Studying people in their natural environment over extended periods to understand behaviors, motivations, and cultural context that surveys and lab tests cannot reveal.
Definition: Studying people in their natural environment over extended periods to understand behaviors, motivations, and cultural context that surveys and lab tests cannot reveal.
Ethnographic research immerses you in the participant's world—their home, workplace, commute, daily routine—to observe behavior as it naturally occurs rather than as people describe it in a lab setting.
In a usability test, you control the environment and the tasks. In ethnographic research, you give up that control deliberately. You observe what people actually do, not what they do when they know they are being watched and tested.
This distinction matters because people routinely misreport their own behavior. They forget steps, omit workarounds, and describe idealized versions of their routines. Ethnographic observation captures reality.
Ethnographic research is resource-intensive. A single field visit can take a full day per participant. But it surfaces insights you will never get from remote testing—the physical environment, social dynamics, and workarounds that shape real usage.
A semi-structured interview technique conducted in the user's natural environment, combining deep observation with in-the-moment questioning. Best for uncovering real-world context that shapes behavior.
Research focused on understanding the 'what' and 'why' through rich stories, observations, and context. Seeks depth of understanding rather than statistical measurement.
A longitudinal research method where participants log their experiences over an extended period. Captures in-the-moment feedback that overcomes memory limitations and reveals patterns over time.
This term is referenced in the following articles: