{"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":"2026-06-04T02:27:45.007Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"d6321978-482b-4dad-86b5-c575731a0e03","slug":"guerrilla-user-research","title":"Guerrilla User Research: The Complete Guide to Fast, Low-Cost Feedback","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/guerrilla-user-research","summary":"Guerrilla user research is an informal, low-cost method for rapid user feedback — approaching people in public spaces or online communities instead of running formal scheduled sessions. Testing with 5-8 participants reveals ~85% of usability problems (Nielsen). AI-moderated tools like Koji enable digital guerrilla research that collects overnight feedback from targeted audiences without geographic limitations.","content":"# Guerrilla User Research: The Complete Guide to Fast, Low-Cost Feedback\n\n**Bottom line:** Guerrilla user research is a lightweight, informal method for collecting rapid user feedback — by approaching people in public spaces, reaching out in online communities, or intercepting users in-context — instead of running formal, scheduled research sessions. Testing with just 5–8 participants can reveal approximately 85% of major usability problems (Nielsen Norman Group), typically in a single afternoon. This guide explains when to use guerrilla research, how to run it effectively, and how AI-moderated interviews make guerrilla-style feedback collection faster and more powerful than ever.\n\n## What Is Guerrilla User Research?\n\nGuerrilla user research is informal, low-cost research conducted outside the structured environment of a usability lab or scheduled video call. The approach was coined in the 1990s by Jakob Nielsen, who used the military metaphor to describe small, fast, improvised tactics that deliver results without heavy resources.\n\nTraditional user research involves:\n- Formal participant recruitment through research panels\n- Screeners to filter by detailed demographic and behavioral criteria\n- Scheduled sessions with consent forms and incentive logistics\n- Full moderation protocols and video recording setups\n- Post-session transcription, analysis, and reporting cycles\n\nGuerrilla research shortcuts all of this. You find people where they already are — coffee shops, coworking spaces, libraries, Reddit communities, Slack workspaces — and ask two or three focused questions about your product or concept.\n\nSessions run 5–10 minutes. Questions are targeted: two to three tasks or topics. The goal is directional signal — fast enough to surface major problems before you invest engineering time, without claiming statistical precision.\n\nThe Interaction Design Foundation defines guerrilla testing as *\"a quick, cost-effective method for gathering feedback on designs by approaching people in public spaces and asking them to complete tasks on a prototype or live product.\"*\n\n## When Guerrilla Research Is the Right Call\n\nGuerrilla research is a complement to formal methods, not a replacement. It works best when:\n\n**You are in the early design phase.** Wireframes and low-fidelity prototypes are ideal for guerrilla testing. Low fidelity reduces the risk of participants evaluating aesthetics instead of usability.\n\n**You need fast directional signal.** Deciding between two navigation patterns before next week's sprint review? Guerrilla testing can give you directional feedback in an afternoon.\n\n**Budget or time is constrained.** Research sprints, hackathons, and lean startup contexts often require insights in hours, not weeks. Guerrilla research is designed for these constraints.\n\n**Your product serves a broad consumer audience.** Guerrilla testing works best when your target user could be almost anyone — a consumer app, a public website, a retail experience. It breaks down for niche professional tools.\n\n**You want to supplement formal research.** Guerrilla findings are hypothesis-generators. They tell you where to look, not what is definitively true. Pair them with formal research for high-stakes decisions.\n\n## When NOT to Use Guerrilla Research\n\n- **Niche professional audiences**: Testing a tool designed for radiologists, enterprise security teams, or logistics managers with random participants will produce noise, not signal.\n- **Sensitive research topics**: Health, financial, and personal data topics require ethical handling that guerrilla settings cannot support.\n- **Quantitative validation**: If you need to know that 65% of users prefer option A, you need a statistically valid sample — not 6 participants in a coffee shop.\n- **Accessibility-focused research**: Testing with users who have disabilities requires specific recruiting, accommodations, and expertise that guerrilla settings cannot provide.\n\n## The Five Guerrilla Research Methods\n\n### 1. Public Space Intercept Testing\n\nThe original guerrilla method. Approach people in coffee shops, libraries, or coworking spaces with a laptop or phone. Ask if they have 5–10 minutes, offer a small incentive, and run a focused prototype or concept evaluation.\n\nTips for success:\n- Choose venues where your target users naturally congregate\n- Keep sessions to 5–10 minutes — respect people's time and you will get more cooperation\n- Get verbal consent before starting (\"Is it okay if I take a few notes?\")\n- Lead with a genuine pitch: \"I am designing an app for X and would love 5 minutes of your feedback\"\n\n### 2. In-App or On-Site Intercept Surveys\n\nFor digital products, intercept testing means surfacing a brief research prompt to active users at a relevant moment. A customer who just completed checkout sees: \"Can we ask you 3 quick questions about your experience?\" This is guerrilla in spirit — opportunistic, fast, low ceremony — but digital.