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The 8 types of market research: definitions, uses and examples.
13 min read What are the different types of market research that can help you stay ahead of the curve with your marketing strategy? Understand how to use each type, and what the advantages and disadvantages are.
Market research (also called marketing research) is the action or activity of gathering information about market needs and preferences. This helps companies understand their target market — how the audience feels and behaves.
There are 8 types of market research, each with their own methods and tools:
- Primary research
- Secondary research
- Qualitative research
- Quantitative research
- Branding research
- Customer research
- Competitor research
- Product research
Let’s start our list by exploring primary and secondary research first.
Free eBook: The new era of market research is about intelligence
1. Primary research
Primary research is research that you collect yourself but going directly to the target market through a range of methods. Because it is data you create, you own the data set.
Two types of results — exploratory information (determines the nature of a problem that hasn’t yet been clearly defined) and conclusive information (carried out to solve a problem that exploratory research identified) — from participants are collected as raw data and then analyzed to gather insights from trends and comparisons.
This method is good for getting the views of a lot of people at one time, especially when time is short, but it comes with its own management issues. The interviewer must prepare a way to gather answers and record these, while engaging in conversation with many people.
Participants may be affected by the group setting, either from acquiescence bias (the desire to say yes to please the interviewer), dominance bias (stronger participants can alter the results from less dominant participants) or researcher bias (where the research leads or impacts the participant responses indirectly).
This provides a structured setting where the interviewer can listen to what’s being said and investigate further into an answer. The interviewer can also pick up on non-verbal cues from body language can help the interview understand where to deep-dive and broaden their understanding.
However, some of the same biases (acquiescence and researcher) still exit in this format. The method is time consuming to do the interviews and collect the data afterwards.
A survey is an excellent method for carrying out primary research as participants do need to be physically present with the interviewer to carry it out. The survey can be completed anywhere there is an internet connection, meaning there is flexibility for the participants to use different devices and for interviewers to contact participants in different geographical time-zones.Preparation is key, however, as the researchers must segment the market and create a list of participants to send the survey to. Hiring a panel or using existing marketing lists can help with this.
2. Secondary research
Secondary research is the use of data that has previously been collected, analysed and published (and therefore you do not own this data). An example of this for market research is:
Most information is freely available, so there are less costs associated with this kind of secondary research over primary research methods.
Secondary research can often be the preparation for primary research activities, providing a knowledge base. The information gathered may not provide the specific information to explain the results, which is where primary market research would be used to enhance understanding.
There is also a logistics planning need for a recording solution that can handle large datasets, since manual management of the volumes of information can be tricky.
Both primary and secondary research have its advantages and disadvantages, as we’ve seen, but they are best used when paired together. Combined, the data can give you the confidence to act knowing that any hypothesis you have is backed up.
Learn more about primary vs secondary research methods
The next market research types can be defined as qualitative and quantitative research types:
3. Qualitative research
Qualitative market research is the collection of primary or secondary data that is non-numerical in nature, and therefore hard to measure.
Researchers collect this market research type because it can add more depth to the data.
This kind of market research is used to summarise and infer, rather than pin-points an exact truth held by a target market. For example, qualitative market research can be done to find out a new target market’s reaction to a new product to translate the reaction into a clear explanation for the company.
4. Quantitative research
Quantitative research is the collection of primary or secondary data that is numerical in nature, and so can be collected more easily.
Researchers collect this market research type because it can provide historical benchmarking, based on facts and figures evidence.
There are a number of ways to collect this data — polls, surveys, desk research, web statistics, financial records — which can be exploratory in nature without a lot of depth at this stage.
Quantitative market research can create the foundation of knowledge needed by researchers to investigate hypotheses further through qualitative market research.
The next four variations of market research are specific to topics areas, that bring about specific information.:
5. Branding research
Branding market research assists a company to create, manage and maintain the company brand. This can relate to the tone, branding, images, values or identity of the company.
Research can be carried out through interviews, focus groups or surveys. For example, brand awareness surveys will ask your participants whether the brand is known to them and whether it is something they would be interested in buying.
Additional areas for brand research is also around brand loyalty, brand perception , brand positioning , brand value and brand identity .
The aim of research will be to understand how to know if:
- Your brand is performing in relation to other competitors
- There are areas to improve your brand activities
- There are positives to showcase to enhance your brand’s image
6. Customer research
Customer market research looks at the key influences on your target customers and how your company can make changes to encourage sales.
The aim of this research is to know your customer inside out, and continuously learn about how they interact with the company. Some themes covered by this include:
- Customer satisfaction – Exploring what keeps customers happy, as higher customer satisfaction is more likely to lead to increased customer retention.
- Customer loyalty – This looks at what experiences have happened to lead to greater customer loyalty across the customer lifecycle.
- Customer segmentation research – Discovering who the customers are, what their behaviour and preferences are and their shared characteristics.
Relevant desk research may look at historical purchase records, customer journey mapping , customer segmentation, demographics and persona templates.
Primary research, such as NPS and customer satisfaction surveys , or customer satisfaction interviews at the end of customer support calls, can also give more details.
7. Competitor research
Competitor market research is about knowing who your competition is and understanding their strengths and weaknesses, in comparison to your organization. It can also be about your competitive offering in the market, or how to approach a new market.
