Why traditional customer research is broken
Most teams know they should talk to customers. Most don’t — or not often enough.
The reasons are always the same. Recruiting participants takes weeks. Scheduling interviews takes coordination. Running focus groups costs thousands. And by the time results come back, the decision has already been made on gut instinct.
The result is that customer research becomes something teams do quarterly at best, or only when a major launch forces it. Day-to-day decisions about messaging, positioning, features, and content are made without hearing from a single real person.
What changes when research takes 20 seconds
With OriginalVoices, customer research becomes part of every decision, not a quarterly project.
When we asked real UK banking customers what frustrates them about their banks, the answer was unanimous: fees and lack of transparency. But when we asked whether they would switch, almost no one said yes. The barrier was not satisfaction — it was inertia, fear of the unknown, and the effort of moving direct debits.
That is insight that reshapes an entire go-to-market strategy. It took under a minute.
Who uses this
- Product managers validating assumptions before committing to a roadmap
- Marketers understanding how their audience actually talks about a problem
- Founders testing whether a market need exists before building
- Strategists mapping audience sentiment across segments and geographies
- Content teams discovering what questions their audience wants answered
- UX researchers supplementing usability testing with attitudinal data
What you can research
- Motivations and barriers — why people buy, switch, stay, or leave
- Language and framing — how your audience describes problems in their own words
- Segment differences — how attitudes vary across age, role, geography, or behaviour
- Competitive perception — what people think of your competitors and alternatives
- Unmet needs — what your audience wants but cannot find
- Emotional drivers — the feelings behind purchase decisions, not just the logic