovered! •  Evidence is only suggestive; more research is needed! 10! Source: Krahmer & Ummelen, 2004!
  • 11. What does this mean?! •  Current moderating practices are not consistent! •  Moderating is often taught through mentorship; so bad habits can easily be perpetuated! •  Moderators should be willing to examine their practices and adapt if needed! •  Therefore, we need to pay attention to our moderation and remain neutral. !! 11!
  • 12. Your roles as a moderator!
  • 13. Your Roles (Yes, plural)! •  Gracious Host! •  Guide! •  Neutral Observer! •  Curious Learner! •  Technical Support! ! 13!
  • 14. Structure of a Usability Session! Intro! Pre-Test Tasks! Post-Test Wrap-Up! Questions! Questions! Gracious Host! Guide! Curious Learner! Neutral Observer! Technical Support! 14!
  • 15. Structure of a Usability Session! Intro! Pre-Test Tasks! Post-Test Wrap-Up! Questions! Questions! Gracious Host! Guide! Curious Learner! Neutral Observer! Technical Support! ?! ?! ?! ?! ?! Challenge: Navigate the Transitions Smoothly! 15!
  • 16. 5 Rules of Great Moderating!
  • 17. 5 Rules of Great Moderating! 1.  Know your goals! 2.  Stay neutral ! 3.  Be responsible! 4.  Be confident! 5.  Be genuine! ! 17!
  • 18. 5 Rules of Great Moderating! 1.  Know your goals! 2.  Stay neutral ! 3.  Be responsible! 4.  Be confident! 5.  Be genuine! ! 18!
  • 19. 1. Know Your Goals! •  What are you trying to achieve?! •  Formative ! •  Summative ! •  What topics are highest priority?! ! These will influence! •  Where you focus! •  What you skim when time runs short! •  How you fine-tune your moderating style! 19!
  • 20. 5 Rules of Great Moderating! 1.  Know your goals! 2.  Stay neutral ! 3.  Be responsible! 4.  Be confident! 5.  Be genuine! ! 20!
  • 21. 2. Stay Neutral! •  Be Quiet!! •  Don’t insinuate they gave a wrong answer! ✘  “Why did you do that?”! ✘  “What made you think to click that link?”! •  Don’t put ideas into their heads! ✘  “Does entering your SSN make you feel uncomfortable?”! ü “What do you think about entering your SSN?”! •  Use their words! •  If they call the dashboard a “chart area”, then call it a “chart area”! •  Keep your tone naturally curious, not derisive! •  “What did you expect here?”! 21!
  • 22. 2. Stay Neutral! •  Avoid closed-ended (Yes/No) questions ! •  Don’t start with a verb! ✘ Did you see that?! ✘ Was that difficult?! ✘ Is this frustrating?! 22!
  • 23. 2. Stay Neutral! •  Use Open-ended questions! •  Start with What, When, Where, Why, How! ü What would you change to make this easier?! ü When in this process would you be ready to buy?! ü Where did you expect to find that information?! ü Why did you say this was easy?! ü How does that error message make you feel?! 23!
  • 24. 2. Stay Neutral! •  Use neutral, “continuing” response phrases! •  Acknowledge that they gave feedback! •  Don’t imply whether it is good or bad! ✘ “Oh”, “Hmm”, “Interesting” - Assessing! ✘ “OK”, “Yeah”, “That’s good” - Agreeing! ü “Uh huh”, “Mhmm”, “Tell me more” - Continuing! 24! Source: Boren & Ramey, 2000
  • 25. 5 Rules of Great Moderating! 1.  Know your goals! 2.  Stay neutral ! 3.  Be responsible! 4.  Be confident! 5.  Be genuine! ! 25!
  • 26. 3. Be Responsible! You have responsibilities to:! ! •  Participant! •  Company! •  Future Users ! •  Study Integrity! 26!