The aim of this research is to find ways to make your organization stand out and future planning through horizon scanning and listening to customer preferences.
For example, for competitive analysis, researchers would create a SWOT for your business and your competitors, to see how your business compares.
Primary research could interview customers about their buying preferences, while secondary sources would look at competitor’s market dominance, sales, structure and so on. With this thorough analysis, you can understand where you can change to be more competitive, and look for ideas that make you stand out.
8. Product research
Product market research is a key way to make sure your products and services are fit for launching in the market, and are performing as well as they can.
The aim of this research is to see how your product is perceived by customers, if they are providing value and working correctly. Ideas can also be formed about upgrades and future product development.
There are a number of avenues within product research:
- Product branding – Does the product brand and design attract customers in the intended way?
- Product feature testing – this can happen at various stages of development with target markets (in early development, between versions, before product launch, etc.) to check if there are positive reaction to new or improved features
- Product design thinking – what solutions would solve your customers’ current or future problems?
- Product marketing – Do the marketing messages help your product’s memorability and saleability, or can they be improved?
Primary research methods have a clear advantage in this kind of market research: Surveys can ask for rankings on the popularity or usefulness of features or conduct conjoint analysis, while in-person observation interviews (where the participant can handle a product) can be particularly useful in seeing what customers do with the product in real time.
How to use market research types in your company
In a good marketing strategy, it’s preferable to have a mixture of data across:
- Qualitative and quantitative research
- Primary and secondary research
- Your specific topic area or area of focus
With these three components, you can make sure your market strategy gives you a complete picture of your market’s operational data and experience data , — what your market does and why .
Economical experience data (O data)
This type of experience data is quantitative in nature (including operations, featuring sales data, finance data and HR data ). As it can be quantified into numerical values, it can be measured over and over, providing datasets.
There is the opportunity to use a data-driven approach to understanding the results and making predictions based on historical trends.
This sort of data can be measured more easily than emotions and feelings. But it can only tell you about past activities and what happened. It can’t tell you what will happen in the future and why things will happen — this is where X data comes in.
Emotional experience data (X data)
This type of experience data seeks to find reasons to explain emotional decisions and how brands ‘sit’ in people’s minds. In this way, this data is qualitative in nature.
Companies that have X data have a ‘mental advantage’ over other companies, as they are able to understand the perceptions of the customer, their needs and values.
When you have tangible insights on the audience’s needs, you can then take steps to meet those needs and solve problems. This mitigates the risk of an experience gap – which is what your audience expects you deliver versus what you actually deliver.
Related resources
Mixed methods research 17 min read, market intelligence 10 min read, marketing insights 11 min read, ethnographic research 11 min read, qualitative vs quantitative research 13 min read, qualitative research questions 11 min read, qualitative research design 12 min read, request demo.
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Types of market research: Methods and examples
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Here at GWI we publish a steady stream of blogs, reports, and other resources that dig deep into specific market research topics.
But what about the folks who’d appreciate a more general overview of market research that explains the big picture? Don’t they deserve some love too?
Of course they do. That’s why we’ve created this overview guide focusing on types of market research and examples. With so many market research companies to choose from, having a solid general understanding of how this sector works is essential for any brand or business that wants to pick the right market research partner.
So with that in mind, let’s start at the very beginning and get clear on…
Market research definition
At the risk of stating the slightly obvious, market research is the gathering and analyzing of data on consumers, competitors, distributors, and markets. As such it’s not quite the same as consumer research , but there’s significant overlap.
Market research matters because it can help you take the guesswork out of getting through to audiences. By studying consumers and gathering information on their likes, dislikes, and so on, brands can make evidence-based decisions instead of relying on instinct or experience.
What is market research?
Market research is the organized gathering of information about target markets and consumers’ needs and preferences. It’s an important component of business strategy and a major factor in maintaining competitiveness.
If a business wants to know – really know – what sort of products or services consumers want to buy, along with where, when, and how those products and services should be marketed, it just makes sense to ask the prospective audience.
Without the certainty that market research brings, a business is basically hoping for the best. And while we salute their optimism, that’s not exactly a reliable strategy for success.
What are the types of market research?
Primary research .
Primary research is a type of market research you either conduct yourself or hire someone to do on your behalf.
A classic example of primary research involves going directly to a source – typically customers or prospective customers in your target market – to ask questions and gather information about a product or service. Interviewing methods include in-person, online surveys, phone calls, and focus groups.
The big advantage of primary research is that it’s directly focused on your objectives, so the outcome will be conclusive, detailed insights – particularly into customer views – making it the gold standard.
The disadvantages are it can be time-consuming and potentially costly, plus there’s a risk of survey bias creeping in, in the sense that research samples may not be representative of the wider group.
Secondary research
Primary market research means you collect the data your business needs, whereas the types of market research known as secondary market research use information that’s already been gathered for other purposes but can still be valuable. Examples include published market studies, white papers, analyst reports, customer emails, and customer surveys/feedback.
For many small businesses with limited budgets, secondary market research is their first choice because it’s easier to acquire and far more affordable than primary research.
Secondary research can still answer specific business questions, but with limitations. The data collected from that audience may not match your targeted audience exactly, resulting in skewed outcomes.
