Archive for 31 March, 2011

my radical suggestion for dealing with difficult respondents

The past couple of weeks have seen me tearing up and down the country moderating focus groups as part of an insight project I’m working on.

Writing a feedback note to the recruitment agency I use, it struck me that there’s nearly always one respondent in the group that you’d rather had stayed at home, even if it meant you were down on numbers.  These are the people who don’t behave badly enough to be actually asked to leave (which seems to be reserved for drunks, aggressive types and anyone catastrophically off-brief), but still make the moderator’s job a lot harder.

Deciding to actually tell a respondent that they need to quieten down / stop showing off / admit that they’ve been to at least three groups in the last month is a last resort as it almost inevitably affects the group dynamic and the flow of the session.  But there’s only so much you can do with body language, redirecting the conversation and ignoring the loudmouths.

I can’t lay all the blame at the door of the recruiting ladies, who often have rather challenging briefs to meet on short timescales and can’t be expected to put every single respondent through a personality assessment and lie detector test – although there’s no question that there are a few field recruiters out there who need to pull their socks up and stop sending the same groupies to every job they’re given.

But I think I’ve come up with an (admittedly fairly radical) suggestion to address the problem of The Respondents You Wish Had Never Turned Up.  It’s called Moderator Screening.

What if we paid every respondent an extra fiver and asked them to turn up a bit earlier, say twenty minutes before the group.  Then if viewing facilities put CCTV in their respondent waiting rooms the moderator could remotely watch the respondents interact and if necessary ask the viewing facility hostess to quietly pay off (i.e. give them the money but send them home) anyone who looked like a researcher’s nightmare.

It could work for hotel and in-home groups too.  Get everyone seated in the bar/kitchen and let the moderator sort drinks, coats and have-you-come-far-today questions.  A few minutes face to face might be enough time to pick out any disruptive influence and discretely encourage them to go home early.

I’d much rather moderate a group of seven happy, chatty respondents than eight where one is dominating the conversation and making everyone else clam up.  What do you think?

31 March, 2011 at 4:27 pm 3 comments


Hello. I'm Gemma Teed, I'm a UK Account Planner and this is where I share my thoughts on Planning, marketing, trends and other related stuff.

I'm a freelance / self employed Planner, so if you're a client or agency click on work with me. If you're just nosy, you need about me, or pop over to my LinkedIn and twitter.

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