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Contextual Interview

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What it is & What You Learn

Contextual interviews are like usability tests because you watch and listen as users work. They differ from usability tests because you go to the user and watch and listen to them as they work in their own environment. Contextual interviews are more natural and sometimes more realistic because they occur in the person’s environment. They are also usually quite informal.

Seeing the user's environment can be very useful. By going to the user, you see the user's environment and the actual technology the user works with. You can answer questions like these:

  • What is the social environment like and are there people around to help the user?
  • What is the physical environment like and what types of connection do they have (e.g., user on broadband or on a modem)?
  • Does being online tie up a phone line so the user wants to be on and off the Web quickly?

Conducting a Contextual Interview

In a contextual interview, you watch and listen as the user does his or her own work. You don't usually impose tasks or scenarios on the user. The observer listens to the user but may also ask clarifying questions and probe to gain greater understanding of what the user is doing and thinking. The results are usually qualitative rather than quantitative.


Contextual Interviews vs. Usability Testing

In a usability test, you usually have all users try to complete the same scenarios resulting in comparative data from several people trying the same thing. In contextual interviews you watch people’s behavior in their own environment doing their own tasks.

However, you can combine contextual interviewing and usability testing:

  • During a contextual interview, take scenarios along and combine watching users do their own work in their environments with asking them to try a few of your tasks.

  • During a usability test, interview users to find out the sorts of questions, issues, tasks they would do with the site. Let the users do their own tasks. Also have the users do some of your tasks to get data on tasks from all the users.

Usability testing in Web site development today is often informal and is often conducted much like a contextual interview. However, usability testing can range from informal and qualitative to quite formal and quantitative. For more about usability testing, see Learn About Usability Testing.


Next Steps

You should use the information gathered from the contextual interview to supplement the other types of data you collect when you learn about your users.