Seven cards, one per method. Each card names what the method actually captures, the instrument the participant interacts with, the tools that commonly run it, and a real example drawn from a real research context.
METHOD 01
Semi-structured interviews
What it captures
Self-reported experience, in depth. The participant explains goals, decisions, barriers, and turning points in their own words. Follow-up questions surface the layer beneath the first answer.
Typical instrument
Interview guide with eight to fifteen primary questions and a probe set for each. Sometimes paired with a card-sort or stimulus exercise.
Tools that run it
ZoomOtterRevDescript
A workforce training program runs a forty-minute intake interview with each of 200 new participants per cohort. The guide asks about prior employment, current goals, and anticipated barriers. The transcript and the participant's persistent ID land on the same record as their later survey responses. Workforce
METHOD 02
Focus groups
What it captures
Shared experience and divergence. The group dynamic surfaces what one person noticed alone and what the whole cohort recognized together. Disagreements are evidence, not noise.
Typical instrument
Focus group protocol with five to eight prompts, a stimulus or scenario, and a closing reflection. Six to ten participants per session, one moderator, one note-taker.
Tools that run it
ZoomIn-personOtter
A community health nonprofit runs an exit focus group at the end of each program cycle. Eight clients reflect on the service. Themes from the transcript attach to each participant's record, so the cohort-level reflection and the individual case notes sit in the same dataset. Community health
METHOD 03
Open-ended surveys
What it captures
Experience at scale. Open-ended responses produce thousands of voice-data points across a population, paired with the rating or selection that preceded them.
Typical instrument
Survey questionnaire with three to eight open-ended items, each paired with a structured rating or multi-select question on the same form.
Tools that run it
SurveyMonkeyGoogle FormsQualtricsTypeformSopact Sense
A B2B SaaS company sends a monthly NPS survey to three thousand customers. Each rating is followed by a single open-ended question: "What's the main reason for your score?" Reasons are themed against a defined codebook as responses arrive. The CS team sees themes by plan tier each Monday morning. Customer research
METHOD 04
Document analysis
What it captures
Evidence the program or organization already produces. Application essays, narrative reports, case notes, journals, policy documents, and submissions are all data — read against a consistent framework rather than read once and archived.
Typical instrument
Document review template with a defined coding framework. Often tied to a funder rubric or theory of change.
Tools that run it
NVivoMAXQDAATLAS.tiSopact Sense
A foundation with 120 active grantees collects three narrative reports per grantee per year. Each report is themed against the funder's outcome framework as it lands. Year-three themes are comparable to year-one themes because the codebook is anchored, not redrafted each cycle. Grant portfolio
METHOD 05
Participant observation
What it captures
Action in context. What people do, which is often different from what they say they do. Field notes record behavior, environment, and the researcher's interpretive memos.
Typical instrument
Observation protocol with a structured field-note template. Sometimes paired with photo or audio documentation, depending on consent and setting.
Tools that run it
Field-notes appNotionVoice memoNVivo
A People Ops researcher observes new-hire onboarding sessions across three regional offices over a quarter. Field notes capture the variation no engagement survey would surface. The notes attach to the employee record alongside pulse survey responses and retention outcomes. HR research
METHOD 06
Case studies
What it captures
Depth within a single bounded unit. A case study uses multiple methods inside one boundary — one program, one organization, one patient cohort — to build an explanatory account.
Typical instrument
Case study protocol bringing together an interview guide, a document review template, and an observation protocol within one defined unit of analysis.
Tools that run it
NVivoMAXQDAATLAS.tiSopact Sense
A clinical research team builds case studies on twelve patients in a treatment arm. Each case pulls together the patient-reported outcome measure, three interview transcripts across the study period, and the clinician's observation notes. The full case lives on one patient record. Clinical research
METHOD 07
Ethnographic fieldwork
What it captures
Culture and context over time. Extended immersion produces evidence about what is normal in a setting, what is contested, and how practice evolves week to week.
Typical instrument
Field journal, observation protocol, informal interview guide, and a documentary photography or recording plan. Sometimes a research diary held in parallel.
Tools that run it
Field journalNVivoOtterAudio recorder
A community health nonprofit embeds a researcher in a clinic for one quarter. The researcher documents patient flow, staff interactions, and barriers to care. Field notes are coded against an access-and-equity framework and join the clinic's quantitative service data on the same dataset. Community health