A big benefit of secondary market research is helping lay the groundwork and get you ready to carry out primary market research by making sure you’re focused on what matters most.
Qualitative research
Qualitative research is one of the two fundamental types of market research. Qualitative research is about people and their opinions. Typically conducted by asking questions either one-on-one or in groups, qualitative research can help you define problems and learn about customers’ opinions, values, and beliefs.
Classic examples of qualitative research are long-answer questions like “Why do you think this product is better than competitive products? Why do you think it’s not?”, or “How would you improve this new service to make it more appealing?”
Because qualitative research generally involves smaller sample sizes than its close cousin quantitative research, it gives you an anecdotal overview of your subject, rather than highly detailed information that can help predict future performance.
Qualitative research is particularly useful if you’re developing a new product, service, website or ad campaign and want to get some feedback before you commit a large budget to it.
Quantitative research
If qualitative research is all about opinions, quantitative research is all about numbers, using math to uncover insights about your audience.
Typical quantitative research questions are things like, “What’s the market size for this product?” or “How long are visitors staying on this website?”. Clearly the answers to both will be numerical.
Quantitative research usually involves questionnaires. Respondents are asked to complete the survey, which marketers use to understand consumer needs, and create strategies and marketing plans.
Importantly, because quantitative research is math-based, it’s statistically valid, which means you’re in a good position to use it to predict the future direction of your business.
Consumer research
As its name implies, consumer research gathers information about consumers’ lifestyles, behaviors, needs and preferences, usually in relation to a particular product or service. It can include both quantitative and qualitative studies.
Examples of consumer research in action include finding ways to improve consumer perception of a product, or creating buyer personas and market segments, which help you successfully market your product to different types of customers.
Understanding consumer trends , driven by consumer research, helps businesses understand customer psychology and create detailed purchasing behavior profiles. The result helps brands improve their products and services by making them more customer-centric, increasing customer satisfaction, and boosting bottom line in the process.
Product research
Product research gives a new product (or indeed service, we don’t judge) its best chance of success, or helps an existing product improve or increase market share.
It’s common sense: by finding out what consumers want and adjusting your offering accordingly, you gain a competitive edge. It can be the difference between a product being a roaring success or an abject failure.
Examples of product research include finding ways to develop goods with a higher value, or identifying exactly where innovation effort should be focused.
Product research goes hand-in-hand with other strands of market research, helping you make informed decisions about what consumers want, and what you can offer them.
Brand research
Brand research is the process of gathering feedback from your current, prospective, and even past customers to understand how your brand is perceived by the market.
It covers things like brand awareness, brand perceptions, customer advocacy, advertising effectiveness, purchase channels, audience profiling, and whether or not the brand is a top consideration for consumers.
The result helps take the guesswork out of your messaging and brand strategy. Like all types of market research, it gives marketing leaders the data they need to make better choices based on fact rather than opinion or intuition.
Market research methods
So far we’ve reviewed various different types of market research, now let’s look at market research methods, in other words the practical ways you can uncover those all-important insights.
Consumer research platform
A consumer research platform like GWI is a smart way to find on-demand market research insights in seconds.
In a world of fluid markets and changing attitudes, a detailed understanding of your consumers, developed using the right research platform, enables you to stop guessing and start knowing.
As well as providing certainty, consumer research platforms massively accelerate speed to insight. Got a question? Just jump on your consumer research platform and find the answer – job done.
The ability to mine data for answers like this is empowering – suddenly you’re in the driving seat with a world of possibilities ahead of you. Compared to the most obvious alternative – commissioning third party research that could take weeks to arrive – the right consumer research platform is basically a magic wand.
Admittedly we’re biased, but GWI delivers all this and more.
And the downside of using a consumer research platform? Well, no data set, however fresh or thorough, can answer every question. If you need really niche insights then your best bet is custom market research , where you can ask any question you like, tailored to your exact needs.
Face-to-face interviews
Despite the rise in popularity of online surveys , face-to-face survey interviewing – using mobile devices or even the classic paper survey – is still a popular data collection method.
In terms of advantages, face-to-face interviews help with accurate screening, in the sense the interviewee can’t easily give misleading answers about, say, their age. The interviewer can also make a note of emotions and non-verbal cues.
On the other hand, face-to-face interviews can be costly, while the quality of data you get back often depends on the ability of the interviewer. Also, the size of the sample is limited to the size of your interviewing staff, the area in which the interviews are conducted, and the number of qualified respondents within that area.
Social listening
Social listening is a powerful solution for brands who want to keep an ear to the ground, gathering unfiltered thoughts and opinions from consumers who are posting on social media.
Many social listening tools store data for up to a couple of years, great for trend analysis that needs to compare current and past conversations.
Social listening isn’t limited to text. Images, videos, and emojis often help us better understand what consumers are thinking, saying, and doing better than more traditional research methods.
Perhaps the biggest downside is there are no guarantees with social listening, and you never know what you will (or won’t) find. It can also be tricky to gauge sentiment accurately if the language used is open to misinterpretation, for example if a social media user describes something as “sick”.
