Updates on work and life from the first quarter of 2021.
Curio Research is Lauren Isaacson, a market and UX research consultant based in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Curio Research is Lauren Isaacson, a market and UX research consultant based in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Happy autumn! Depending on where you are, I hope you're enjoying the pleasant changes in weather and color while prepping your domiciles for a long and lonely self-isolating winter. (Bummer, I know.) This is what I’ve been up to over the last three months…
Hello again! Has it been 3-months already? I've been saying that it feels like everything has happened yesterday and forever ago all at once. It's been stressful for everyone.
In other posts, I discussed reasons to make research accessible, the types of disabilities and how to be polite to people with disabilities, and how to do accessible participant recruiting and qualitative research. Now let's get into quantitative research.
How to make qualitative research accessible to people with disabilities, from recruiting to online and in-person research.
Hello again. I hope you're doing okay and staying safe. The world has certainly changed since we last spoke. I'll try to keep this lighthearted, but a lot is going on, and a lot is not going on.
So you're used to doing all of your research in-person, and social distancing has suddenly made that impossible. You don't even have a lab or an office to use! As someone who views remote research from home as the norm, I can help. Once you get used to doing remote qualitative research from home, you can do it from anywhere. I find it to have worthwhile advantages over in-person.
Previously, we discussed the many reasons for involving people with disabilities in research. Now, let's move on to understanding and interacting with them.
The moral, legal, business reasons for making research accessible.
In a time when we’re all worried and not sure what to do next, we want to help.
There are a two numbers in research that are seemingly magical: 5 and 400