What is on the minds of your residents?

For many housing associations, it has been written down in fine words for years: resident experience, housing happiness, feeling at home. But behind those words lies a simple, yet difficult question: what is actually going on in the mind of a resident?
Written by Yvette van der Weele

How experience takes shape

Every day, residents notice hundreds of things. Most fade into the background almost immediately. But experiences that carry weight tend to stay.

The pleasure of a summer evening in the garden.
The frustration of loud music from a neighbour.
The tension after a break-in on the street.

These are the moments that embed themselves in our memory. And it is precisely those emotional memories that colour the living experience for years to come. It explains why a neighbourhood with strong numbers can still feel unsafe. And why a simple, friendly gesture from a member of staff can make all the difference.

Why traditional research falls short

For years, housing associations worked with lists full of statements. Residents were asked to tick boxes, after which all those numbers were neatly arranged into tables. But nobody thinks in tables. Nobody speaks in numbers.

 

People think in images, experiences and feelings. Not in figures.

That is what makes traditional questionnaires unsuitable for capturing real experience. They measure primarily what the organisation finds important, not what residents find important.

 

The shift: ask fewer questions, listen better

That is why we turn it around. We do not start with the organisation — we start with the resident.

We simply ask residents: what comes to mind when you think about your home, your neighbourhood or your housing association?

No leading questions. No tick boxes. Just space for real stories. That is how you get pure information from the world residents actually live in, free from the noise of assumptions and interpretation.

What does this mean for housing associations?

This approach is not a research instrument — it is a smart way of listening. It gives you a clear view of:

  • what truly occupies residents’ minds
  • where tension exists within a neighbourhood
  • which experiences contribute to a positive living environment
  • which events continue to cast a shadow over the living experience

Neighbourhood managers can have individual conversations with residents based on their story, not based on numbers. Teams see at a glance where things are going well and where attention is needed. And you avoid building policy on assumptions that turn out to be wrong.

The result: you focus your attention on what truly matters to residents. And that brings calm, direction and focus.

Why this is so powerful

Organisations want residents to think along and get involved. Stories set an organisation in motion. They touch something that numbers never can. We see it time and again with housing associations that take this step.

 

In closing

Resident experience is not a measurement. It is a collection of experiences that embed themselves in the mind and in the heart. Those who take these experiences seriously can make far more focused choices. And the beautiful thing is: every housing association can start today.

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