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Interview notes
- prepare your questions before your interview
- edit your questions down to 10 questions – not to fatigue the participant, that way they are more likely to accept a second / follow up interview
- don’t overload the questions – keep them short, simple, focussed
- first few questions – warm up questions, easy to answer, provide context
- bulk of questions are a framework for retelling the story in chronological order
- final few questions are about the future / the impact of the event
- always add – is there anything else you would like to talk about?
- avoid giving out questions in advance, but if pressed, offer them the topics the interview will cover
- be warm and make small talk
- give them a glass of water if they are on your turf – take the water if on theirs!
- dont delay, look at the room/lighting/powerpoints – set up quickly
- in a larger crew than one, the person asking the questions establishes rapport
- think about light sources – face windows
- explain that you need full sentences and demonstrate it, especially if they think they know what they mean – give us much detail as they can
- offer an escape – if theres anything you dont want to answer…. however I don’t think there’s anything in these questions that will warrant that
- acknowledge the camera once (only) ‘know you can look at me whilst you answer, or around the room, but don’t look at the lens.’
- be an attentive listener, and use your facial expressions to support and encourage. Avoid making sounds.
- ask follow up questions if something interesting pops up. Ideally as it pops up, before moving on to the next question.
- silence is golden – if you want someone to talk more
technical pointers
- check the mics before you begin and monitor sound with headphones – just wear headphones while you’re interviewing – explain beforehand, and enter the room wearing headphones
- fix audio problems as they occur (pops, handling noise, lack of topic sentences)
- consider eyelines ( the interviewer should sit close to the camera)
- consider framing (rule of thirds, the framing of other interviews)
- consider reframing (moving closer as we move from general to specific – put down in sheet of questions to remind to reframe – get closer as more emotional, deeper questions are asked)
- in order to get the best eyeline, sit right next to the camera
- film action sequences after the initial sitdown interviews – participants are more likely to be more comfortable, and also to be less ‘performative’
sound
- lapel mics are best used for interviews, as they capture sound close to the subject, minimising background noise
- boom mics are also good, however more fallible when held (contact noise), or when on a mic stand, as they do not move with the subject
- can hide lapel mics from view using moleskin tape, wrapped into a cone which encases the mic and then sticks to the clothes