A survey method for reliably prioritizing a long list of items by showing respondents small subsets and asking them to choose only the most and least important from each set.
Definition: A survey method for reliably prioritizing a long list of items by showing respondents small subsets and asking them to choose only the most and least important from each set.
MaxDiff (Maximum Difference Scaling) solves a fundamental problem in survey research: asking people to rank or rate a long list of items produces unreliable data. When faced with 15 or 20 features, participants struggle to differentiate between items in the middle of the list, and rating scales suffer from response biases where everything gets a 4 out of 5. MaxDiff sidesteps this by showing respondents small subsets — typically 4 or 5 items at a time — and asking them to select only the most important and the least important item from each set. Each respondent sees multiple subsets, and the experimental design ensures every item appears an equal number of times across all subsets.
The result is a rank-ordered list of preferences derived from many simple, cognitively easy choices rather than one cognitively demanding ranking exercise. Because the method forces trade-offs (you must pick a best and a worst), it produces cleaner differentiation between items than direct rating. The statistical output is a utility score for each item on a ratio scale, meaning you can say not just that Feature A is preferred over Feature B, but by how much.
MaxDiff requires specialized survey tooling with dedicated question types — platforms like Sawtooth Software or Qualtrics offer built-in MaxDiff modules that handle the experimental design and analysis. Running MaxDiff in a generic survey tool is technically possible but error-prone. For a broader discussion of structured decision methods in UX research, see Section 14.3 of UX Research: Building Blocks for Impact in the Age of AI by Marc Busch.
A Core Method of asking at scale using standardized questions. Enables data collection from larger samples but sacrifices the depth of interviews for breadth and standardization.
Research focused on numerical measurement with the goal of generalizing findings from a sample to a broader population. Answers 'how much,' 'how many,' and 'how often.'
A survey method that reveals how users make trade-offs between product attributes by presenting realistic product concepts with different feature and price combinations.
This term is referenced in the following articles:
An interactive calculator that uses decision theory to estimate whether a research study is worth the investment — before you run it.
An interactive tool that guides you to the right research method based on your goals, constraints, and context.
Stop asking 'How much would you pay?' The 3 methods to get honest answers: MaxDiff, Conjoint, and Van Westendorp.