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When community members take over!
1.
2. There will always be a gap between what a consumer
shares and how a researcher interprets it. This disparity
is created by a cultural, generation and/or knowledge
gap. These different gaps make it difficult for a
researcher to put things into the right perspective. Here,
community participants can help us out. By
What to expect? becoming our co-researcher, they can find more and
new insights that would otherwise not have been
captured. Customers feel empowered and honoured
when they are asked to become co-researchers. There
are many ways to collaborate with co-researchers. In
this article, our experience with co-researchers is
illustrated in three case studies from Campbell’s,
Air France-KLM and Philips.
4. Co-researchers bring down the wall
The new buzzword in research industry is What would happen if we brought down these walls
„collaboration‟. Today, 8 out of 10 consumers are and turned participants into researchers? Our recent
willing to collaborate with brands, 36% of case studies prove that community participants
whom prefer to do so in a branded research are not only perfectly capable of taking on the
community (Social Media Around The World, role as co-researchers, it’s also a way to close
2012). In order for collaborations to be really cultural, generation and knowledge gaps.
successful, it‟s key that there‟s an equal relationship These studies illustrate 3 ways of how community
between all parties and that they consider each members become co-researchers: by moderating,
other as true partners. In Online Customer analysing and fine-tuning our conclusions.
Communities, we consider the participants as equal
partners. We empower them to start their own
discussions and enable them to share (un)solicited
feedback. However, the roles are still split: we are
the researchers, they are the participants. For a
successful collaboration, we need to challenge these
traditional, distinct roles and examine the
convergence of the roles of a researcher and
participant.
5. MROCs allow us to build an on-going connection
with our participants. After the introductory period,
we have gained their trust and participants know
their way around in the community. Even members
who were not familiar with communities before, learn
Participants as quickly how the community works, what the role of
the community manager is and what is expected of
‘co-moderators’ them. Without introducing the official role of a
‘co-moderator’ we already see some members
starting to behave as moderators in the social
corner (i.e. the room to talk off-topic and start new
discussions). This already shows there‟s potential for
empowering participants to be part of the research
team and become actual co-moderators.
6. How to collaborate with co-moderators
There are various ways to introduce co-moderators into the community. We have
identified two types of co-moderators: „by role‟ and „by mission‟
7. 1 The role of the co-moderator
The co-moderator task „by role‟ is endorsed as another moderator in the MROC of a specific room (i.e.
social corner). The co-moderator is encouraged to start discussions by him/herself, moderate,
summarise and report back to the moderator. In the community “Come Dine With Me” which we ran
for Campbell‟s, the co-moderator took his role very seriously and started completely new topics in the
Lounge.
“I really enjoyed being a co-moderator, it
really felt like I was playing an important role
and that I was being heard. Thank you for
asking me to do that, I would love to do it
again”
(Co-moderator in the “Come Dine With Me”
community)
8. 2 The mission of the co-moderator
The co-moderator „by mission‟ tries to complete a secret assignment. Instead of being „responsible‟ for
one room, the mission for this co-moderator is to join an already existing discussion and
stimulate the conversation to keep the topic active. Afterwards, as in the case of the co-moderator
“by role”, they summarise the discussion and report back to the moderator. In the community we ran for
Campbell‟s, we asked participants to join the discussion “Your ideal restaurant experience” to find out
extra insights in order to understand the total restaurant experience. For this role, the co-moderators were
positively surprised also
“I accept the challenge and look forward to
reporting back to you with my findings.
Should be fun!”
(Initial reaction from the co-moderator by
„mission‟)
10. Working with a co-moderator „by mission‟ helps to
keep the discussion relevant and dynamic.
Plus, the questions are posed from a peer‟s point of
view, which helps close the participant-vs.-
researcher gap. Where co-mods by mission only
‘poke’ discussions on topic level, co-mods by
role go one step further. They take over a whole
forum (e.g. social corner) and collaborate with the
members on a structural level, resulting in closer
P2P relations and increasing the social glue of the
community. Overall, co-moderatorship is perceived
to be very rewarding both for the co-moderator and
the other participants. Our experience with co-
moderators already shows there are more
opportunities for collaborating with participants as
In a brand new study with Campbell‟s, we observed co-researchers. In the past year, we‟ve done several
studies to further explore the potential of co-
that working with co-moderators increases the
researchers in the analysis stage.
general engagement of the MROC. The
conversation can be even more open as it is peer-to-
peer, speaking the same language. Also the findings “How interesting that you used a couple of the
other members to help you and ask us
are summarized from a consumer point of view, not questions too. It’s a great idea, they know
that of a researcher‟s, thus bringing another mind and where we’re coming from, and understand what
a different perspective into the analysis process. Using we are talking about so it’s easier to talk to
them”
co-moderators also reaffirms to all participants that the (A „Come Dine With Me, Australia‟ MROC
MROC is about listening, sharing and collaborating participant talking about a co-moderator)
together. (Luke et al, 2012)
11. Participating in crowd interpretation
Next to moderation, participants can also add value when they are involved
during the analysis phase, also referred to as „crowd interpretation‟. The
rationale behind crowd interpretation is that analysis of data is biased by a
researcher gaze. To get all potential interpretations and insights hidden in the
data, we should to include multiple perspectives.
12. Recently, we conducted an insightment community
in cooperation with Air France-KLM where we
wanted to detect new needs of transfer
passengers. After an observational stage where
each transfer passenger reported about their
Interpreting journey, we invited the community members to
interpret each other‟s contributions. Previous
research (Verhaeghe et all, 2011) taught us that
community data consumers who are knowledgeable about the topic
are most suitable for interpreting research results.