  • 27. 3. Be Responsible! •  Informed Consent:! 1.  Voluntary! 2.  Comprehension! 3.  Disclosure! •  The purpose of the study! •  Any reasonably foreseeable risks! •  Potential benefits ! •  Notification of recording and observers! •  Confidentiality protections ! •  Ability to withdraw at any time without penalty! 27!
  • 28. 3. Be Responsible! Situations happen during testing.! You may need to juggle your responsibilities.! ! What are your priorities?! ! •  Study Integrity! •  Company! •  Future Users! •  Participant! 28!
  • 29. What to do?! If…! •  Participant doesn’t want to be recorded! •  You don’t have time to ask every question! •  The participant rants about the website and calls it “crap”! 29!
  • 30. 5 Rules of Great Moderating! 1.  Know your goals! 2.  Stay neutral ! 3.  Be responsible! 4.  Be confident! 5.  Be genuine! ! 30!
  • 31. 4. Be Confident! •  Project confidence! •  If you make a mistake, keep going! •  Don’t over-apologize! •  Pause if you need to collect your thoughts! •  “Fake it until you make it”! 31!
  • 32. 5 Rules of Great Moderating! 1.  Know your goals! 2.  Stay neutral ! 3.  Be responsible! 4.  Be confident! 5.  Be genuine! ! 32!
  • 33. 5. Be Genuine! •  Don’t play the notes on the page…! …play the music! ! •  Don’t just read the questions from the page…! …have a conversation! 33!
  • 34. 5. Be Genuine! •  LISTEN! •  Listen and respond! •  Stay in the moment! •  Don’t worry about past ! •  Or the future! •  Create a conversation! ! 34!
  • 35. 5 Rules of Great Moderating! 1.  Know your goals! 2.  Stay neutral ! 3.  Be responsible! 4.  Be confident! 5.  Be genuine! ! 35!
  • 37. Keep Improving! 1.  Identify your improvement areas! •  Watch your videos! •  Have colleagues give you feedback! 37!
  • 38. Keep Improving! 2.  Learn from others! •  Watch others moderate! •  Be a participant! •  Listen to talk radio interviews! 38!
  • 39. Keep Improving! 3.  Practice skills in everyday life! •  People watch (observe) in public! •  Be quiet and listen in everyday conversations! ! 39!
  • 40. The most important thing is…! PRACTICE! •  No one is perfect the first time! •  Do your best and continually improve! •  You’ll be awesome in no time!! 40!
  • 42. Thank You! (Slides will be posted to Slideshare..follow me on twitter for link) Susan Mercer! Senior Experience Researcher! smercer@madpow.com! @susanamercer! 42!
  • 43. References / Photo Credits! Boren, T. and Ramey, J. (2000) Thinking aloud: reconciling theory and practice. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 43 (3), 261-278.! Dumas, J. and Loring, B. (2008) Moderating usability tests, Morgan Kaufman.! Dumas, J. and Redish, J. (1999) A practical guide to usability testing, Intellect Ltd.! Ericsson, K. and Simon, H. (1980) Verbal reports as data. Psychological review. 87 (3), 215-251.! Krahmer, E. and Ummelen, N. (2004) Thinking about thinking aloud: A comparison of two verbal protocols for usability testing. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 47 (2), 105-117.! Norgaard, M. and Hornbaek, K. (2006) What do usability evaluators do in practice? An exploratory study of think-aloud testing. DIS 2006, 209-218.! ! ! ! Slide 4: Samantha Louras Photography ! Slide 5: flickr: torgeaux! Slide 14: flickr: mkorcusa, flickr: Calsidyrose, flickr: marioanima, flickr: breity, flickr: Qole Pejorian! Slides 27, 29 and 30: flickr: Raphael Quinet, flickr: acme, flickr: betsyweber, flickr: KirkOls! Slide 32: flickr: bberburb! Slide 34: flickr: Tulane Public Relations! Slide 35: flickr: apdk, flickr: marktristan! Slide 38: flickr: Raphael Quinet! Slide 39: flickr: l-i-n-k! Slide 40: flickr: loppear! ! ! 43!