There’s also a potential problem around what people say vs. what they actually do. Tweeting about the gym is a good deal easier than actually going. The wider problem – and this may shock you – is that not every single thing people write on social media is necessarily true, which means social listening can easily deliver unreliable results.
Public domain data
Public domain data comes from think tanks and government statistics or research centers like the UK’s National Office for Statistics or the United States Census Bureau and the National Institute of Statistical Sciences. Other sources are things like research journals, news media, and academic material.
Its advantages for market research are it’s cheap (or even free), quick to access, and easily available. Public domain datasets can be huge, so potentially very rich.
On the flip side, the data can be out of date, it certainly isn’t exclusive to you, and the collection methodology can leave much to be desired. But used carefully, public domain data can be a useful source of secondary market research.
Telephone interviews
You know the drill – you get a call from a researcher who asks you questions about a particular topic and wants to hear your opinions. Some even pay or offer other rewards for your time.
Telephone surveys are great for reaching niche groups of consumers within a specific geographic area or connected to a particular brand, or who aren’t very active in online channels. They’re not well-suited for gathering data from broad population groups, simply because of the time and labor involved.
How to use market research
Data isn’t an end in itself; instead it’s a springboard to make other stuff happen. So once you’ve drawn conclusions from your research, it’s time to think of what you’ll actually do based on your findings.
While it’s impossible for us to give a definitive list (every use case is different), here are some suggestions to get you started.
Leverage it . Think about ways to expand the use – and value – of research data and insights, for example by using research to support business goals and functions, like sales, market share or product design.
Integrate it . Expand the value of your research data by integrating it with other data sources, internal and external. Integrating data like this can broaden your perspective and help you draw deeper insights for more confident decision-making.
Justify it . Enlist colleagues from areas that’ll benefit from the insights that research provides – that could be product management, product development, customer service, marketing, sales or many others – and build a business case for using research.
How to choose the right type of market research
Broadly speaking, choosing the right research method depends on knowing the type of data you need to collect. To dig into ideas and opinions, choose qualitative; to do some testing, it’s quantitative you want.
There are also a bunch of practical considerations, not least cost. If a particular approach sounds great but costs the earth then clearly it’s not ideal for any brand on a budget.
Then there’s how you intend to use the actual research, your level of expertise with research data, whether you need access to historical data or just a snapshot of today, and so on.
The point is, different methods suit different situations. When choosing, you’ll want to consider what you want to achieve, what data you’ll need, the pros and cons of each method, the costs of conducting the research, and the cost of analyzing the results.
Market research examples
Independent agency Bright/Shift used GWI consumer insights to shape a high-impact go-to-market strategy for their sustainable furniture client, generating £41K in revenue in the first month. Here’s how they made the magic happen .
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The 8 types of market research and how to use them
There are eight types of marketing research you can try to stay ahead of the competition. Learn more about marketing research methods and how to use them.
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“If you keep doing what you’ve always done, you’ll keep getting what you’ve always got.”
Doesn’t sound too threatening if you’ve always been successful, right?
Continuing to do what you’ve always done means you’ll fall behind—and probably fade to darkness—to where all the forgotten brands go.
Take Kodak. They were a major player in photography for decades—remember? When digital photography boomed, Kodak kept doing what they always did. Their business floundered and people forgot about them. Well, everyone apart from Pitbull.
Now, look at Fujifilm, one of Kodak’s biggest competitors. They did the opposite and looked for ways to apply their expertise in film to the technology of the new millennium instead. Their company is still going strong.
The same goes for research. If you’re doing the same old types of market research, speaking to the same old people, and doing the same old tired surveys—you’re already behind.
How do you decide what kind of market research you need to do? It all comes down to what you need to know and what your business goals are.
In this article, we’ll explain the various types of market research you can use to solve issues and challenges in your business. We’ll throw you a freebie, too, and provide some market research tips about when to use each strategy.
Let’s get you ahead of the curve.
1. Brand research
Brand research helps with creating and managing a company’s brand, or identity. A company’s brand is the images, narratives, and characteristics people associate with it.
When to use it
Brand research can be used at every stage in a business’s lifecycle, from creation to new product launches and re-branding. There are at least seven types of brand research:
Brand advocacy: How many of your customers are willing to recommend your brand?
Brand awareness : Does your target market know who you are and consider you a serious option?
Brand loyalty: Are you retaining customers?
Brand penetration: What is the proportion of your target market using your brand?
Brand perception : What do people think of as your company’s identity or differentiating qualities?
Brand positioning: What is the best way to differentiate your brand from others in the consumer’s mind and articulate it in a way that resonates?
Brand value: How much are people willing to pay for an experience with your brand over another?
How to do it
A researcher will use several types of market research methods to assess your and your competitors’ strengths and weaknesses. Generally, they will conduct competitor research, both qualitative and quantitative, to get a picture of the overall marketplace. Focus groups and interviews can be used to learn about their emotions and associations with certain brands.
Market research surveys are useful to determine features and benefits that differentiate you from competitors . These are then translated into emotionally compelling consumer language.
2. Campaign effectiveness
This type of market research is designed to evaluate whether your advertising messages are reaching the right people and delivering the desired results. Successful campaign effectiveness research can help you sell more and reduce customer acquisition costs.
