{"site":{"name":"Koji","description":"AI-native customer research platform that helps teams conduct, analyze, and synthesize customer interviews at scale.","url":"https://www.koji.so","contentTypes":["blog","documentation"],"lastUpdated":"2026-06-13T11:42:41.843Z"},"content":[{"type":"blog","id":"67e3f534-e1db-4d27-b4f7-74d9313f0d96","slug":"focus-groups-vs-interviews-2026","title":"Focus Groups vs Interviews: Which Research Method Gets You Better Data? (2026)","url":"https://www.koji.so/blog/focus-groups-vs-interviews-2026","summary":"Should you run focus groups or one-on-one interviews? This guide compares both methods on depth, cost, bias, and speed — and shows why AI-moderated interviews are replacing both for modern research teams.","content":"# Focus Groups vs Interviews: Which Research Method Gets You Better Data? (2026)\n\nYou have a research question that needs answering. Your budget is limited. Your deadline is tight. And your stakeholders want insights, not methodology debates.\n\nSo: focus groups or interviews?\n\nThe honest answer is that for most product, UX, and customer research questions, **one-on-one interviews produce better data** — and AI-moderated interviews now deliver that data at the speed and scale that focus groups were always supposed to offer.\n\nThis guide breaks down the differences, the trade-offs, and the emerging third option that is making both traditional methods feel dated in 2026.\n\n---\n\n## What Is a Focus Group?\n\nA focus group is a moderated group discussion with 6–10 participants conducted simultaneously. A trained moderator guides the conversation while clients observe from behind a one-way mirror or via video stream.\n\nFocus groups became the dominant qualitative research method in the 1950s and remained so for decades. They are fast at gathering a range of surface-level opinions and are particularly useful for:\n\n- Early-stage concept testing (ad copy, packaging, product concepts)\n- Exploring how social norms and group dynamics influence perception\n- Generating initial hypotheses before deeper research\n- When stakeholders need to observe real users react in real time\n\n## What Is a One-on-One Interview?\n\nAlso called an in-depth interview (IDI), a one-on-one interview is a structured or semi-structured conversation between a researcher and a single participant. Sessions typically run 30–90 minutes and aim to go deep on individual experience, motivation, and behavior.\n\nIn-depth interviews are the gold standard for:\n\n- Understanding why users behave a certain way\n- Exploring sensitive topics (pricing sensitivity, churn reasons, health decisions)\n- Uncovering individual decision-making processes\n- Jobs-to-be-done and switch-event research\n- Customer discovery for product-market fit\n\n---\n\n## Focus Groups vs Interviews: Head-to-Head Comparison\n\n### 1. Depth of Insight\n\n**Winner: Interviews — by a wide margin.**\n\nIn a typical focus group with 8 participants over 90 minutes, each person gets approximately **15 minutes of speaking time**. In a one-on-one interview, that same participant gets **45–60 minutes** of focused exploration.\n\nThat 3–4x difference in speaking time is not just a quantity advantage — it is a quality one. When a participant has only 15 minutes, they stay at the surface. When they have 60 minutes with a skilled interviewer probing follow-up questions, they reveal the underlying motivations, workarounds, and emotional context that drive real behavior.\n\n### 2. Groupthink Bias\n\n**Winner: Interviews — decisively.**\n\nFocus groups are systematically prone to groupthink. The moment one confident participant frames their opinion strongly, others self-censor or anchor to it. Research comparing individual interviews and focus groups found that **individual interviews generate a significantly broader range of views** on the same topic.\n\nThis bias is structural, not a moderator skill problem. When people are in a room together, social conformity pressure is unavoidable. One-on-one interviews eliminate this entirely.\n\nFor sensitive topics — pricing, churn, competitive evaluation, financial decisions — focus groups are particularly unreliable. Participants will not honestly say \"I left because your product was too expensive\" in front of eight strangers.\n\n### 3. Speed to Insights\n\n**Traditional focus groups:** 2–4 weeks from design to report (participant recruitment, facility booking, moderation, transcription, analysis).\n\n**Traditional one-on-one interviews:** 3–6 weeks for 15–20 interviews when scheduled manually and analyzed by hand.\n\n**AI-moderated interviews (Koji):** 10–20 interviews completed in 24–72 hours, with automatic thematic analysis, quote extraction, and a shareable research report ready the same day.\n\nThe speed advantage that focus groups once held over traditional interviews has been entirely erased by AI-native research platforms.\n\n### 4. Cost\n\nThis is where focus groups have always struggled:\n\n- **In-person focus group:** $8,000–$15,000 per group (facility rental: $1,500–$2,500, incentives: $100–$150 per participant, moderator, analysis, report)\n- **Two focus groups in a major metro:** Often $20,000–$30,000 total\n- **Traditional IDI project (10–15 interviews):** $5,000–$15,000 including recruiting and reporting\n- **AI-moderated interviews (Koji):** From €29/month for 29 credits — enabling multiple quality interviews at a fraction of traditional costs\n\nFor most teams, the true cost of focus groups is not just the invoice — it is the research budget consumed that could have funded continuous discovery.