

Ğxact directions will be emailed to you once your booking is made.Ground floor access to both the studio and toilet but unfortunately no wheelchair access.Please bring a packed lunch or there is a supermarket nearby. Please let me know of any allergies when making the booking. Aprons and protective equipment will be provided. It is recommended that you wear comfortable, loose fitting clothing and no open sandals.Not suitable for women who are pregnant or breast feeding due to the lead content in the solder.It is best to keep the following hour free and avoid needing to rush off. Glass cutting also requires a certain amount of strength and mobility in the wrist. Please keep in mind that there will be quite a bit of standing and moderate labour during the making of your stained glass sun catcher.User Interviews clients include Eventbrite, Glassdoor, AT&T, DirecTV, Lola, LogMeIn, Thumbtack, Casper, ClassPass, Fandango, NNG, Pinterest, Pandora, Colgate, Uber and REI, to name a few. No mention of what those forthcoming products might be, but the current iteration sure seems attractive enough. “Right now, our greatest challenge is that our clients are the best product people in the world, and we have a huge pipeline of amazing ideas that are very valuable and no one is doing yet that our clients would love,” said CEO and cofounder Basel Fakhoury.

With Recruit, User Interviews charges $30/person that it matches with a company for feedback. To be clear, User Interviews doesn’t facilitate the actual interviews with users, but tracks the feedback, facilitates sending emails and ensures that no one from the research team is reaching out to a single user too often. But because the majority of user research is based on existing users, the company also built Research Hub, which is essentially a CRM system for user feedback and research. In fact, User Interviews’ first sales were made by simply responding to Craigslist ads posted by companies looking for non-users from which they could collect feedback. The platform’s first product, called Recruit, offers a network of non-users that can be matched with companies to provide feedback. In the process of talking to customers to understand their pain points, they realized just how difficult collecting user feedback could be. It was a dud, and the team - Basel Fakhoury, Dennis Meng and Bob Saris - decided to do far more user research before determining the next product. User Interviews actually started out as Mobile Suites, an amenities logistics platform for hotels. User Interviews, an ERA-backed company out of New York, is looking to lighten that load with a fresh $5 million in seed funding from Accomplice, Las Olas, FJ Labs and ERA. But the only way to build for the consumer is to hear what they want, which can be a resource-intensive thing to retrieve. It’s not uncommon to hear CEOs and business leaders talk about focusing on the consumer.
