Corporate Ethnography
High-tech companies are deploying ethnographers and anthropologists by the score to study how people actually use technology.
Redmond, WA – Ethnography, a form of applied anthropology, sounds way too fuzzy and foreign to turn the heads of corporate types. Certainly, in the past, it has been something of an oddity; the only ethnographers inside corporations were holed up at places like Xerox’s Palo Alto Research Center, where they worked on problems like how to make a photocopier’s On button more obvious to users.
Today, though, corporate ethnography is a blossoming field, as evidenced by the first-ever Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference (EPIC), organized by ethnographers at Intel and Microsoft and held at Microsoft’s campus on November 14-15. The conference drew more than 200 working ethnographers from high-tech firms, specialist shops such as IDEO, and technology-intensive businesses such as Wells Fargo.
Over two days, the participants held a series of workshops and presented papers with titles like “The Worst Technology For Girls?” and “Who We Talk about when We Talk about Users.”
One talk examined an ongoing effort by ethnographers to root out organizational problems slowing down a software company’s development process. Another examined how bi-lingual, multinational teams could be formed more effectively, while yet another examined how technology affects, and is affected by, the trend toward “great rooms” in private U.S. homes.
The conference’s proceedings will be published. In part, that’s a way to establish corporate ethnography in the academic world, which still harbors doubts about the field. And in part it’s simply a useful venue for discussions, since ethnography is still an emerging tool in technology industries. Indeed, some attendees confessed that they weren’t sure they were part of a new discipline at all, and even debated what comprises ethnography.
Internal debates aside, ethnography is gaining credence in the corporate world as a form of market research. Ethnography focuses on a qualitative examination of human behavior. In a corporate setting, ethnographers typically examine how people treat a product, say, a mobile phone, in the context of their lives. Ethnographic researchers at the EPIC could be divided into seven general types: sociologists, human factors and computer interface specialists, computer scientists, anthropologists, psychologists, MBAs, and design specialists.
Both hardware and software makers are using ethnographers to adapt products for specific markets. Intel, for instance, has designed PCs to appeal specifically to market segments in China and India. And it was an ethnographer who figured out that Japanese people don’t use instant messaging on their PCs, because interruptions are considered impolite.
Such tactical advances are being joined by a more strategic use of ethnography. In May, for example, Intel pulled three of its ethnographers out of its research arm and put them into line operations, with a mandate to build a larger team of ethnographers, to help Intel better understand emerging markets, such as developing economies, digital health care, and the digital home.

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