visit
Mixed Methods Research is defined as a type of user research that combines qualitative and quantitative methods into a single study. Companies like Spotify, Airbnb and Lyft are using Mixed Methods Research to combine rich user insights with actionable statistics for deeper user insights.
The rules of user research have changed. The distinction between qualitative and quantitative research is becoming blurry as research at scale becomes more common. Fast-growing companies are prioritising researchers fluent in both qualitative and quantitative methods that can adapt to any research challenge. We have entered the era of Mixed Methods Research.
Traditionally these qualitative and quantitative research methods were viewed in opposition. Each side would proudly stand and proclaim that their methods were more important for the company’s success. The researcher conducted the study using either a qual or quant research method and interpreted the findings on their own.Then it all started to change. The importance of user experience became increasingly important as companies adopted product-led and lean startup growth strategies. Founders initially took on this responsibility for user research. As companies grew, this work was passed down to technically-minded product managers. Product managers quickly learned that big data could tell them what users were doing but it couldn’t tell them why.
Quantitative research methods are remarkably useful for gathering hard data to measure, validate and inform crucial decisions. This quant data is the currency of internal decision-making in product-led companies. Stats from this research can answer questions like ‘Which feature do users like the most?’ or ‘Which design do users prefer?’.
However, quantitative data will likely surface new questions that can only be answered with qualitative research. Qual insights can help you to understand why questions such as ‘Why do my users like to use my product?’, ‘Why do they churn?’ and ‘Why do they behave this way?’.
A research toolkit compass from Spotify’s “”
Additionally, qualitative research provides an opportunity for users to share insights you never would have thought to ask about. At , we call these insights unknown unknowns and they’re a core output of successful
Mixed Methods Research is unique because the researcher can address multiple research objectives in one project — understanding the pains and motivations driving user behaviour as well as the scale of their impact on the total userbase. A Full-Stack Researcher has the breadth of expertise to select the perfect research methods to answer any question, regardless of whether it sits on the qual or quant side of the fence.In 2016, Blake Bartlett from venture capital firm OpenView coined the idea of “Product-Led Growth”. This is the strategy that fuels rocketship trajectory companies like Slack, Calendly and Dropbox. The defining feature of Product-Led Growth is the “”. In the 1980s and 1990s we had the CIO Era, where deals were done over dinner and 18 holes of golf. Then came the Exec Era in the 2000s, where outbound sales and marketing targetted the non-technical executive of the company. The End User Era suggests that purchasing has shifted down to the end user. Their primary decision-making criteria is not “how will this product help the business’ bottom line?” but “how will this product help me in my day-to-day?”.
🔭 1. Exploratory: Qual → Quant
Exploratory Mixed Methods Research research puts the qualitative step first. This typically involves a user interview sprint but can also take the form of an online survey with open-ended questions. The findings of this first step inform the quantitative research that follows. This usually means taking the insights from your qual step and using them to inform a quantitative project, such as a quant survey or unmoderated usability testing. The results of your quant step help you to quantify the significance of your qualitative insights.This approach is great when you are working on a research problem with a lot of unknowns and you don’t know what you should ask in your quant study (or as we call them at , ‘’). Qualitative insights will help you to form a hypothesis which can then be validated or invalidated during the quantitative step. To explain, let’s introduce you to Alison Berent-Spillson, a UX researcher, designer and Medium content creator.
In 2018, Alison was tasked with conducting research for Slingshot, an application that helps competitive foosball players to improve how they practice. To kick off her research, Alison needed to get a basic understanding of the opinions and perspectives that foosball players held. This led her to conduct exploratory interviews with foosball players. It was through these interviews that Alison was first able to understand the frustrations that players felt.
