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deploy-empathy

结构化的客户访谈方法,侧重于如何提问以获得关于客户体验和需求的真实见解

person作者: jakexiaohubgithub

Deploy Empathy Framework

Overview

Michele Hansen's Deploy Empathy provides a practical methodology for conducting customer interviews that uncover genuine insights. Core principle: How you ask a question matters as much as which questions you ask. Empathy isn't just being nice—it's a strategic tool for understanding customer experiences.

Core Insight

Most customer interviews fail because interviewers ask leading questions, interrupt, or probe for feature validation. Deploy Empathy teaches using empathy strategically: Make customers feel comfortable enough to share authentic experiences, frustrations, and contexts.

Framework: Targeted empathy in structured interview types (Discovery, Switch, Long-time customer) generates actionable insights even for small teams with no UX background.

The Three Interview Types

1. Discovery Interviews

Purpose: Explore new ideas or understand problems before building.

When: Early stage, validating assumptions, identifying underserved needs.

Key questions:

  • "Walk me through the last time you [relevant activity]"
  • "What was frustrating about that?"
  • "What alternatives have you tried?"

2. Switch Interviews

Purpose: Understand why customers switched from competitor/alternative to your product.

When: Onboarding new customers, understanding competitive advantages.

Key questions:

  • "What were you using before?"
  • "What triggered you to start looking for something different?"
  • "What nearly stopped you from switching?"

3. Long-Time Customer Interviews

Purpose: Discover retention drivers and expansion opportunities.

When: Reducing churn, identifying upsell potential, understanding loyalty.

Key questions:

  • "What would you do if we disappeared tomorrow?"
  • "What keeps you using us versus alternatives?"
  • "What have you tried to accomplish but couldn't?"

The Deploy Empathy Process

Step 1: Set Interview Intention

Before interview, write down: What do I want to learn? Avoid "validate my idea" intentions.

Good intention: "Understand how freelancers currently track project time" Bad intention: "Prove people need my time tracking app"

Step 2: Create Safe Environment

First 2 minutes set tone. Make customer comfortable before asking anything.

Techniques:

  • Thank them for time
  • Explain purpose ("I want to learn about your experience")
  • Assure no wrong answers
  • Ask permission to ask questions

Script: "Thanks for talking with me. I'm trying to understand how [customer type] handle [situation]. There are no right or wrong answers—I just want to learn from your experience. Can I ask you some questions?"

Step 3: Ask Open-Ended Questions

Use "what," "how," "tell me about" questions. Avoid "yes/no" or leading questions.

Good: "How do you currently handle [task]?" Bad: "Do you find [task] frustrating?" (leading, binary)

Step 4: Use Follow-Up Probes

When customer mentions something interesting, dig deeper with neutral probes.

Probes:

  • "Tell me more about that"
  • "What do you mean by [word they used]?"
  • "Walk me through what that looked like"
  • "What else?"

Rule: Use customer's words, not your interpretations.

Step 5: Embrace Silence

After asking question, shut up. Resist urge to fill silence. Customer needs time to think.

Technique: Count to 7 in your head after asking. Let customer break silence.

Step 6: Avoid Pitching/Explaining

Interview is for listening, not selling. Don't explain your product or correct misunderstandings.

If customer asks: "I'm still learning, so I don't want to bias what you share. Can we talk about that at the end?"

Step 7: Close with Gratitude and Next Steps

Thank customer, ask permission for follow-up, optionally ask for referrals.

Script: "This was incredibly helpful. Can I reach out if I have follow-up questions? Also, is there anyone else you think I should talk to?"

Example Application

Scenario: SaaS company seeing churn after 3 months

Interview type: Long-time customers (those who stayed 12+ months)

Interview setup:

  • Recruit 5 customers for 30-min calls
  • Intention: "Understand what makes customers stick around"

Interview excerpt:

  • Interviewer: "What would happen if we disappeared tomorrow?"
  • Customer: "Ugh, I'd be stuck using spreadsheets again."
  • Interviewer: "Tell me about that." (probe)
  • Customer: "Before you, I tracked everything manually. Took hours every Friday. I'd go back to that I guess, but I'd hate it."
  • Interviewer: "What specifically would you hate?" (probe)
  • Customer: "Mostly the manual entry. And forgetting to log things."
  • Interviewer: "How did you handle forgetting before?" (probe)
  • Customer: "I'd just estimate. Sometimes lost billable hours that way."

Insight discovered: Retention driver isn't features—it's avoiding return to error-prone manual process. Focus onboarding on "never lose billable hours" not feature tour.

When to Use

  • Validating new product ideas (discovery interviews)
  • Understanding why customers choose you (switch interviews)
  • Reducing churn (long-time customer interviews)
  • Prioritizing roadmap based on real customer needs
  • Any time you need to understand customer experience

Anti-Patterns

  • ❌ Asking "Would you use this feature?" (hypothetical, unreliable)
  • ❌ Explaining your product during interview (you're there to listen)
  • ❌ Interviewing only "friendly" customers (they'll be nice, not honest)
  • ❌ Jumping to solutions during interview ("So you need X feature!")
  • ❌ Interrupting customer to clarify or correct
  • ❌ Leading questions: "You hate [competitor], right?"

Success Metrics

  • Interview Completion Rate: % of interviews where customer talks 80%+ of time
  • New Insights per Interview: Novel learnings (target 2-3 per interview)
  • Referral Rate: % of interviews ending with customer referral
  • Confidence in Decisions: Team's clarity on customer needs post-interviews

Integration with Other Frameworks

Enables:

  • Jobs to Be Done: Discover customer jobs through Switch interviews
  • Continuous Discovery Habits: Weekly interview cadence
  • Lean Product Playbook: Customer feedback in MVP testing

Complements:

  • The Mom Test: Similar philosophy, different question scripts
  • Opportunity Solution Trees: Interview insights become opportunities

Common Pitfalls

Asking About the Future

Customers are terrible at predicting future behavior. Ask about past experiences instead.

Bad: "Would you pay $50/month for this?" Good: "How much do you currently spend on [similar tools]?"

Pitching During Interview

You're not there to sell or convince. That comes later.

If customer says: "I don't think I need that" Don't say: "But actually..." (that's pitching) Say: "Tell me more about why" (that's learning)

Not Recording/Taking Notes

You'll forget details. Get permission to record or take thorough notes.

Over-Structuring

Have questions prepared, but follow customer's interesting tangents.

2025 Update: AI Integration

Updated edition includes guidance on using AI for:

  • Transcription and analysis of interviews
  • Pattern identification across multiple interviews
  • Synthesis of insights

Warning: AI assists, doesn't replace. Human empathy and judgment remain critical.

References

  • "Deploy Empathy: A Practical Guide to Interviewing Customers" - Michele Hansen (Updated 2025)
  • mjwhansen.com
  • Geocodio case study (bootstrapped to multi-millions using customer research)

Related

  • mom-test
  • jobs-to-be-done
  • continuous-discovery-habits
  • customer-development
  • user-research-methodologies