Library

Why does research matter in human-centered design

Human-centered design often stumbles due to inadequate research. This note emphasizes the importance of research to gain rich customer-centric insights—the most important element of HCD.

The inevitable is hidden and forgotten

Human-centered design (HCD) continues to ride a wave of popularity across sectors. The approach, if applied correctly, has the potential to generate effective, customer-centric insights. These insights can be used to develop innovative solutions that create enduring value for customers and organizations. HCD involves an empathetic understanding of users, creative thinking, and rapid testing of solutions.

When an organization adopts an HCD approach, it increases the chances to obtain better and timely insights from customer engagement and thus be able to design and deliver appropriate services to customers. HCD not only benefits the organization by addressing business problems but also allows active collaboration that can empower customers to express their needs, preferences, and aspirations. MSC has used our flagship version of HCD, Market Insights for Innovation & Design (MI4ID) for two decades now. As we celebrate 20 years of work, we examine the one thing that makes MI4ID so successful.

Many solutions developed using the philosophy of HCD have not yielded great results—for example, here and here . While there is no question of the intent, desirability, and appropriateness of using HCD, these failures indicate that HCD-based solutions often stumble due to a lack of supply-side buy-in and a poor understanding of both internal and external market players beyond the end customer. Repeated “pivoting” to new solutions is not a badge of honor—it is a sign of inadequate research that underlies the design of the initial solutions.

One example where HCD could have been applied with more rigor is a particular case where the low enrolment for a product was attributed to poor awareness among potential customers. Developed using the HCD approach, the proposed solution was a smart, digital platform-based community financial literacy and marketing program. However, the solution was developed using insights from hastily conducted research, which revealed that WhatsApp was a common source of information and that the servicing agent had less time or capacity to share knowledge. The solution also proposed an element of gamification, whereby if one person views all the suggested videos and responds to some questions, they will be entitled to some “freebies”.

However, the researchers missed a key insight. The real obstacle was not the customer’s knowledge, as they were already receiving basic knowledge from the agent—who was a trustworthy and influential source of information. Rather, the underlying issue was that potential users, as well as some existing users, had many queries that neither the agent nor other information sources could answer. Clearly, a contextual understanding and deeper customer insights would have highlighted the real issues, proposed a solution, and more importantly, improved the knowledge dissemination hierarchy. The proposed digital platform—however well designed, smart, and interactive—was not the solution in this case.

Similar challenges arise when HCD overlooks the contexts or the ecosystem of providers. In another HCD-led exercise, the proposed solution to enhance the adoption of mobile money by customers was to establish a model shop where the digital payment was accepted. The HCD process overlooked the fact that many shops in a nearby market-accepted cash, offered short-term credit, and were an integral part of the community relationships that villagers used to manage their financial affairs.

We have also witnessed many instances where HCD-led solutions have failed because of a partial involvement from service providers in the development of the solution or product or simply because the regulations did not permit the proposed product. Such examples indicate that research on the market and supply-side realities within which a solution must operate received inadequate attention.

We list below some limitations of HCD that providers, regulatory bodies, and other organizations should address.

  1. There is often a “need to find a quick fix” bias, owing to a shallow focus on understanding the context. A number of assumptions are made based on a few interactions mapped as per the work-plans and planned activities. As a result, a planning fallacy invariably ensues in the subsequent work.
  2. The HCD process simply tests “confirmation bias” as a pre-determined idea or “solution” from elsewhere—with minimal contextual changes. Practitioners often overlook local knowledge, realities, and ideas. Thus, they face inevitable challenges to adoption.
  3. HCD is limited by a “mind projection fallacy” bias, where HCD practitioners assume to have a thorough understanding of their strategy, trajectory, or regulatory environment. As a result, the proposed solutions are difficult to adopt for the organization in its existing strategic plans or as per the law.
  4. HCD practitioners often fall into the “outside expert” trap, where they do not spend enough time to understand the local context and lack sufficient local knowledge. They do not make the effort to put the right team and tools in place to understand the context, such as by developing and reading “research-guides”, understanding the local language used to describe complex human financial behavior, or conducting participatory exercises. This bias is often amplified by a failure to formulate questions because the practitioners assume that they “already know this well.” As a result, they do not formulate contextual questions. Moreover, such outside experts often use tools or games that are not adapted to the local market.
  5. While a persuasive and engaging presentation of ideas is immensely important, it may be used to obscure a lack of detailed assessment and analysis, also known as the “design chic” challenge. Indeed, the prevalence of teams spending more time designing presentations and reports than the actual fieldwork is a fairly good indicator of this problem.

Despite the inherent biases that flourish when practitioners carry out inadequate research, providers generally resist making adequate investments in research. Although providers acknowledge that disruptive thinking leads to solutions, they are often comfortable in carrying out cursory research that extends between five and 10 days and involves talking to 10 or 15 customers at most. The result of which is that they “mix and match” their lessons from other settings and test the design solutions hastily with end-users. This process overlooks contextual information including one’s decision-making process and the emotional and mental barriers, that is, the behavioral issues around critical questions, such as:

  • Why do the end-users do what they do?
  • What are the key socio-cultural barriers that hinder the desired behavior or goals?
  • Where is the gap in converting intention into action?
  • What are the behavioral triggers behind the end-users’ choices?

These elements must be uncovered before envisioning the design solutions.

Balancing the act: give research its due!

The HCD process, by itself, does not undermine or negate the importance of research. Yet somehow, research is relegated to solution testing, which takes precedence while the aspect of creative thinking is ignored. MSC’s product and service development toolkit “Market Insights for Innovation & Design” (MI4ID) stress research-driven insights before innovations can begin. MI4ID further stresses on the involvement of those on the supply side who are responsible for implementing solutions at an early stage. Read more about MI4ID and its success stories here.

It is essential to undertake adaptive research where intelligent moderation of field-discussion uncovers the nuances that surround the research issue. Most HCD research should use carefully selected combinations of interactive methods, such as discussions, games or participatory exercises, activity prototypes, observations, mystery shopping, among others, to decipher such nuances.

To obtain rich insights and understand the situation on the ground, providers should ideally recognize that research is an investment, one that is worth making to unlock value that endures—thereby realizing a strong return on investment well into the future while also serving happy customers. This requires an empathetic mindset that is hard to achieve by browsing data online or by simply interviewing a few people. Researchers need to spend time, align with the socio-cultural fabric, and assimilate with the wider societal dynamics to interact successfully with potential beneficiaries only then successful interventions can be designed.

Leave comments

Written by

jayan-nair

Akhand Tiwari

Partner
jayan-nair

Graham Wright

Group Managing Director
jayan-nair

Mimansa Khanna

Senior Manager