Friday, September 27, 2019

9A Testing the Hypothesis, Part 2



Who: After interviewing, I found out there are certain people who do fall outside the boundary. These individuals are the ones who simply don't care about what they wear or already satisfied with the solutions they use to meet their need. Three of my younger interviewees identified "styling their clothes" as a daily issue. While my other two older interviewees said they didn't struggle with styling their clothes because they have other important things to worry about in the morning. I do want to expand my market some more because most of my interviewees have been college students. In comparison to college students, I feel that students who live in the city rather than a college town will have more of a need for this.

What: After speaking to my interviewees, I realized that this need for being fashionable can be closely related to the desire of wanting to be accepted by others. One of the two reasons someone may care so much about what they wear is because of self-confidence or to not feel judged by others.
·      Younger perspective - They feel that they are looked at harder as they mature into an adult. One person mentioned how they felt like this from middle school to high school. They always tried to look their best wherever they went, so they weren't talked about or judged. They like my solution and believe it would definitely help their morning routine be faster. As well as, help them continuously pick outfits that fit their mood, occasion, or style and boost their self-confidence.
·      Older perspective - The older interviewees don't find a solution like this necessary. An older woman was saying how at a certain point and time, you have to stop caring about what others think. The style that you choose to pick is what you want and should be nobody's else choice. An older man believed the young kids should stop worrying and just pick out their outfits in advance to help, sign up for a personal stylist, or even just ask a friend for help.

Why: I believe the need is not different - everybody has this issue at some point and time. The only thing is the as the outsiders got older, they didn’t consider this to be an issue that affects their daily routine, or they are satisfied with other measures that suit their need.
            
          


Inside the boundary

Outside the boundary

Who
·      Young teens who care about their appearance
·      Young teens/adults who don’t see this is as an issue

What
·      Need help styling outfits
·      An organized way of finding clothes faster
·      A styling assistant
·      An organized closet
Why
·      People want to look better
·      Dress to impress
·      People want to feel confident
·      Getting ready takes long

·      Have measures already to satisfy the need – personal stylist, put clothes out in advance, websites that provide outfits for a monthly subscription
·      Don’t need material things to make them feel confident
·      Don’t care how their outfits look to others




2 comments:

  1. Rachel,

    I found it very interesting that after conducting your interviews, you discovered that the need for being fashionable or having nice style is closely linked to wanting to feel accepted or liked by others. I absolutely think this can be true for many people, especially if one has low self-esteem. Overall, I really enjoyed reading your post, great job!

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  2. Hi Rachel, thanks for sharing this post! I really liked how you separated your interviewees into a younger and older group. I also agree with you that this need may change depending on where you live and think this theory would be interesting to further explore. I found it interesting that the need to be fashionable stemmed from a desire to be accepted for many of your interviewees.

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