It’s estimated people see up to 5,000 advertising messages each day. That means attention is a scarce resource, so campaign effectiveness research should be used when you need to spend your advertising dollars effectively.
Campaign effectiveness research depends on which stage of the campaign you use it in (ideally, it’s all of them!). Quantitative research can be conducted to provide a picture of how your target market views advertising and address weaknesses in the advertising campaign.
3. Competitive analysis
Competitive analysis allows you to assess your competitors’ strengths and weaknesses in the marketplace, providing you with fuel to drive a competitive advantage.
No business exists in a vacuum—competitive analysis is an integral part of any business and market plan. Whether you’re just getting started, moving into a new market, or doing a health check of your business, a competitive analysis will be invaluable.
A researcher will typically choose a few of your main competitors and analyze things like their marketing strategy, customer perceptions, revenue or sales volume, and so on.
Secondary sources such as articles, references, and advertising are excellent sources of competitive information; however, primary research, such as mystery shopping and focus groups, can offer valuable information on customer service and current consumer opinions.
4. Consumer insights
Consumer insights research does more than tell you about who your customers are and what they do. It reveals why customers behave in certain ways and helps you leverage that to meet your business goals.
Knowing your customers deeply is integral to creating a strategic marketing plan. This type of market research can help you anticipate consumer needs, spark innovation, personalize your marketing, solve business challenges, and more.
Consumer insights research should be specific to your business—it’s about getting to know your target audience and customers. Various market research methods can be used, such as interviews, ethnography, survey research, social monitoring, and customer journey research.
Here are some of the characteristics you should understand through consumer insights research:
Purchase habits
Interests, hobbies, passions
Personal and professional information
How they consume media and advertising
5. Customer satisfaction research
Customer satisfaction research is a type of market research that measures customers’ experiences with products or services, specifically looking at how those meet, exceed, or fail to live up to their expectations.
Customer satisfaction is a strong indicator of customer retention and overall business performance. Successful customer satisfaction research should help you understand what your customers like, dislike, and feel needs improvement. You can use this type of market research to look at the quality and design of products, speed and timeliness of delivery, staff and service reliability, knowledge, and friendliness, market price, and value for money.
There are several ways to measure customer satisfaction, most commonly using surveys. An NPS or Voice of the Customer Survey can help you measure customer loyalty. Customer Effort Scoring measures how satisfied people are with customer service or problem resolution. CSAT is any survey that measures customer satisfaction , typically measured using Likert scale surveys . They can be conducted at different points in the customer experience, allowing deeper insight into that moment.
6. Customer segmentation research
Customer segmentation studies aim to divide markets or customers into smaller groups or personas with similar characteristics to enable targeted marketing. By understanding how people in each category behave, you can understand how each influences revenue.
Customer segmentation research is best used if you’re ready to give customers individualized experiences. Not every customer in your target market is the same. The more you understand each specific persona, the easier it is to focus on delivering personalized marketing, build loyal relations, price products effectively, and forecast how new products and services will perform in each segment.
Market researchers use four characteristics to segment customers.
Demographics: demographic information such as age, gender, family status, education, household income, occupation and so on
Geography: where people live, from cities and countries to whether they are city dwellers or suburbanites
Psychographics: socioeconomic status, class, lifestyle, personality traits, generation, interests, hobbies, etc.
Behavior: brand affinity, consumption and shopping habits, spending, etc.
A researcher will identify your current customers and collect data about them through various market research methods, such as surveys, database research, website analytics, interviews, and focus groups. The aim is to gather as much information as possible.
7. Product development
Market research for product development involves using customer knowledge to inform the entire process of creating or improving a product, service, or app and bringing it to market.
Innovation is hard work. A quick Google will tell you that 80–95% of new products fail every year. Conducting market research for product and app development helps minimize the risk of a new product or change going bust as it enters the market. There are three stages where you can use market research:
Conception: The moment you’re thinking about adding something new, market research can find market opportunities and provide insights into customer challenges or their jobs-to-be-done, so you can find a way to fill the gap.
Formation: Once you have an idea, market researchers can help you turn it into a concept that can be tested. You can learn more about strategizing pricing, testing advertising and packaging, value proposition, and so on.
Introduction: Market research can help you gauge attitudes toward the product once it’s in the market and adapt your messaging as it rolls out.
Keep making the product better or find opportunities to introduce it to new markets.
Product development research will utilize different market research methods, depending on the goal of the research. A researcher could present focus groups with product concepts and listen to their opinions, conduct interviews to learn more about their pain points, or perform user testing to see how they interact with an app or website.
8. Usability testing
Usability testing is concerned with understanding how customers use your products in real time. It can involve physical products, like a new blender, or digital products like a website or app.
Usability testing is helpful when you need to detect problems or bugs in early prototypes or beta versions before launching them. It typically costs far less to test a product or service beforehand than to pull a flawed product off the shelves or lose sales because of poor functionality.
There are several types of usability tests, which vary based on whether you’re testing a physical or digital product.
