2. Customer interviews:
3. During these interviews, I honestly just felt relieved to be done interviewing customers. It's not something I really enjoy. I found that the biggest factor was the price of the decals - one customer said it was reasonable while another considered it steep. Another customer didn't even have a car so it wasn't relevant to her. I'm not certain on what price I should stick with - I also thought the idea to issue decals based on credits or standing interesting.
Hi, Taylor. I thought it was a really interesting concept to have the customers read the informational notecard as opposed to you telling them about your idea. Psychologically, it makes me ponder the impact that the form of delivery of the message has on people's thoughts about a product. You did well answering their questions and were clear and concise.
ReplyDeleteHere is the link to my blog post:
http://rolononariver.blogspot.com/2016/02/interviewing-customers-no-3.html
Hey Taylor, I liked how you did not have a set strategy and just asked them to read your business idea and give you their feedback. For my interviews, I did the same thing and found it to be easier than just telling a person what my idea was going to be. It takes a lot of the bias away from the interview and more about the idea at hand. The interviews were a little short; I think you could have asked them a few questions about the idea to get a better respond out of them. I do not know anything about your product but from the interviews, I could tell that people were not too convinced by it. Here is the link to my blog feel free to check it out
ReplyDeletehttp://ent1646.blogspot.com/2016/02/customer-interviews-no-3.html