An insight repository. Ah… The place where you can easily find all customer insights at your fingertips. Wish that was true.
I’ve interviewed over 500 product teams in the last 3 years and reviewed with them among other things their customer insights repositories (also referred to as research repositories). There were outstanding teams I had the honor talking to but overall I saw 3 major patterns emerge:
To state the obvious, I’m not the first one to come across these shortcomings - I learned them from product teams experiencing them. They are creative and have employed a number of strategies to boost insight consumption:
Tomer Sharon used to share handpicked video snippets with teams delivering insights that matter to them. Many researchers I’ve spoken with push insights into Slack because this is the place where their colleagues consume information.
There are other approaches too, like involving the product team more in research. Inviting them to sessions and recaps. The underlying idea being that they can contribute to finding better insights and higher involvement in the process will translate to higher consumption of insights.
Such strategies do have a positive impact on consumption but you’ll also notice a common denominator: they all require continuous & manual effort from research to keep the engagement high.
Is there no way around?
The human brain evolved to be a highly efficient economic powerhouse. You can observe it in your own lives: there is so much that our mind does on autopilot, without thinking or deciding. We also tend to cherish habits, doing the same things at the same time. (Also think about how long we hold on to our world views even in the light of contradicting evidence.)
Why should it be different in work?
It isn’t. So we need an economic & habit building solution. A great inspiration just happens to be around the corner: Google.
We’ve all developed a habit over the course of the last +20 years and turn to Google whenever we don’t know something. We type in some keywords or questions and Google gets us the most relevant hits likely to answer our questions.
We need a Google like solution. A tool in which you don’t need to do all the manual analysis to distill highlights (like highlighting, tagging, etc.) and you could get more relevant insights from user sessions for any question you may have. It would tick a few boxes:
Airtime turns user calls into product insights. Using the video or audio recordings of calls, Airtime identifies & interprets recurring feedback patterns within seconds for up to 1000 calls in a single analysis.
If you have a specific question, Airtime will pull together all relevant feedback for you so you can have a holistic view of customer feedback.
To build an insight repo, all you need to do is to move all recorded customer calls into Airtime and start asking questions like you do on Google.
No manual work with highlighting, defining labels, tags or keywords.
Here is a 1 minute demo to give you a glimpse:
It couldn’t be more simple to give Airtime a spin:
Done.
Check out Airtime using our free trial or book a short demo with us if you’d like to discuss how to best use Airtime for your use cases.