Qualitative user testing, on the other hand, involves showing a product or prototype to a small number of people while observing and interviewing them. It produces a different sort of information, but the goal is still to help you make better product decisions based on user feedback.
Now, a big part of my job involves talking to users about products in qualitative tests, so you might imagine that I would hate A/B testing. After all, wouldn't something like that put somebody like me out of a job? Absolutely not! I love A/B testing. It's a phenomenal tool for making decisions about products. It is not the only tool, however. In fact, qualitative user research combined with A/B testing creates the most powerful system for informing design that I have ever seen. If you're not doing it yet, you probably should be.
A/B Testing
What It Does Well
A/B testing on its own is fantastic for certain things. It can help you:- Get statistically significant data on whether a proposed new feature or change significantly increases metrics that matter - numbers like revenue, retention, and customer acquisition
- Understand more about what your customers are actually doing on your site
- Make decisions about which features to cut and which to improve
- Validate design decisions
- See which small changes have surprisingly large effects on metrics
- Get user feedback without actually interacting with users