Are you filmmakers or researchers?

What 'normal' person is going to let a stranger into their
homes to film them?


Don’t people act in front of the camera?

How do you find willing participants for the studies?

What about ethics? What happens with the film?

So participants don’t feel like they are on Big Brother?

How many people do you work with in one of these studies?

In the field do ethnographers work in pairs or individually?

If you are working with a small sample how representative
is it going to be?


When you say Naked Eye ethnographers live with people, do you
mean they sleep at their house?


Is 3 days of fieldwork enough?

How many hours footage do you capture?

What is Clip Bank, the on line resource?

If you have anymore questions send Nick an he’ll do his best to answer your questions.
  Most clients now realise there's a big difference between what participants say they do and what they really do in reality. The participants Naked Eye work with during studies are the same type of people who would do any type of research. What's important is communicating clearly to them who we are, our professional backgrounds and issuing contracts to protect their privacy. It is also important that they understand our approach to research. We conduct research with people not on people. At all stages of the research it’s about keeping an open mind, learning and adapting…learning and adapting.

Believe us, if anyone thinks that someone is not 'normal' it is the participants who think we are mad spending our weekends and evenings doing this type of research.