Journey testing involves observing the customer experience on an app or website and monitoring how they perform. This type of study can be done online
Eye tracking studies monitor where people’s eyes are drawn. Generally, they are conducted on websites and apps, but can also be done in stores to analyze where people look while shopping
Learn ability studies quantify the learning curve over time to see which problems people encounter after repeating the same task
Click tracking follows users’ activity on websites to evaluate the linking structure of a website
Checklist testing involves giving users tasks to perform and recording or asking them to review their experience
Combining types of market research with Typeform
When it comes to market research, you need to ask yourself what business challenge or question you’re trying to address. Then, select the appropriate methods and tools, such as market research automation , to simplify your process.From there, the world of useful data and actionable insights will open to you.
About the author
We're Typeform - a team on a mission to transform data collection by bringing you refreshingly different forms.
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8 Types of Market Research Studies and How To Use Them
A look at the different types of market research methods and studies brands can tap into for specific insights required to steer a business toward success.
Jan 29, 2024
quantilope is the Consumer Intelligence Platform for all end-to-end research needs
A market research study is a study that brands create to understand their target audience from a variety of angles (who they are, what they do, how they act, and other behaviors relevant to their business decisions). With a variety of market research study types available, the trick is knowing which type will deliver the right kind of information.
In this blog, we look at 8 different types of market research studies and how they can tap into the specific insights needed to steer a business toward success.
Table of contents:
- Brand research studies
- Consumer insights research
- Customer satisfaction research
- Product/service research
- Competitor research
- Segmentation research
- Advertising research
- Usability testing
Consumer research studies with quantilope
1. brand research studies .
A brand image can be a company’s greatest asset, so it’s crucial that businesses know how their brand or portfolio of brands is performing from a consumer point of view. This includes:
Brand awareness and recall:
Whether consumers know your brand exists, and whether they remember it (spontaneously)
Brand image:
How consumers perceive your brand and your brand's overall reputation
Brand positioning:
Your brand's values, personality, and where it sits within the competitive set
Brand performance:
How your brand is selling/performing in the market, and its projected future sales
Brand trust:
Whether your brand is viewed as reliable and if consumers trust it
Brand loyalty:
Whether customers stick with your brand or move on to a competitor instead
All of these brand topics can be researched using a mixture of qualitative and quantitative research, and oftentimes it would be advantageous to combine them. Aspects like brand awareness and brand loyalty are best understood via quantitative methods as solid percentages can be attached to awareness and loyalty amongst different customer segments or demographics (e.g. by life stage, location, gender). The more nuanced aspects of brand image and positioning can really be brought to life through qualitative research ; hearing from consumers in their own words can clearly explain how they feel, what their body image says about the brand, and other sentiment analyses. Depending on a brand's needs, qualitative research might be used to prompt ideas for a later quantitative study, supplement insights from a previously-run quantitative study, or, used on its own.
Brands can track these metrics over a period of time using a brand health tracking approach - an equally incremented capture of consumer data to see how consumer perceptions around a brand change over time. Back to table of contents
2. Consumer insights research
Consumer insights are all about putting together a comprehensive picture of who your target market is: their demographics, their lifestyles, their likes and dislikes, what’s important to them, their values, needs, and behaviors. It can be thought of as a ‘scene-setting’ exercise, so that brands can build consumer profiles that help guide their marketing or product development strategies. Brands might also want to run consumer insights research with regard to a certain area of its business: branding, social media activity, or product usage, for example.
Sales data can act as a starting point for consumer insights research, which brings useful knowledge around demographics. Knowing who buys your brand will determine which types of people to recruit for future market research studies. For example, if you know your customer base is made up mainly of women, you might set a sample quota that is 80% female and 20% male. Like brand research studies, consumer insights research is beneficial both quantitatively and qualitatively. Quantitative research will provide insights in the form of numerical data while qualitative research (focus groups, interviews and observations) are useful for exploring consumers' values, needs, and behaviors in further context. Back to table of contents
3. Customer satisfaction research
Satisfaction research investigates which areas of a brand or product are performing well and which could do with improvement. In most cases, quantitative research is used since businesses need the reliability of larger numbers to show how satisfied customers are. Survey questions ask respondents to score the brand/product/service on a variety of metrics (e.g. usability, reliability, value for money, design, taste, etc.) and computer-based analysis tools are used to calculate satisfaction according to those scores. NPS (Net Promoter Score) is a common methodology used for this research purpose. NPS measures how likely a consumer is to recommend a product or brand to someone they know, which gives a good indication of the value they attach to it . Back to table of contents
4. Product/service research
Product or service research forms a core part of market research in many businesses. For existing products, ensuring they remain relevant and achieve sales targets means making changes to them when appropriate. Product development research involves capturing consumer feedback on a product to identify what’s working well or where the pain points are, which feeds into ideas for improving the offer. New product research involves presenting respondents with a concept or product mock-up/prototype and gathering feedback, while new service research means exploring the potential of a brand's service that hasn't existed before. As with many studies, qual and quant both play their part here, with qual nailing down the issues that exist and quant putting numbers against them. Back to table of contents
5. Competitor research
Regardless of the business you’re in, knowing what/who you’re up against in your category is essential. Understanding your competitors’ strengths and weaknesses means your brand can capitalize on gaps in the market and create an option for consumers that meets their needs. This is an area where existing sales and performance data on a variety of brands can be used effectively and cheaply, as this information is generally freely available (i.e. secondary data). But primary research (new research carried out to explore the issue at hand) also has its place, with focus groups hammering out the pros and cons of various brands, and quantitative market research rating brands on relevant metrics. Once findings are in, a SWOT analysis (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) can be created to identify what a brand should continue doing and where it should improve.
