Digicam or Digican't?
Digital camera setup still too daunting
for most consumers
By Glenn Slovenko
Effortless computers and email clients,
hot-and-cold-running-bandwidth that whisks 5-megapixel images to
the photofinisher, home color printers with professional quality
output in a snap, and for peanuts . . . NOT!
Infrastructure limitations will keep digital camera setup and use
daunting for years to comedespite the steady flow of
innovation. To realize the digital potential, manufacturers need to
get better at guiding average consumers through the technical
odyssey they face. This necessity gives new meaning to the
expression, "the devil is in the details."
In the rush to match a competitor's new resolution, price point,
feature, or form factor, manufacturers are overlooking details
critical to consumers. We at EZ Rated find that most digital
cameras do not provide a reasonable setup and first use experience
out-of-the-box. The setup and first use failure rates are
appalling. Too many consumers go through torture, then in
frustration are forced to seek assistance.
Causative issues are oftentimes minor, as are the remedies, yet too
few bother to take the relatively painless steps necessary to catch
and correct such items. Lost customer goodwill and "Cost Events"
(e.g., lost sales, product returns, after sale support, warranty
service from negligence, brand damage, and negative referrals,
etc.) inevitably result. This hurts the manufacturer, and our
transitioning industry.
"I know one thing now, based on today's experience I am definitely NOT going to buy a digital camera. No way!" (User quote #1)
Recently we heard a senior executive state that correcting
significant flaws in the setup process of their digital camera was
"not a priority!"
Not a priority for whom?
Consumers clearly have a desire for ease when it comes to the
complex world of digital photography. For proof, one need only
examine the dramatic change in Kodak's market capture, post
EasyShare.
"Is it a big 'returner'? I would think it is!!! My friend
has one and she's yet to get a picture on the computer. They're
complicated, I know that! I would really give up at this point.
It's too complicated. It should be easier. I'm a computer science
graduate."
(User quote #2)
We at EZ Rated know from too many test results that consumers frustrate easily when faced with vexing and poorly understood processesespecially if significant obstacles are encountered prior to experiencing some success.
"I don't know what is happening in this installation process. I would like to know what's going on. I don't know what it's doing and it's pissing me off. I have no idea what I am installing now. There's no getting out of this. I don't understand what I'm loading. I have no idea whether I'm going to use it." (User quote #3)
Click Photo to EnlargeIndividual items themselves are not normally a big problem. It
is the compounding effect of confusing documentation, cryptic
references, diagram deficiencies, jargon, misleading marketing
copy, and poor labeling that leads to wincing, furious consumers.
In the below illustration (taken from a new release, and materially
disguised), EZ Rated presents a montage of interacting
documentation elements, along with user data, commentary, and
prescriptions. Presented in this manner, several issues now seem
obvious don't they?
User quote #3 largely resulted from frustration with the issues
uncovered in the illustration.
Investing the level of resources required for a new camera
development and launch without robust debugging based on soccer
moms and Joe Average is nonsensical. EZ Rated specializes in such
refinements via our Product Radar and Flash services, both of which
derive from EZ Rated's Anthropological Usability Evaluations. Our
proprietary processes select, analyze, and report on users who
reflect the home setup and first use experience of 90% of the
demographic, 90% of the time. If these folks can setup and use your
camera efficiently, "Cost Events" will be minimal. However, left
unattended, the issues that prevent these users from efficient
setup and first use will be the same issues filling call centers
and driving product returns in the future.
Imagine that you have invited close friends to visit your secluded
cottage in Maine for a little summer vacationing. With much effort
you draft directions to the cottage that show major highways,
distances between turns, points-of-interest en route, suggested gas
stops, and the last mile to 1/10,000 scale. However, the directions
have a slight flaw; they're missing "ONE" needed turn.
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