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Fieldwork Discovering "Unk-Unks"
Reprint 48410;
Summer 2007,
Vol. 48, No. 4,
pp. 17-21
For innovators and entrepreneurs, discovering unknown unknowns — or "unk-unks" as they are sometimes called in engineering circles — can be crucial when evaluating a new venture or product idea. The long interview format, a technique used in social science research, is a very good tool for helping innovators identify such unk-unks — the things they don’t know, they don’t know. Although entrepreneurs often do market research by designing surveys that they distribute electronically, that approach can be problematic because in the early stages of exploring a venture entrepreneurs may be asking questions about the wrong product, the wrong pricing model and the wrong potential market segment. Also, innovators enamored of their own idea may ask leading questions while doing market research or focus on their idea more than on customer needs. The long interview format avoids these pitfalls. It features open-ended questions and short prompts that encourage respondents to elaborate. John Mullins is associate professor of management practice at London Business School. He is the author of The New Business Road Test: What Entrepreneurs and Executives Should Do Before Writing a Business Plan (FT Prentice Hall, 2003). Comment on this article or contact the author through smrfeedback@mit.edu. Academic pricing and volume discount information
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