\n\n### 3. Online Community Research\n\nPosting in relevant Reddit communities, Slack groups, or Discord servers to request quick feedback. \"I am building a tool for [community] and would love 10 minutes of feedback from anyone willing to share their experience.\"\n\nThis approach reaches authentic audiences without geographic limitations. Response rates are often surprisingly high when the request is genuine and community-appropriate.\n\n### 4. Five-Second Testing\n\nShow participants a screenshot, webpage, or concept for exactly five seconds, then remove it and ask: \"What do you remember? What do you think this product does?\" Five-second testing measures first impressions and message clarity — one of the fastest research methods available.\n\nYou can run five-second tests guerrilla-style in person (show your phone or laptop briefly) or with asynchronous AI-moderated tools.\n\n### 5. Corridor Testing\n\nWithin your own organization, pull in colleagues or visitors who are unfamiliar with the product to catch obvious usability problems. This is the lowest-cost method — but also carries the highest social bias, since coworkers are unlikely to criticize openly. Use only for catching glaring issues, not for validating product direction.\n\n## How Many Participants Do You Need?\n\nJakob Nielsen's foundational 2000 research — \"Why You Only Need to Test with 5 Users\" — established that testing with just 5 participants reveals approximately 85% of a product's usability problems. Nielsen and Landauer showed that the typical value of the proportion of usability problems discovered while testing a single user is 31%, averaged across a large number of projects — meaning each additional user after five adds diminishing returns.\n\nAs Nielsen wrote: *\"Elaborate usability tests are a waste of resources. The best results come from testing no more than 5 users and running as many small tests as you can afford.\"*\n\nFor guerrilla research, aim for **5–8 participants per session**. Below 5, you risk missing problems that multiple participants would have flagged. Above 8, the additional time investment begins to exceed the incremental insight gain for a directional method.\n\nImportant caveat: Nielsen's finding applies to comparable users. If your product serves meaningfully different user types (for example, admins and end users), run separate 5-person guerrilla sessions for each type.\n\n## How to Run a Guerrilla Research Session: Step-by-Step\n\n**Before the session:**\n1. Define one focused research question (not \"is this good?\" but \"can users find the settings page without help?\")\n2. Prepare 2–3 tasks or questions — not a 20-question protocol\n3. Set up your prototype or product on a device participants can interact with independently\n4. Decide on an incentive (optional, but a small gift card increases participation meaningfully)\n5. Write a 20-second pitch explaining what you are doing and why you need their help\n\n**During the session:**\n1. Get verbal consent before starting\n2. Set context: \"Pretend you just heard about this app from a friend and you are seeing it for the first time\"\n3. Give one task at a time — do not front-load all questions simultaneously\n4. Use the think-aloud protocol: \"Can you narrate what you are thinking as you try this?\"\n5. Resist the urge to help — when participants struggle, that is the data\n6. Thank them genuinely and provide the incentive\n\n**After the session:**\n1. Write notes immediately — memory decays fast, especially if you run back-to-back sessions\n2. Capture your top 3 observations while they are fresh\n3. After 5 sessions, look for patterns across all observations\n4. Translate patterns into specific, actionable design changes\n\n## Speed Comparison: Guerrilla vs. Formal Research\n\nA typical formal moderated research project timeline:\n- Recruiting: 1–2 weeks\n- Scheduling: 3–5 days\n- Running sessions: 1–2 weeks (5–10 sessions at 60 minutes each)\n- Transcription and synthesis: 1–2 weeks\n- **Total: 4–6 weeks**\n\nA guerrilla research session:\n- Preparation: 2–4 hours\n- Sessions: 1 afternoon (5–8 participants, 10 minutes each)\n- Synthesis: 1–2 hours\n- **Total: 1 day**\n\nThe insight quality differs — guerrilla research is directional, formal research is definitive. But for early-stage validation or answering a specific focused question, guerrilla research delivers at a fraction of the time and cost.\n\n## Modern Guerrilla Research: How Koji Makes It Even Faster\n\nThe guerrilla research revolution is no longer limited to coffee shops. AI-moderated interview tools like Koji enable digital-first guerrilla research that reaches higher-fidelity participants with even less effort.\n\n**Digital guerrilla research with Koji:**\n\nInstead of approaching people in a public space, share your Koji interview link in a relevant online community. Participants complete the AI-moderated interview asynchronously — answering voice or text questions at their convenience, from anywhere in the world, on their own schedule.\n\nThe AI probes and follows up exactly as a skilled moderator would, but without scheduling friction. You can collect 10–20 guerrilla-style research conversations overnight.\n\n**Why this outperforms traditional guerrilla approaches:**\n- No geographic limitations — recruit from the exact communities where your users live online\n- Niche audiences become accessible — you are not limited to whoever happens to be in a coffee shop\n- Automatic transcription and insight extraction — no manual notes needed\n- Koji supports 6 structured question types: scale, single_choice, multiple_choice, ranking, yes_no, and open_ended — adding quantitative signal alongside qualitative findings\n- A shareable research report is ready before you wake up the next morning\n\nTeams using AI-assisted research tools report collecting insights up to 60% faster than traditional intercept approaches — while reaching participants who better match their actual target user profile.