Back to table of contents
One of the best ways to understand competitors is to use a multi-implicit association test:
6. Segmentation research
Market segmentation takes a target market and divides it up into groups that share similar traits, preferences, attitudes, needs, and behaviors. It is a useful way to understand that a target market isn’t one homogenous mass of people, but that it includes different groups who operate in different ways. This is powerful knowledge to have when developing marketing messages, as sub-groups will respond in different ways to advertising and other communications. Segmentation is primarily done through quantitative means to size the groups and quantify the prominence of traits, though segments can always be further explored through qualitative research as well. Back to table of contents
7. Advertising research
Any business should care about whether or not its advertising is resonating with consumers in terms of message, style, and tone. Testing a selection of possible campaign routes (with an A/B test for example) helps advertising teams make the right decisions about which one to run with. Brands can test all sorts of elements in an A/B test such as advertising channel, ad format, color scheme, font size, logo placement , and so on. As with other types of research, qual research can help in gauging initial reactions to ad executions amongst a small audience, as well as refining them once quantitative research has taken place (or, vice versa). Quantitative research delivers scores on different aspects of the advertising, thereby showing which are working well, which are irrelevant, and which require improvement. Back to table of contents
8. Usability testing
Usability testing asks respondents to use a product or service and report on how well it performs. This could be anything from a car, to a website, to a pack of cleaning wipes. Qualitative research excels here at revealing the pertinent issues that might not have been uncovered if the research had gone straight into a quantitative approach (i.e. a consumer explaining that the scent of a cleaning wipe reminded them of a negative experience and that's why they rated it poorly). Ethnographical research is a form of qualitative research that sheds light on how products or services are actually used, so that design teams can work on the technicalities a product. Quantitative research (whether done before, after, or apart from qualitative research) can quantifies how many consumers report good/bad usability of a product, and for what reasons. Back to table of contents
quantilope can help with all aspects of your research and marketing strategy. Its online qual and quant tools deliver high-quality research for all eight of the research study types outlined above and many more.
quantilope’s online survey platform makes quantitative research simple to set up, analyze, and present. With just a few clicks, you can create a questionnaire to be sent to target customers in a fraction of the time it takes with traditional research vendors. When results come in, quantilope’s automated advanced research methods take the data and model it in a way that makes the findings actionable for your business. Analysis tools like MaxDiff will identify which features of a brand or product are most important in the purchase decision, or which parts of an advertising message are most motivating. Key Driver Analysis will reveal which attributes are most likely to end in a positive outcome (customer satisfaction, loyalty, or purchase, for example.) Meanwhile, quantilope’s dedicated segmentation tool will map your target market and identify the defining characteristics and needs of each. These are just a few of quantilope’s advanced analysis methods - each created to solve specific business issues.
In addition to our quantitative offer, quantilope’s inColor video research tool takes a qualitative approach to research. Respondents post videos of themselves answering specific research questions, talking generally about a research topic, or even using a product or service. Brands can put together a sample as large or small as they wish, then use the videos to create showreels for their stakeholders that illustrate consumer views on the topics covered.
If you’d like to chat more about what quantilope's end-to-end Consumer Intelligence Platform can do for your business, get in touch below:
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The Types of Market Research [+10 Market Research Methods]
- Market research
Jaclyn Robinson, Senior Manager of Content Marketing at Crunchbase
Market research can help startups understand where they should be placing their resources and time. It can tell you everything from how people are perceiving your company, as well as which features to drop or continue developing. And while there are plenty of ways to conduct market research, not every market research method is right for every situation.
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Market research can help play a major role in developing your product, marketing, and overall business strategy. Understanding the different market research methods can be the difference between wasting months of engineering time or exceeding your ambitious revenue targets.
We review the types of market research as well as the market research methods you can pursue based on your primary objectives and business goals.
The 2 types of market research
All market research falls under two distinct categories: primary research and secondary research.
Primary research looks at any data you collect yourself (or someone you pay). It encompasses analyzing current sales, metrics, and customers. It also takes into account the effectiveness of current practices, while taking competitors into account.
Secondary research looks at data that has already been published by others. It includes reports and studies from other companies, government organizations, and others in your industry.
10 market research methods
The type of data you need will decide which market research technique to use. Here are the most commonly used market research methods:
Primary research methods
These primary research methods will help you identify both qualitative and quantitative data. Qualitative data is information that cannot be measured while qualitative data is taken from a large sample size and is a statistically significant mathematical analysis.
1. Interviews
Great for: expert advice
Consisting of one-on-one discussions, interviews are a great source of qualitative data. You can either perform interviews by telephone, video conference, or face-to-face. Interviews are great for an in-depth look for target audience insights.
In-depth interviews are great when expert advice is needed or when discussing highly complex or sensitive topics. Interviews are usually 10 to 30 minutes long with 25 to 75 respondents.
Great for: understanding brand awareness, satisfaction and loyalty analysis, pricing research, and market segmentation .
One of the most commonly used market research methods, Surveys are an easy way to understand your target audience and allow you to test a large sample size to determine if findings are true across a larger segment of your customers.
