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Market Research Techniques
Market research can provide critical information
about the buying habits, needs, preferences and opinions of current and prospective
customers. While there are many ways to perform market research, most businesses
use one or more of five basic methods: surveys, focus groups, personal interviews,
observation and field trials. The type of data you need and how much money you're
willing to spend will determine which techniques you choose for your business.
- Surveys. Using concise, straightforward questionnaires,
you can analyze a sample group that represents your target market. The larger
the sample, the more reliable the results.
- In-person surveys are one-on-one interviews typically conducted
in high-traffic locations such as shopping malls. They allow you to present
people with samples of products, packaging or advertising and gather immediate
feedback. In-person surveys can generate response rates of more than 90
percent, but they are costly. With the time and labor involved, the tab
for an in-person survey can run as high as $100 per interview.
- Telephone surveys are less expensive than in-person surveys,
but costlier than mail. However, due to consumer resistance to relentless
telemarketing, getting people to participate in phone surveys has grown
increasingly difficult. Telephone surveys generally yield response rates
of 50 percent to 60 percent.
- Mail surveys are a relatively inexpensive way to reach a broad
audience. They're much cheaper than in-person and phone surveys, but they
only generate response rates of 3 percent to 15 percent. Despite the low
return, mail surveys are still a cost-effective choice for small businesses.
- Online surveys usually generate unpredictable response rates
and unreliable data because you have no control over the pool of respondents.
But an online survey is a simple, inexpensive way to collect anecdotal
evidence and gather customer opinions and preferences.
- Focus groups. In focus groups, a moderator uses a
scripted series of questions or topics to lead a discussion among a group
of people. These sessions take place at neutral locations, usually at facilities
with videotaping equipment and an observation room with one-way mirrors. A
focus group usually lasts for one to two hours, and it takes at least three
groups to get balanced results.
- Personal interviews. Like focus groups, personal
interviews include unstructured, open-ended questions. They usually last for
about an hour and are typically recorded.
Focus groups and personal interviews provide more subjective data than surveys
do. The results are not statistically reliable, which means they usually don't
represent a large segment of the population. Nevertheless, focus groups and
interviews yield valuable insights into customer attitudes and are excellent
ways to uncover issues related to new products or service development.
- Observation. Individual responses to surveys and
focus groups are sometimes at odds with people's actual behavior. When you
observe consumers in action by videotaping them in stores, at work or at home,
you can observe how they buy or use a product. This gives you a more accurate
picture of customers' usage habits and shopping patterns.
- Field trials. Placing a new product in selected stores
to test customer response under real-life selling conditions can help you
make product modifications, adjust prices or improve packaging. Small business
owners should try to establish rapport with local store owners and Web sites
that can help them test their products.