Sunday, December 21, 2008
From Brainstorming to Webstorming
A slide presentation from Paul Tran of Brightidea - Innovation & Idea Management.
I liked it a lot - certainly something to think about with Ethnopanels. Am I too obsessed with Ethnopanels?
Thursday, December 18, 2008
A personal Merry Christmas from the Salari Family
Every year we send out a Salari Family Christmas film to friends, colleagues and clients. You can see more here, here and here. But this is a film with a difference. It is quite naturalitic and not too different to the material we film as part of EDL projects. In other words, there are insights to be gleaned from this film. And I mean ethnographic insights, which I the subject, would never have been able to see/articulate.
So I invite you to watch and test you abilities at extracting new understanding from a sequence of film. A hint: focus on what I am NOT doing. And then think about how much more the twins could be learning.
The best reply will will a seriously nice book.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year
I made a pledge that I would transparently and honestly feedback to you any ethnographic experiments we have conducted. Here is one we completed the other day. Using our panel. Asking 250 people to tell us about how they snacked. Whatever you might think about the process, please let me know, it demonstrates to me that qualitative and quantitative can come together even where ethnography is concerned.
Enjoy the clip. It's long-ish at nearly 10 minutes but well worth a watch over a cup of coffee (or tea). I would love to hear your thoughts.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Why do ethnography?
This is from Sam Ladner's blog on technology design and research methods. Simple points are made but so easy to lose sight of how important these points are when trying to get to consumers' true needs.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
New York Trip Film (no insights here)
Have a look at this film. It's a about missing a connection en-route to NY last spring. Not particularly well filmed or edited (I leave that to our experts). What, I hope, you will find interesting is that it was captured entirely using the built in camera of my MacBook Pro! It goes to show just how easily you can capture every day events using things other than a video camera.
QRCA Barcelona Conference Fun Film (no insights here)
This is a film I shot using a tiny hand held DV camera. I would recommend it to anyone but only for YouTube quality footage and no more. Much better than using the built in camera on my laptop. I even filmed our entire summer holiday with it.
Real Ethnography vs. Fake Ethnography
Dr. Aviva Rosenstein - "Fake Ethnography vs Real Ethnography" at URF08 from bolt peters on Vimeo.
A refreshing talk/perspective on what ethnograpy is and is not. My own very strong view is that ethnography must incorporate naturalistic observations, ideally captured on film. A lot of ethnography seems still to be qualitative interviews in people's homes. I could go on but won't. This clip is 30 miutes long so watch it over lunch or an extended break. But make time to watch it. It's good.
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Orchards vs Wild Apples
Qualitative vs Quantitative delineation is fast becoming old hat according to my friend, John Griffiths of Planning Above And Beyond. Listen to him talking about web 3.0, wild ‘fruit’, hunter gatherers and the danger it poses for researchers. But (a big, but) the opportunity for ethnographic researchers is huge…
How to Fix EthnoPanels
I told, John all about our ethnoPanels experiment and how it went wrong. Listen to him suggest a much better way of energising our panels. He calls it ‘Super Moderation’. He shares a wonderful analogy about most qualitative researchers having no idea how to throw a great party. According to, John, most only know how to be good bouncers.
Gadgets for Qualitative Researchers
John, like me, loves gadgets. Here he talks about his latest discovery. See other gadgets on his website.
Sunday, November 9, 2008
On the money: an interesting read in the Guardian online about Gillian Tett, social anthropology and predicting the credit crunch
"Because one of the things I learned as an anthropologist is that to understand how a society works you need to not just look at the areas of what we call 'social noise' - ie what everyone likes to talk about, so the equity markets and M&A and all the high-profile areas everyone can see. But you need to look at the social silences as well." Read it all, here.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
International Student Ethnographic Film Festival 08
What is an ethnographic film? Is it rigorous enough to withstand commercial scrutiny? How do these films convey insight? Perhaps we will find the answers to these questions and more at an interesting event taking place next week on the 11th and 12th of November at Goldsmiths in London, UK. I'll be there too as a panelist and places are free! But you need to make a reservation. If you do come, be sure to find me and we can go for a drink somewhere afterwards.
Go here to read more.
Monday, October 27, 2008
Sharing resources: a thought.
The other day we were in one of those client workshops where a bunch of (qual) agencies were invited to bond with the client, better understand their research needs moving forward and be introduced to new managers.
It was a fun day. And we were the only (fundamentalist) ethnographic research agency present which made me think we were the only 'real deal' ethnographic player. We were if you consider naturalistic observations and spending 2-3 days with respondents as key components of ethnographic research.
Why, I asked myself, doesn't everyone else use video like us? Well, it's expensive. You have to pay an experienced video ethnographer/employee to not only film but to edit the events. Then the films have to be co-discovered, analysed and interpreted.
A thought occurred to me. And I emailed our client with the thought: Should any of your other research suppliers wish to do naturalistic observational research, we will do it for them! And we will do it at cost. The same cost that I have to pay as an employer with a very small admin fee on top. As long as my time isn't used and we don't have to do any analysis or interpretation, we will offer our ethnographers as an in house resource to anyone who needs them, anywhere in the world.
And why not? At first it was meant as an offer exclusively to fellow agencies at the client workshop. But today I thought I would open the offer to any qualitative research agency who needs trained, experienced and professional video ethnographers.
The only issue will be how busy we are and whether or not we can free up our people to work on other people's projects. Well, let's see how many requests we get. If you are a client and want the same, go here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Popular Posts
- How to write an insight statement
- A deaf Easter post
- I'm crazy about street photography
- Viewpoint: The faddish breakouts of ethnography
- Commercial vs. academic anthropology: a guest post by, Pedro Oliveira
- Pune Morning day 5
- Key concepts in anthropology
- Railways station ethnography - can you see what my students saw?
- Leavening
- Mobile ethnography tasks and probes: