Google Consumer Surveys (http://www.google.com/insights/consumersurveys/home) achieves a similar end for a surprisingly low price, and they've figured out all the boring details like how to poll a representative sample of the US internet population and how to get stats right.
Disclaimer: I work on the product. I think it'd be pretty useful for startups to gauge the market.
Sounds like a really interesting product, and something we'll definitely check out, but to be very clear...interviews != surveys.
In terms of customer discovery and problem identification, absolutely nothing beats interviews. Surveys may have their place when it comes to getting demographic information or validating a market size, but interviews should not be replaced with surveys.
Wow, I somehow missed that the original article was about interviews despite it being all over the article. I think I read it earlier in the day but only came back later to comment on it and forgot that important part. :( Thanks for being polite about my error.
This is a great option if your target is likely to be an mTurk user. Further, this is a great write-up on how to do it!
If you do this, make sure to validate your psychographics and demographics. You will also want to validate your responses with people you've identified in your psychographics and demographics. In other words, make sure the data you are getting is actually valid data and not coming from some 12 year old playing with his mom's phone. :)
Really interesting... thanks for sharing! For our surveys, we also captured specific demographic information to get the most representative sample as possible.
What is a useful way to find initial customers for a B2B product? (As other commenters have noted, mTurk is more useful in a consumer setting.)
Is there a way to find initial customers in a scalable manner? i.e. scaling it across many different business ideas and potential customers?
This would be a great service that a lot of people would pay for. I know, I know, I'm asking for marketing to be commoditized and turned into a service, which is hard. I don't really know how to do it.
Is elastic appropriate for customer development and initial marketing?
My understanding was that their use-case was if you wanted to scale out sales on a product for which you have already identified need, price, customer profile, etc.
Really great post with 2 super relevant examples to interview and test the theories that make up your business. I'm curious how other people are using mTurk (and other scalable solutions) to help test their theories. Any winning ideas out there?
In my opinion probably a more viable approach for testing consumer-oriented ideas (e.g. "Daycare Review Service") than B2B products (e.g "Lesson Scheduling for Music Teachers"), but some really useful and actionable stuff here.
By and large, I'd agree with you, but consider that people are still people when they're off work. By that I mean, if the decision maker you're looking for could easily be on Mechanical Turk in their off time. I can promise there are Music Teachers on mTurk, just like there are marketers, hr reps, sales people, real estate agents, etc.
@hansef - this was (is?) definitely my impression. But turns out mTurk users, on average, are more educated than the average population. Many in business roles. We were surprised by some of the responses, and indeed the b2b profiles on some of our profiles. I guess like everything startup, worth testing and challenging assumptions.
I wonder how well this would work for B2B apps, in which case you need to interview professionals of some sort.
For example, I would love to interview PR professionals. Compared to parents, I would venture a guess that they're much harder to find on MT. I wonder if Facebook ads would work better.
LinkedIn and Facebook can both be pretty good when you need narrow targeting.
There are three big issues with using MTurk for business research. You can't do much to refine who you get as respondents, the respondents are incentivized to complete the task without regard for the effect on your data, and you have restrictions on what you can do due to the anonymity rules.
If you're following the way of the niche, MTurk may be too problematic compared to just slogging through some cold calls. The benefit for more broadly targeted projects is that it lets you grab a large sample size with fairly low effort.
At the price point for interviews and with the ability to validate, it's worth a try. Using the guide, it can't take more than 1 hour to set this up... faster and cheaper then getting assets up and ready on FB.
I'm in a similar boat, but with entrepreneurs instead of PR people. I've been trawling various user groups and will be going to some local meetups, but it isn't highly efficient. Ideas appreciated!
(Speaking of which, if you are an entrepreneur or an early employee at a startup (like <= employee 3), I'd love your feedback via a quick survey! http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/F7W9P5P )
This is a pretty well known strategy. Good to see people using this still and getting great results from it. You can get some surprisingly useful feedback for just $X00, especially if you note down your target user group in the HIT.
Disclaimer: I work on the product. I think it'd be pretty useful for startups to gauge the market.