Community Narratives, also referred to as storytelling, is a 
qualitative research method in which a creative consumer group is 
encouraged to share experiences with products and to express their 
feelings.  Consumers describe experiences or situations in their own 
words.  The participants in the group are typically users of a category 
of products, not a specific brand. Both established and innovative 
qualitative data collection methods are used in the context of ongoing  
relationships within groups of target consumers.  While traditional 
focus groups allow only a short time to probe the feelings and actions 
of representative consumer groups, storytelling employs multiple 
sessions to allow the same creative, articulate consumers to build 
community within their group, a process that leads to more honest 
communication, enhanced creativity, and increased discernment of the 
target product category and/or concept.  
	
 
Community Narrative techniques probe beyond surface consumer 
attitudes, behaviors, and feelings to allow researchers to learn at a 
deeper emotional level than traditional sensory methods.  Consumers are 
encouraged to express their experiences and feelings, allowing 
motivations and unarticulated needs to be uncovered and new insights to 
emerge, often by building on other group members’ ideas.  Using literal 
and figurative exercises, the storytelling process provides focus on the
 researcher’s initial questions while allowing spontaneous “verbal 
excursions” by group members. Understanding consumer responses on 
product sensory attributes is a major outcome.1
	
 
References
	
1 Meilgaard, M., G. V. Civille and B. T. Carr (2007). Sensory Evaluation Techniques, 4th Ed. New Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 12: 267.