Friday, May 11, 2012

Reply to Smarty Ears


Before I respond to the various replies to my Buyer Beware blog, I would like to share what I knew about Smarty Ears and Barbara Fernandes prior to Buyer Beware. I knew that Ms. Fernandes was one of the first speech pathologists to develop apps for the profession. I knew that her company had grown and so had the number of apps she had put in the iTunes store. I knew that her LinkedIn group forum was called GeekSLP. I had no idea what any of her apps were like since I had never purchased any of them. Hence, I had never had the occasion to form any opinion of Smarty Ears apps. More importantly, I have never held, nor have had any reason to have held, any biases for or against Ms. Fernandes, her employees or her company.

A super long time ago, during grad school, I took a research methodology course. One of the objectives was to learn to critique research. An important educational point made was that one should not always take claims of efficacy, cause-effect, results and conclusions, even those done by researchers in reputable institutions, at face value. Nevertheless, sometimes I will just believe a claim without question because it is just easier than “checking it out.” Then there are times, when a connection or claim is made and my interest is piqued. That is what caused me to post Buyer Beware. As a result of the post I received many replies, three of which were written by people affiliated with Smarty Ears: Sean Sweeny, MtMarySLP and Barbara Fernandes.

Regarding my issue with Ms. Fernandes reviewing one of her apps, Mr. Sweeny, the New Product Development Manager for Smarty Ears, stated, “As for Barbara leaving a review, that is something that can be done when an app is downloaded, and it's pretty transparent as to who she is.” The overriding question is, should it have been done? In my opinion, no. Does everyone who reads the Smarty Ear app reviews really know that Barbara Fernandes owns Smarty Ears? Wouldn’t transparency come in the form of Ms. Fernandes stating her name, followed by CEO of Smarty Ears? Clearly, Ms. Fernandes liked the app because she accepted someone’s idea and it is now in her product line. I simply disagree with the appropriateness of reviewing an app that is her product.

After that post, cmf-slp posted about her disappointment with Smarty Ears Match2Say app and the amount of money she paid for the app. In reply, I posted that another gripe I had with Smarty Ears that had to do with the way some of their app descriptions state that the app is based on research. MtMarySLP, who helped author an app for Smarty Ears, noted, “The introduction of the app, where it cites research, is written by the author of the app - not Smarty-Ears.” That may be, but Smarty Ears offers the app as its product and is responsible for what is written on its site. MtMarySLP makes another point, “Many questions are asked about the research and efficacy of using apps in therapy.  As SLPs we are responsible for doing research and using best practices. If an app is based on theory and research and can support that with cited articles - shouldn't it be stated?”  I agree that we are each responsible for doing research and using best practices. That is precisely what I did when I questioned Smarty Ears citation.  Should we, as professionals, take at face value a statement such as, “supported by research?”  Can it be that the research does not exactly support the premise of the app? Let’s take the Go-Togethers app, the one whose description caught my attention, as an example. The app description notes that the “…app is based on research around vocabulary and word meaning development in students.” The next sentence alludes to research by “McGregor, Newman, Reilly & Capone (2002).” The paper (McGregor, Newman, Reilly & Capone, Semantic Representation and Naming in Children With Specific Language Impairment, JSHR, Oct 2002; 45: 998 – 1014) examines the relationship between a child’s aptitude with semantic knowledge, synonyms, and word retrieval and word naming accuracy. Go-Togethers targets associations and categories, important skills in language development and reasoning tasks. The problem is that associations and categories were not the focus of the study nor were they mentioned as relevant to the outcome of the study. So why mention the study? Is it meant to lend credence to value of that particular app? These two questions were what led me to my comment about research being used as a marketing trick. Perhaps, “trick” was too strong a word. But the reference is misleading.

Regarding my interest in reviewing her apps, Ms. Fernandes asked, “… why do you feel like Smarty Ears is under any obligation to give you our apps for free so that you can do a review? Yes, we do give them to bloggers and reviewers, however our resources are limited and we are not able to accommodate everyone. I am sorry about that, but making a blog to "write unbiased reviews" does not make anyone entitled to FREE CODES for app reviews. I did not mean to sound too critical but I do not feel that this post was done in a fair, balanced, or even with the “SLP hat on”, so I wanted to provide our perspective on it.” I am sorry, Ms. Fernandes, that you feel that, by pointing out that you reviewed one of your own apps, and that my questioning the link to research purported to support Go-Togethers was unfair, unbalanced and unprofessional. Are we to conclude that a fair, balanced and professional speech pathologist is one who raises no questions about what you write or what you do? Raise a question about Smarty Ears and one is accused of using vitriol as when Mr. Sweeny stated, “I am confused by the vitriol here.” Vitriol as in malicious, malevolent, hateful, hostile, virulent, and nasty? Really?  Really, Mr. Sweeny?

Regarding free apps: I understand the limitations an app developer has when handing out free apps. I do not feel “entitled” to receiving any developer’s apps. However, I can assure Ms. Fernandes and other app developers that I would provide unbiased reviews of their apps. I would do so not to please the people at Smarty Ears or other app developers. Rather, I would so because the readers of my blog have a right to read about the pros and cons of apps they may want to purchase. Most of us do not have unlimited funds to spend on apps. Apps can be expensive and unlike hard materials they are not returnable for a refund. We need to spend wisely. And we need to know that the reviewer will not be bent to the will of the app developer nor does he/she benefit financially from her positive reviews.



7 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  2. SB, I removed your comment by accident. I apologize.

    For readers who would like to contact me via email, please do the following: Type in your comment, your email address and indicate if you would prefer that I not post your comment. I will not post it onto the blog. Instead I will respond via email. Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Can you post which apps she left reviews on? I am curious to read them and it may take me forever if I click on each one in iTunes. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I am happy to report that since my post "Buyer Beware," Ms. Fernandes has removed her reviews of her own apps.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That would be why I couldn't find any. Well, that is good news but I think it also supports your previous statements, and maybe she realized it is kind of fishy for a company to review their own product.

      Delete
    2. Thank you for having the courage to do this. I hope more people will question what the app developers are doing. It is becoming an ocean of apps with many sharks.

      Delete
  5. This is exactly the reason that I wrote my post about applications being researched based vs. actually researched themselves. Also, that the apps do what they state that they do. This also reminds me of when I was researching different assessments in college.

    I know that this comment is a few weeks after you posted this, but I agree that it is important to question each and every app, or product for that matter. Also, I do agree that it is unprofessional for a company or anyone in it to rate an app/product/write a product review on another site (unless it is an interview or information release) no matter what business you are in, especially if that brings your rating percentage up. That would be like if a CEO wrote a review and had each of its employees write a positive review as well - misleading. It is hard to do what you did, but I agree that it is definitely something to think about. I actually did see the reviews on iTunes right after I read your post and I wonder how many other companies have done this on iTunes, Amazon, and other places.

    We ended up having a big discussion about apps/research on SLPs Talk Apps on Facebook. A lot was brought up about how we have all been trained in evidence based practice and how apps are tools just like any other product and we need to make the decisions ourselves. The problem is, how can we make that decision when the apps are pricey, the product previews are only 3-4 slides, and we have to go off of what the developer has stated in the information (and some really do have good intentions, not that I know for sure that anyone had bad ones).

    Anyhow, good luck with everything in the future and I look forward to continuing to read your blog!

    ReplyDelete