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Context acts as the bridge between an abstract idea (’a comfortable user experience’) and a tangible design (‘cushioned, breathable running shoes’). Although gaining context through remote research can be tricky, our UXR friends with an anthropological background know the solution: Digital ethnography.
This week, we’re joined by Megan McLean, User Researcher at Spotify. Megan shared the who-what-and-how of digital ethnography, what she’s learned about mapping the digital landscape, and how she ensures her ethnography projects succeed.
Highlights
[03:55] The core tenets of ethnography
[06:50] Spend more time with your data throughout your study to get the most out of it.
[10:01] What is digital ethnography anyway?
[14:09] How Megan gets her participants to go deep on the subjects she wants to learn about
[16:05] Pros and cons of the pandemic’s effect on research
[19:28] How Megan recreates more real life context in her interviews
[23:20] How does the audio first platform of Spotify change the way you look at things?
[27:17] Who is digital ethnography a good fit for?
[30:28] How Megan makes things simpler for her participants
[36:36] The difference between writing analysis for usability studies and for ethnographies
[39:14] What Megan’s learned about people and technology through her work
About our guest
Megan McLean is a User Research Manager at Spotify. Before Spotify, Megan received a Masters in Anthropology, worked in academia, and on UX research teams at places like Ipsos.
4.9
7575 ratings
Context acts as the bridge between an abstract idea (’a comfortable user experience’) and a tangible design (‘cushioned, breathable running shoes’). Although gaining context through remote research can be tricky, our UXR friends with an anthropological background know the solution: Digital ethnography.
This week, we’re joined by Megan McLean, User Researcher at Spotify. Megan shared the who-what-and-how of digital ethnography, what she’s learned about mapping the digital landscape, and how she ensures her ethnography projects succeed.
Highlights
[03:55] The core tenets of ethnography
[06:50] Spend more time with your data throughout your study to get the most out of it.
[10:01] What is digital ethnography anyway?
[14:09] How Megan gets her participants to go deep on the subjects she wants to learn about
[16:05] Pros and cons of the pandemic’s effect on research
[19:28] How Megan recreates more real life context in her interviews
[23:20] How does the audio first platform of Spotify change the way you look at things?
[27:17] Who is digital ethnography a good fit for?
[30:28] How Megan makes things simpler for her participants
[36:36] The difference between writing analysis for usability studies and for ethnographies
[39:14] What Megan’s learned about people and technology through her work
About our guest
Megan McLean is a User Research Manager at Spotify. Before Spotify, Megan received a Masters in Anthropology, worked in academia, and on UX research teams at places like Ipsos.
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