Along with web ads, using email lists is a very common way to get participants for online studies.

One big advantage of using customer lists is that we’re contacting people who already have some kind of relationship with the organization, usually as current users of their products or services. This relationship usually boosts the response rate, because these people are likely to have a vested interest in improving those products and services.

Another advantage of customer lists is that we often get to pick who to invite, usually based on information in the lists such as region, age, usage, and so on.

The downside is that, unlike passive web ads, email invitations are an active (albeit minor) intrusion into people’s lives. Organizations should be very careful about how (and how often) they “bother” their customers with unsolicited messages, no matter how good the cause. For more on this, see Letting people opt out below.

 

How many should we invite?

Earlier we recommended getting about 50 participants from each user group we want to test.

However, we all know that most people will ignore most email invitations to research studies like this. So, to get 50, we have to invite many more than that.

How many more?

For many organizations, this is more people than they have on their lists, so the question is not “how many should we invite?” but rather “how else can we get participants?”. Luckily, we don’t need to be tied to any one method of recruiting. Most of the studies we do include web ads AND email lists, and sometimes even then we have to start beating the bushes for more people – see the other methods described in this chapter.

 

Inviting in batches

If we have access to a large list of customers (perhaps thousands), we may be tempted to email them all and get lots of results fast.

Careful – emailing everyone in a large pool is a rookie mistake.

So, if we have a large number of potential invitees, we recommend inviting them in smaller batches according to the expected response rate.

For example, suppose we need 50 participants and we have 1000 people on our list. How many should we invite?

The big win here is that we “save” a bunch of people to use on our next study; we’re rationing them so that we always have a pool of users to fuel our ongoing research.

The other factor at work here is urgency. Using batches slows down the study (because we wait a few days between batches).

Filtering lists to get the right people

We don’t just want any 50 people to do our study; we want the right 50 people – people who match our idea of a representative user.

If our study is for all users, then a simple web ad or a blanket email blast to a customer list is probably OK. This should ensure that most of our participants are current (or past or future) users.

Often, however, we may want to get more specific about who does our study. If we are reorganizing the Large Business section of a bank’s website, for example, we want large-business users to test the new structure, but we don’t want personal-banking users because they do different tasks, use different terminology, and would generally be irrelevant to this study.

When we’re going after a specific user group, there are two common approaches:

Having a database that we can filter is very useful if we have specific recruiting criteria. While this is mostly used for targeted studies like in-person usability testing (we’re only testing 10 participants, so we want to be sure we get just the right users), it can also help improve our tree-test results. For example, we may want to recruit not just personal-banking users, but specifically those who use Internet banking frequently.

If we do want specific users, we can do your filtering early or late:

Letting people opt out

We mentioned earlier than inviting people by email is intrusive – most people have a limited appetite for unsolicited invitations, and some people may not want to be contacted at all. We need to respect their wishes and keep their goodwill.

There are two common ways to handle this:

Hiding participants from each other

When we send a batch of email invitations, it’s important that the recipients don’t see each other in the received message. Beyond the clutter of several hundred names in the “To” field, it’s also a privacy violation – people shouldn’t be able to see who else is on a email list.

To prevent this, we can either:

Who should send the email?

Because spam and phishing emails are a fact of Internet life, we need to make sure that our email looks legitimate to both the email system and the recipient themselves.

We can increase the response rate by having the invitation sent by someone the user knows (or knows of). When we had trouble recruiting enough people for a study with businesses, we asked the company’s account managers to forward our email to their respective customers. Because the invitation was sent by someone they knew (and had a business relationship with), we got a much higher response rate.

 


Next: Using social media