The crowd interpretation was done in a game. In the
first round, members gave their interpretation of the
input of their peers. In the second round, the original
contributor could rate the analysis. For each correct
analysis, one received points. Consumers who were
best at the analysis (highest number of points) won
the game and got a special reward. When
comparing the results of the researcher group with
those of the participants, we can conclude that
involving co-researchers leads to up to 21% of
new insights, which would otherwise not have
been reached. In other words: involving community
participants in the analysis stage brings new insights
to the table and helps researchers to close the gaps.
Crowd interpretation of Gen Y community data
.
13. Dry-running your presentation for consumers
Another way to involve participants in the tasks of the researcher is by asking them to fine-tune
your conclusions, almost like a dry-run for the community participants instead of the company.
This technique was used in a recent study we did for Philips.
14. Last year, we set up a 3-week insight shaping
community with 50 Chinese consumers,
together with Philips. Normally, we would work
with a native moderator. Due to time constraints, we
had to work with a non-native moderator and the
Fine-tune researcher’s
community was run in English, while the fear existed
we would lose out in terms of the fine nuances in
Chinese culture and society. To avoid this caveat
conclusions and increase positive feedback loops for enriched
information generation, we used 10 of our
participants as our co-researchers in a process of
crowd interpretation.
After our analysis of the community outtakes, these
participants were presented our findings and were
asked to challenge them. In performing the task of
crowd interpretation, these participants were asked
to explain our findings from the Chinese cultural
perspective, illustrate our findings with their own
personal examples as well as go beyond our first
impressions. Working with co-researchers
created truly unique insights that were key for
Philips to find the right positioning in the
Chinese market. We, as researchers and
Philips‟ “Sleep Well” community with Chinese consumers
marketers, would never have uncovered these
insights from an online distance (Schillewaert et al,
2012).
.
15. A new milestone in the researcher-participant
relationship
Based on these 3 case studies, we have truly experienced the added value of co-researchers in
communities, learned how and when to appeal to them and developed a future outlook.
16. 1 Co-researchers help you close cultural,
contextual and knowledge gaps
First of all co-researchers help you overcome a knowledge barrier. Community
participants all share a strong interest in a brand or topic. The more niche the theme will be,
the bigger the knowledge gap and the harder it will be to moderate specific discussions and
draw the right conclusions.
Secondly, co-researchers can help you close a contextual blind spot. For example, we
also conducted crowd interpretation for a GenY community in cooperation with MTV. The
researchers involved in this GenY community were not all GenY members. Using crowd
interpretation with like-minded peers of the participants generating the data helped us to
overcome this generation gap.
Finally, the last case shows that co-researchers are crucial to overcome the cultural
barrier. These co-researchers know their culture and go beyond the researcher‟s first
impressions.
17. 2 Co-researchers are the ultimate level of
community engagement
Another key learning of working with co-researchers is that it’s not for everybody. It‟s an
extra challenge that participants need to be interested in and perceive as an exclusive
reward. Therefore, we consider co-researchers as the ultimate level of method engagement,
rewarding selected members to become an official co-owner of the community.
5 levels of creating gradual engagement in Online Customer Communities
18. 3 Co-researchers are the future of our
profession
Participants are no longer used for exploitation for our research needs and have
become our partners with whom we collaborate. When we put community participants
into a different context such as a co-researcher, it does not replace the researcher. On the
contrary, actually. It proves that we are building a long-lasting relationship with our
participants; it‟s a synergy. And sharing the responsibility for the community with participants
reaffirms this new relationship. We believe this is the next step in collaborating with
community participants and is the way forward for our profession as market researchers.
20. Luke, M., Cappuccio, R., De Ruyck, T., Willems, A., & Grant, R. 2012. Come Dine With Me,
Australia. Proceedings for AMSRS Conference 2012.
De Ruyck, T. & Veris, E., 2011. Play, interpret together, play again and create a win-win-win,
Schillewaert, N., De Ruyck, T., Troch, T. & Wijngaarden, J. van, 2012. When information is
hard to get creating positive feedback loops through engagement in online research
communities,
http://www.greenbookblog.org/2012/07/02/when-information-is-hard-to-get-creating-positive-
feedback-loops-through-engagement-in-online-research-communities/
Verhaeghe, A., Schillewaert, N., Van den Bergh, J., Ilustre, G. & Claes, P., 2011. Crowd
interpretation. Are participants the researchers of the future? Proceedings for Esomar
congress 2011.
Verhaeghe, A., Hageman, C., Troch, T. & De Ruyck, T. (2012). Doing more with less.
Proceedings for Esomar qualitative congress 2012.
21. The research team
Anouk Willems Tom De Ruyck
+31 10 742 10 35 +32 9 269 14 07
anouk@insites-consulting.com tom@insites-consulting.com
@AnoukW1 @tomderuyck
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/anouk- http://www.linkedin.com/in/tomderuyck
willems/3/490/974
Annelies Verhaeghe Thomas Troch
+32 9 269 1406 +32 9 269 12 26
annelies@insites-consulting.com thomas@insites-consulting.com
@annaliezze @thomastroch
http://be.linkedin.com/in/anneliesverhaeghe http://www.linkedin.com/in/thomastroch
22. Want to know more about
research communities?
Tom De Ruyck
Head of Research Communities
+32 9 269 14 07
tom@insites-consulting.com