15-A Figuring out Buyer Behavior No.2
Interview 1: Alejandra is a Junior medical student at the
University of Florida. She told me she saw a lot of potential in my medical
application and hopes to see more inventions like that in the future. I asked
her how much she would pay for this app and she was hoping it would be free.
Her most important aspect of the app would be how easy it is to use so people
of all ages can use it with ease. For her user-friendliness is the most
important part of the app. “If people cant figure out how to use it within 5
minutes, they will delete it off the phone,” she said. She doesn’t usually buy
apps and is very picky about what she downloads.
Interview 2: Tommy is a senior communication major at the
University of Florida. He is an avid video game player and claims to never have
made a doctor’s appointment by himself. Although he is slightly different from
my other interviewees in the segment, Tommy claims he is sick all the time and
his mother gets annoyed of booking his doctor’s appointments all the time. Tommy loves to download apps on his phone and
he organizes all of them in folders. He does not have any health apps however,
he says he would use my app idea if it was created. Tommy stated that he would
only buy an app if it was 100 percent necessary for him. His main concern is
whether the app is easy to use or not. User-friendliness is very important to
him too.
Interview 3: Michelle is a graduate student in the Communications
school and does not really use applications often. She only downloads apps if
they will make her life easier, for example she said she has the American
Airlines app for easy check-ins and she has the Orange Theory app to schedule
her gym classes. She is very practical about her purchases and values quality
over anything. Michelle appreciates apps that are easy to use and well made.
She has never bought an app for more than 1 dollar and doesn’t plan to anytime
soon. When it comes to “rightness” with
an application, it matters whether the app was helpful or not. If the app is
not useful to her she will delete it. She worries about memory storage on her
phone.
Conclusion:
In terms of purchase decision all three interviewees focused
on user-friendliness and quality. The only way these consumers would go out of
their way to download a medical app, would be if it was useful to them. The
most all the interviewees would pay is a dollar. All of them obviously would
get the app from the app store ; however, they mentioned that word of the mouth
is the best way to market an app for millennials. Also, if their doctor recommended
the app, they would consider buying it much more. When it came to post-purchase
evaluation, the ‘rightness of a purchase’ is a based on how useful it is. If
the consumer feels as though they are not using it enough or it is not worth
the memory storage on their phone, they will delete it.
Ciara,
ReplyDeleteI actually agree with your interviewees, when it comes to purchasing or downloading apps, I always go for the apps that are most user-friendly and have quality purposes. Your first interviewee, Alejandra, made a good point - if user's don't see a purpose for the app, they'll typically delete it off their phone within 5 minutes. I find myself doing that often. I also agree with the points you made in your conclusion, a good price to price your app at would be $1; anymore and your run the risk of not making it marketable to millennials. The one thing you're competing with too, besides the competition, is memory storage on people's phones. I also am pitching an app as my venture, and I know if my app isn't "worth wild" enough, people will simply chose saving storage, over it.
Ciara, reading your conclusion, I would also agree with your interviewees. I wouldn't purchase an app if I wasn't going to use it often and also, if I don't find myself using it, I would just delete it. I think if you were to make the app in collaboration with programs and softwares that doctors and hospitals use it would improve the app a lot more. That way information is instantly in the doctors hands.
ReplyDeleteI agree with your interviewees. Although I am a millennial, downloading an app for medical reasons can make me nervous so focusing on quality, and making it user-friendly would be important. In order to download it I would also be focusing on the reviews that people have, and would ask doctors about it. When it comes to medical reasons I do not want to make a mistake and appreciate the comments that others make about it As one said, word of mouth is an excellent way to spread the word about how good the app can be.
ReplyDelete