Platforms designed to facilitate UX research processes can cut costs and time, but these benefits often come at diversity’s expense. Platform panels often lack diversity. Your product needs feedback from diverse and marginalized populations to ensure you meet their needs. To get it, you’ll need to take some extra steps.
We’ve developed a set of approaches to increase your ability to get diverse feedback while using these UX Research platforms.
Online research platforms specialize in finding the first available participants that meet your study’s eligibility criteria. It often only takes minutes to recruit six participants. With more traditional recruiting, individuals are screened over the phone, which might take days or weeks.
The downside of speedy platform recruits is the limited control over recruiting criteria and quotas. The nature of these platforms also introduces restraints, including:
In comparison, traditional recruiting firms can accommodate upwards of 20 screening questions, a number that isn’t possible on UX Research platforms. They set expectations with potential participants accordingly and take responsibility for whether they meet all study criteria. Traditional recruiting firms also give you the final say on demographic quotas, which many platforms are unable to do. In this scenario, you have the most quota control. For example, you can request to recruit precisely one Black participant or request at least one but no more than three participants over 55 years old.
UX Research platforms recruit participants almost exclusively online, with low incentives compared to traditional methods. They also do not provide affordances for participants with disabilities. These factors negatively affect the overall diversity of their participants, and as a result, platform panel members tend to skew:
Since study sign-up is first-come, first-served, you could miss out on recruiting a participant from an underrepresented population (e.g., based on race/ethnicity or age) simply due to the timing of when you launch your study and who is available. You are also unlikely to reach any participants with impairments (e.g., visual, motor, cognitive, and/or auditory).
We advise teams to implement one of our three adaptable approaches for using research platforms to get fast and diverse feedback while being cost-sensitive.
UX Research teams vary in size, budget, and workflow. Below, we outline three approach levels that consider team size and resources: Pond, Lake, and Ocean. We recommend starting with the foundation-level approach, Pond. As your team grows in size and your team’s inclusivity maturity grows, your approach may evolve into the Lake and Ocean systems.
Each of the three approaches we describe contains multiple, ongoing research streams that focus on different types of feedback. For all approaches, we recommend splitting a traditional n=6 usability test into two smaller tests, each with n=3-4:
Before implementing one of these approaches, be sure to talk with your UX Research platform’s Customer Success Manager about any possible impact on your subscription’s cost. Confirm how many total users/tests per year you can get feedback from and how many concurrent or simultaneously live studies you can host on your account. While you're talking to your Customer Success Manager, be sure to share that you'd like to see features that help you have more diverse recruits.
For any of these approaches, make sure you educate stakeholders on how and why you are including more diverse participants in research. Help them learn how to digest findings without tokenizing participants. Emphasize that each participant’s lived experience may vary from someone with a similar background.
The Ocean approach is the aspirational approach for large, established teams (7+ years) with a significant budget. This approach works best for teams with a minimum of five researchers.
See specific timeline examples of what these approaches might look like in action over four months for your team (Download our PDF resource).
UX Research platforms will continue to evolve and improve when it comes to the inclusivity of their panels. However, as it stands today, your team will need to take additional steps to ensure diverse participant populations.
When diverse recruiting is your research priority, and you need the speed of an online platform, we recommend User Interviews due to the diversity of their panel. And because they don't limit the number of screening questions, making it easier for you to control which participants you'd like to recruit.
Download a comparison table and sample research timelines for our recommended approaches.
Learn about Research Operations by AnswerLab.