\n\n### 5. Scalability\n\n**Winner: Interviews (when AI-moderated).**\n\nA traditional focus group tops out at 8–10 participants per session. Running 50 participants requires 6–7 sessions, each requiring a moderator, a facility, and full post-processing.\n\nAI-moderated interviews scale differently. Sending an interview link to 200 customers costs the same per-interview rate whether you get 20 responses or 200. Koji automatically analyzes all responses and synthesizes themes across any volume — making 50 interviews as operationally feasible as 5.\n\n### 6. Consistency\n\n**Winner: AI-moderated interviews.**\n\nFocus groups depend heavily on moderator skill. A strong moderator can prevent groupthink and draw out genuine insight. A weak one produces dominated conversations with surface-level data.\n\nAI-moderated interviews apply consistent probing logic to every single participant — the same follow-up depth, the same neutrality, zero moderator fatigue. Koji is trained to ask follow-ups like \"Can you tell me more about that?\" without introducing leading language or losing focus.\n\n---\n\n## When Should You Actually Use a Focus Group in 2026?\n\nFocus groups are not obsolete — but their use cases have narrowed considerably:\n\n1. **Stakeholder buy-in sessions:** When executives need to watch real customers react to a concept in real time, the theater of a focus group has political value that IDIs cannot replicate.\n2. **Social dynamic exploration:** When the group reaction itself is the research object — for example, how a new product category gets discussed at the table.\n3. **Creative stimulus reactions:** Early-stage ad concept testing where you want visceral, unfiltered group reactions.\n4. **Community and cultural research:** Understanding norms within a tightly defined community where group conversation reveals social meaning.\n\nFor everything else — discovery, churn analysis, pricing research, feature prioritization, usability — interviews produce better data.\n\n---\n\n## The Modern Alternative: AI-Moderated Interviews at Scale\n\nThe traditional knock on interviews was always scale and speed. If you needed 50 customer perspectives, that meant 50 separate scheduling sessions, 50 hours of moderation time, and weeks of manual synthesis.\n\n**Koji** has eliminated that constraint entirely. Here is how Koji compares to both traditional methods:\n\n**vs. Focus Groups:**\n- No facility required\n- No groupthink — every participant responds independently\n- Scales to any number of participants\n- Automatic thematic analysis across all responses\n- Results in hours, not weeks\n\n**vs. Traditional IDIs:**\n- No recruiter or calendar coordination\n- No moderator fatigue or skill variance\n- Consistent probing depth for every participant\n- Automatic quote extraction and pattern detection\n- One-click shareable reports for stakeholders\n\nKoji supports **6 question types** — open_ended, scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, and yes_no — so you can combine deep qualitative exploration with quantitative benchmarks in the same study. The AI interviewer adapts based on participant responses, probing deeper on unexpected answers while keeping structured questions on track.\n\nFor voice interviews, Koji conducts natural spoken conversations — matching the depth of a human IDI without the scheduling overhead. For text-based studies, interactive widgets collect structured data that feeds directly into aggregate charts and shareable reports.\n\n---\n\n## A Practical Decision Framework\n\n| Research Goal | Best Method |\n|---|---|\n| Understand individual motivations and behavior | One-on-one interview |\n| Explore sensitive topics (pricing, churn, health) | One-on-one interview |\n| Test a concept with a group reaction | Focus group |\n| Run 20+ interviews this week | AI-moderated interviews (Koji) |\n| Get executive buy-in via live observation | Focus group |\n| Discover why users choose competitors | One-on-one interview |\n| Build statistical themes across 50+ participants | AI-moderated interviews (Koji) |\n| Understand social norms within a community | Focus group |\n| Continuous discovery / weekly customer learning | AI-moderated interviews (Koji) |\n\n---\n\n## What the Research Shows\n\nThe evidence consistently favors interviews for depth and accuracy:\n\n- Individual interviews generate **3–4x more speaking time per participant** than focus groups (45–60 min vs ~15 min)\n- Studies find that individual interviews produce a **broader range of responses** on the same topic than focus groups\n- The JTBD methodology, which relies on switch-event interviews, reports an **86% innovation success rate** compared to 17% for traditional approaches\n- In-person focus groups cost **$8,000–$15,000 per session** — making scale research cost-prohibitive for most teams\n\n---\n\n## How to Get Started\n\nIf you are currently choosing between focus groups and interviews for your next project, the decision is straightforward:\n\n- If you need depth on individual behavior — run interviews\n- If you need scale and speed without sacrificing depth — run AI-moderated interviews with Koji\n- If you need executive observation or group dynamics specifically — run a focus group\n\n**[Start your first Koji study free at koji.so](https://koji.so)** — 10 free credits on signup, no research expertise required. Go from research question to shareable insight report in the same day.