\n\n**The Koji guerrilla research workflow:**\n1. Create a Koji study with 4–6 questions focused on your one research question\n2. Post the link in 3–5 relevant online communities (Reddit, Slack, Discord, LinkedIn)\n3. Let participants complete AI-moderated interviews on their own time\n4. Review Koji's automatic thematic analysis the following morning\n5. Use the findings to make a fast, informed product decision\n\n## Guerrilla Research vs. Formal User Research\n\n| | Guerrilla Research | Formal User Research |\n|---|---|---|\n| Setup time | Hours | Weeks |\n| Cost | Low | High |\n| Sample size | 5–8 participants | 8–20+ participants |\n| Participant quality | Variable | Controlled |\n| Depth of insight | Directional | Definitive |\n| Bias risk | Higher | Lower (but not zero) |\n| Best use | Early validation, fast answers | Final validation, statistical claims |\n\nSmart research programs use both: guerrilla research for fast learning loops during early design phases, and formal research for high-stakes decisions before major launches.\n\n## Frequently Asked Questions\n\n**Is guerrilla user research scientifically valid?**\nGuerrilla research is exploratory and directional — not statistically rigorous. It surfaces problems and generates hypotheses, but cannot prove statistical claims about user populations. Use it for early-stage learning; use formal methods for definitive conclusions.\n\n**What is a good incentive for guerrilla research?**\nA small gift card is standard for in-person sessions. For online guerrilla research, many participants engage without incentives when the product is relevant to their interests. Charity donations in participants' names are also effective and low-cost.\n\n**How do I recruit for guerrilla research without a panel?**\nCoffee shops, coworking spaces, university campuses (for consumer products), online communities (Reddit, Slack, Discord), and targeted social media posts in niche groups are all effective guerrilla recruitment channels.\n\n**Can I run guerrilla research for B2B products?**\nYes — but be strategic about where you recruit. Post in LinkedIn groups, industry Slack communities, or professional forums rather than general public spaces. AI-moderated tools like Koji are particularly useful for B2B guerrilla research, since you can share a link in a targeted professional community and reach the exact audience you need without geographic constraints.\n\n**How many questions should a guerrilla session include?**\nFor in-person sessions: 2–3 tasks or questions, maximum. For asynchronous AI-moderated guerrilla interviews: 4–6 questions works well, since participants respond at their own pace without social pressure to finish quickly.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [Structured Questions in AI Interviews](/docs/structured-questions-guide)\n- [Lean User Research: How to Run Meaningful Research with No Time or Budget](/docs/lean-user-research)\n- [How to Conduct Usability Testing: The Complete Guide](/docs/usability-testing-guide)\n- [Unmoderated vs. Moderated User Research: How to Choose](/docs/unmoderated-vs-moderated-research)\n- [How to Conduct Market Research Interviews](/docs/market-research-interview-guide)\n- [AI-Moderated Interviews: How Automated Research Works (And Why It Works Better)](/docs/ai-moderated-interviews)\n\n\n## Further reading on the blog\n\n- [B2B Customer Research: The Complete Guide for Product Teams (2026)](/blog/b2b-customer-research-guide-2026) — B2B customer research is harder than B2C — you are navigating buying groups of 10+ stakeholders, gatekeepers, and enterprise procurement cyc\n- [User Research: The Complete Guide to Understanding Your Users (2025)](/blog/user-research-the-complete-guide-to-understanding-your-users-2025) — Learn what user research is, why it matters, and how to conduct it effectively. Discover how AI tools like Koji are transforming the researc\n- [Best AI Market Research Tools in 2026: The Complete Buyer's Guide](/blog/ai-market-research-tools-2026) — AI has fundamentally changed market research. This guide compares the leading AI market research platforms—from AI-native interview tools li\n\n<!-- further-reading:blog -->\n","category":"Research Methods","lastModified":"2026-05-13T00:26:36.807295+00:00","metaTitle":"Guerrilla User Research: Complete Guide to Fast, Low-Cost Feedback (2026)","metaDescription":"Learn how to run guerrilla user research — the rapid, informal method for collecting user feedback in coffee shops, online communities, and in-app intercepts. Jakob Nielsen 5-user rule explained with modern AI-assisted approaches.","keywords":["guerrilla user research","guerrilla testing","guerrilla usability testing","guerrilla research methods","low cost user research","rapid user research"],"aiSummary":"Guerrilla user research is an informal, low-cost method for rapid user feedback — approaching people in public spaces or online communities instead of running formal scheduled sessions. Testing with 5-8 participants reveals ~85% of usability problems (Nielsen). AI-moderated tools like Koji enable digital guerrilla research that collects overnight feedback from targeted audiences without geographic limitations.","aiPrerequisites":["Basic understanding of user research concepts","Familiarity with prototyping or product development"],"aiLearningOutcomes":["Run a guerrilla research session from preparation to synthesis","Apply the 5-user rule to guerrilla sample sizes correctly","Choose between in-person and digital guerrilla research approaches","Use AI-moderated interviews for faster, higher-fidelity guerrilla research"],"aiDifficulty":"beginner","aiEstimatedTime":"15 minutes"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}