🔬 2. Explanatory: Quant → Qual
Explanatory user research starts with collecting and analysing quantitative data. This step often starts by looking at user product behaviour at scale using big data tools like or . You can then bring your insights to a qualitative deep dive to learn more about the context behind the figures through focus groups, in-depth interviews or online community discussions. Explanatory research integrates all of your findings for a broader and deeper understanding of your users.This research design is especially useful when there is a need to explain and interpret the quantitative findings. To explain, let’s introduce you to Clement Kao, a Product Manager at a consumer fintech startup called Blend.Prior to Blend, Clement was working at a CRM startup that struggled with high user churn. Clement noticed that the most engaged users interacted with the app very differently than the disengaged cohort. He decided to segmented the user base by engagement levels to pinpoint the specific events and actions that were indicators of which users were the most and least engaged.Clement started with quantitative research. He analysed the user base to determine their top quartile of “highly engaged” users (with a median login rate of 31.7 times per month) and their bottom quartile of “highly disengaged” users (with a median login rate of 4.9 times per month). Comparing these two groups, they found that highly engaged users regularly reassigned leads to teammates, rejected leads and set vacations in the app. Clement was very surprised that highly engaged users would reassign leads to their teammates — this insight directly contradicted their hypothesis of what a highly engaged user was.🔮 3. Dynamic: Qual + Quant
Dynamic research methods blend qualitative and quantitative data together at the same time within one research study. Unlike exploratory and explanatory research, an entire Mixed Methods Research project can be carried out in just one step using a dynamic mixed methods research tool.A number of core principles define dynamic user research methods. They are fundamentally user-driven. By putting the user at the centre, the researcher takes more of an observation role. This means that dynamic research is often unmoderated or reactively controlled so that participants can shape the evolving data themselves. Dynamic research is particularly suited for teams that are using a Product-Led Growth strategy as the user’s ability to share their experience is prioritised over the researcher’s interference.The most common method of dynamic research is unmoderated usability testing at scale. At an individual level, this is inherently qualitative and observational. However at scale, quantitative data begins to surface trends in user behaviour.Another method of dyamic Mixed Methods Research is (hey, that’s us! 👋). OpinionX takes more of a deliberative approach to dynamic research. On the surface, OpinionX looks like a combination of lots of features that you are already familiar with. Open-ended questions and free-response textboxes enable you to gather rich verbatim opinions from users. Structured voting formats like agree -vs- disagree and pair-choice selection translates the unstructured user opinions into organised quantitative data. The result is a harmonious blend of qualitative user opinions that are easy to prioritise with sorting methods such as consensus, importance and divergence.Dynamic research methods like remove the need for the researcher to manually translate insights from one step to the next, like in exploratory or explanatory Mixed Methods Research. Mixed Methods Research is often seen as a time-consuming process due to the added steps. However, platforms like OpinionX are great at gathering rich and actionable insights even faster than a traditional solo qual or quant study.When COVID first hit back in March 2020, a group of Irish entrepreneurs launched a nonprofit called Feed the Heroes to provide a way for ordinary people stuck at home to support frontline workers. The project was a rapid success and reached over €1M in donations, mainly from individuals, within a few weeks. The Feed the Heroes team were keen to understand what supporters’ core movitations were for donating to their cause.The Feed the Heroes team had drafted a traditional multiple choice survey but they felt that a significant amount of people would end up falling into the “Other” box. They also worried that they would end up missing out on some really rich insights from passionate donors that way. Instead, they launched an OpinionX survey. They added over 30 interesting sample opinions that were directly from donors tweets, emails and testimonials to kickstart the survey. The final thing to do was to share their survey link with their 17,000-strong donor base.Check out the full case study for more info on the surprising insights that helped the Feed the Heroes team get even closer to their donors .
👆 This user-generated statement (qual) was the most important opinion to participants (quant). It completely changed how the Feed the Heroes team understood their value proposition and messaging.Check out the full case study for more info on the surprising insights that helped the Feed the Heroes team get even closer to their donors .The goal of becoming a Full-Stack Researcher is not simply to improve your ability to gather meaningful insights. Instead, Mixed Methods Research enables you to improve your ability to collaborate with your internal stakeholders. Rather than being a Swiss Army Knife that your team delegates research work to, a Full-Stack Researcher is a guide that understands which language to use to guide each internal function to the perspective of the user.
Is it better to have a qualitative researcher and a quantitative researcher rather than a single Full-Stack Researcher?
The more research resources you can have, the better! For many companies this simply isn’t possible. While some may only be able to afford to bring onboard their first UX research hire today, others may find it difficult to even find a user researcher to hire. User research is a rapidly growing profession (the UX industry reached 1M people in 2017 and will grow to 100M by 2050). As a result, there are more user research roles available than there are user researchers to fill them! With this talent shortage in mind, the broader the expertise of your researcher the better.Why is UX research important in the first place?
Companies of their dissatisfied customers. Without user research, understanding the user experience problems that caused these users to become dissatisfied and churn is a guessing game. Customer experience is the battleground for competitive advantage. Companies with superior CX bring in than their competitors with comparatively poor CX.Where can I learn more about the user research profession?
A great place to start is with User Interviews’ annual report.Where can I learn how to conduct qualitative research?
has created a great resource on all things related to running user interviews. has everything you need to know about usability testing.Where can I learn how to conduct quantitative research?
have a great guide to conducting user surveys. can help you get started with A/B tests.How do I analyse the results of open-ended survey questions?
Analysing open-ended questions from a traditional survey is a manual process that requires significant time to do. If you’ve already run your open-ended survey, check out Louis Grenier’s guide and template for . If you haven’t run your project yet, automates the analysis of open-ended responses by letting participants vote on each other’s opinions to surface the statements that are most important to them.Is Mixed Methods Research not just for academic research?
Academia has had a 15 year headstart on Mixed Methods Research compared to tech companies. Mixed Methods Research started taking off in academia around 2006. Early studies found that ‘Mixed methods give a voice to study participants, ensure that study findings are grounded in participants’ experiences and uncover more information than can be obtained in only quantitative research’ []. In recent years, however, Mixed Methods Research has rapidly expanded beyond academia as the UX profession grows and specialised tools enable easier access to this new field of user research.
The number of publications mentioning “mixed methods” in the title or abstract in the .
(Disclaimer: The author is the Co-Founder & CEO at OpinionX)