\n\nFor more on designing effective interview questions, see the guide on [How to Write User Interview Questions That Get Real Answers](/blog/how-to-write-user-interview-questions). To explore the AI interview approach in depth, read [AI-Moderated vs Human-Moderated Interviews](/blog/ai-moderated-vs-human-moderated-interviews).\n\n---\n\n## Frequently Asked Questions\n\n**Are focus groups or interviews better for product research?**\n\nFor product research, one-on-one interviews consistently produce better data. They eliminate groupthink bias, give each participant 3–4x more speaking time, and surface individual motivations that drive real product decisions. AI-moderated platforms like Koji now deliver interview depth at focus group speed and scale.\n\n**Why are focus groups so expensive?**\n\nTraditional in-person focus groups require facility rental ($1,500–$2,500), participant incentives ($100–$150 per person), a professional moderator, video recording, and post-session analysis. Two groups in a major metro area can easily cost $20,000–$30,000 total.\n\n**Can AI-moderated interviews replace focus groups?**\n\nFor most research goals, yes. AI-moderated platforms like Koji deliver the breadth of a focus group — multiple perspectives gathered quickly — with the depth of individual interviews, no groupthink, and full speaking time per participant. Results arrive in hours, not weeks, at a fraction of the cost.\n\n**How many participants do you need for focus groups vs interviews?**\n\nFocus groups typically run 6–10 participants per group, with 2–3 groups recommended for most projects. For interviews, thematic saturation usually occurs at 5–15 participants for most qualitative questions — though AI-moderated platforms make running 30–50 interviews just as operationally feasible as running 5.\n\n**What is groupthink bias in focus groups?**\n\nGroupthink is the tendency for individuals in a group to conform to the opinions of dominant voices rather than sharing their genuine views. In focus groups, this systematically suppresses minority opinions and produces an artificially narrowed dataset. One-on-one interviews eliminate this effect entirely.\n\n**What is the main disadvantage of in-depth interviews?**\n\nThe traditional disadvantages — time, cost, scheduling overhead — have been largely solved by AI-moderated interview platforms. These platforms conduct and analyze interviews automatically, making it operationally feasible to run 50+ interviews in the same time it would take to schedule 5 manually.","category":"Research","lastModified":"2026-06-08T14:30:21.744011+00:00","metaTitle":"Focus Groups vs Interviews: Which Gets Better Research Data? (2026)","metaDescription":"Compare focus groups vs one-on-one interviews on depth, cost, bias, and speed. Learn why AI-moderated interviews are replacing both for modern research teams in 2026.","keywords":["focus groups","user interviews","qualitative research","in-depth interviews","research methods","AI interviews","groupthink","IDI","UX research"],"faqItems":[{"answer":"For product research, one-on-one interviews consistently produce better data. They eliminate groupthink bias, give each participant 3-4x more speaking time, and surface individual motivations that drive real product decisions. AI-moderated platforms like Koji now deliver interview depth at focus group speed and scale.","question":"Are focus groups or interviews better for product research?"},{"answer":"Traditional in-person focus groups require facility rental ($1,500-$2,500), participant incentives ($100-$150 per person), a professional moderator, and post-session analysis. Two groups in a major metro area can easily cost $20,000-$30,000 total.","question":"Why are focus groups so expensive?"},{"answer":"For most research goals, yes. AI-moderated platforms like Koji deliver the breadth of a focus group with the depth of individual interviews — no groupthink, full speaking time per participant — at a fraction of the cost and in hours instead of weeks.","question":"Can AI-moderated interviews replace focus groups?"},{"answer":"Focus groups typically run 6-10 participants per group, with 2-3 groups recommended. For interviews, thematic saturation usually occurs at 5-15 participants for most qualitative questions, though AI-moderated platforms make 30-50 interviews just as operationally feasible.","question":"How many participants do you need for focus groups vs interviews?"},{"answer":"Groupthink is the tendency for individuals in a group to conform to dominant voices rather than sharing genuine views. This systematically suppresses minority opinions in focus groups. One-on-one interviews eliminate this effect entirely.","question":"What is groupthink bias in focus groups?"},{"answer":"The traditional disadvantages of time, cost, and scheduling overhead have been largely solved by AI-moderated interview platforms like Koji, which conduct and analyze interviews automatically, making 50+ interviews as feasible as scheduling 5 manually.","question":"What is the main disadvantage of in-depth interviews?"}]}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}