If I was any good as maths, I would have been a physicist instead of planner. Such is life.
That said, I've always kept a passing fascination for the subject, especially particle physics.
There's a weird phenomenon when things get very, very small, which blows my mind.
You have to assume tiny particles are in multiple places at once, yet if you actually observe them, you affect their behaviour and they appear in one place.
In other words, the more direct questions you ask a tiny particle like an electron, the less reliable the answers you get back.
Researching real people is like that.
Make them feel watched in a focus group and they'll tell you what they think the rest of the group wants to hear (or agree with the loudest mouth).
Even when you talk to then one to one, without knowing it, they'll won't tell you how they really feel or what they'll do.
Partly because they can't help telling you what they think you'll want to hear.
Partly because the mind plays tricks, the further away they are from the experience they're talking about, the less they'll remember or predict it right.
You could ask them questions in the wild, where the experience happens, this is much better.
You'll still get a bum steer though, because the problem isn't just where and how you ask the questions.
It's asking the questions in the first place.
Asking questions about brands, new behaviours and most categories, like it is with electrons, changes their natural state.
Which is to not to give a flying fuck.
By asking questions, you're getting then artificially interested in things they usually just don't care about.
You're asking them to think about things that normally happen on autopilot, or not at all.
Even worse when we test creative and ask them what they think.
No one wants to think about advertising apart from the people who make it.
The first task of advertising is getting noticed in a busy world, yet most research forgets this.
Asking questions in research creates false interest and consideration.
Which leads to false answers.
So most research is a waste of time. Sorry.
If you want to know, don't ask.
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