3. Questionnaires
Great for: Customer feedback and satisfaction surveys (NPS surveys), and when you want more detail on your target audience and customer base.
Do not confuse questionnaires for surveys ! While surveys are aggregated for statistical analysis, questionnaires are a set of written questions used for collecting information.
Questionnaires are used to collect information rather than draw a conclusion. Surveys can include a questionnaire, but a survey must aggregate and analyze the responses to the questions.
When writing questionnaires for market research, keep the number of questions in mind.
In one study, SurveyMonkey found that questionnaires with 40 questions have about a 10% lower response rate than questionnaires with 10 questions . The more questions, the less likely people will finish your questionnaire.
4. Focus groups
Great for: Price testing, advertising concepts, product/messaging testing
Even with the rise of big data, focus groups have remained an integral part of how companies build their products, strategy, and messaging. Focus groups are intentionally compromised by a group of purposefully selected individuals. Above all, the collaborative setting ensures that members of the group are able to interact and influence each other.
Typically these open and interactive groups are composed of around five to 12 screened individuals . Make sure that your participants are diverse so you can get a range of opinions and you have enough representation from several segments of your market.
Many smaller startups will conduct DIY focus groups and will use video conferencing technology, which is one of the most cost-effective and time-efficient market research methods.
This is a great resource to see some good questions to ask your focus groups as well as what topics focus groups should touch on.
5. User groups
Great for: Feature testing, UX and web design feedback
User groups are used to gather UX data and provide insight for website design. User groups usually meet regularly to discuss their experience with a product, while researchers capture their comments.
Here’s a great guide on how to format questions for user groups .
6. Test markets
Great for: Testing new marketing campaigns
Test markets represent a larger market. Using a test group as well as a control group can show you the success of a new landing page, messaging copy, or CTA button. We particularly like the free version of Google Optimize to get quantitative data on how your experiment is performing based on a specific goal.
Secondary research methods
Secondary research can help establish a starting point prior to diving into more expensive primary research techniques. While there is a lot of data on the web regarding basic statistics, you may have to purchase a distinct data provider for a more in-depth look at your market.
Crunchbase Pro and Marketplace partners are a great and inexpensive way to start your secondary research directly on Crunchbase.com.
7. Competitor benchmarks
Great for: Understanding your revenue, churn, operating costs, sales, profit margin, and burn rate.
Competitor benchmarks are the most valuable and widely used of the secondary research methods. Moreover, competitor benchmarks measure specific growth metrics or key performance indicators in comparison to business within the same industry and of a similar size.
You can use Crunchbase Pro to find how much companies in a certain industry are raising and who are the leading players with our global coverage on companies ranging from pre-seed to late-stage. So, as one of the most informative of the market research methods, competitive benchmarks are a great way to inform your business strategy.
Free Crunchbase registered users have access to revenue estimates as well as web traffic data.
8. Sales data
Great for: Understanding your audience and where to place marketing efforts.
Taking a look at internal sales data not only reveals profitability but also helps market researchers segment customer trends.
However, taking a look at competitive sales data is a great way to make sure that you’re meeting the numbers you should be targeting as well as capturing the full potential of the market
9. Government publications and statistics
Great for: General demographic information and larger trends
The U.S. Census Bureau is a great resource of national demographic data. You can also review patents as a preview of industry trends and future innovation.
Also, you can find additional data and research from Data.gov , The World Bank , as well as the Pew Research Center to help inform your market research decisions.
10. Commercial data
Great for: Greater insight into industry trends and reports
If you’re interested in purchasing secondary market research, commercial data is available. For comprehensive reports, Mintel and IBISWorld are both traditional market research companies that provide commercial data.
Additionally, to choose which type of market research method is best for your goal, follow this graph from Relevant Insights. Begin with the metric you’re trying to move and then backtrack into a targeted market research method.
How can Crunchbase help with my market research?
Crunchbase gives market researchers flexible access to Crunchbase’s complete company data. Innovative teams and leaders in market research rely on Crunchbase’s live company data to build powerful internal databases and research insights in respective industries. Learn more about how Crunchbase can help you with your market research .
- Originally published March 14, 2019, updated April 26, 2023
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How To Do Market Research: Definition, Types, Methods
Jul 25, 2024
11 min. read
Market research isn’t just collecting data. It’s a strategic tool that allows businesses to gain a competitive advantage while making the best use of their resources. Research reveals valuable insights into your target audience about their preferences, buying habits, and emerging demands — all of which help you unlock new opportunities to grow your business.
When done correctly, market research can minimize risks and losses, spur growth, and position you as a leader in your industry.
Let’s explore the basic building blocks of market research and how to collect and use data to move your company forward:
Table of Contents
What Is Market Research?
Why is market research important, market analysis example, 5 types of market research, what are common market research questions, what are the limitations of market research, how to do market research, improving your market research with radarly.
Market Research Definition: The process of gathering, analyzing, and interpreting information about a market or audience.
Market research studies consumer behavior to better understand how they perceive products or services. These insights help businesses identify ways to grow their current offering, create new products or services, and improve brand trust and brand recognition .
You might also hear market research referred to as market analysis or consumer research .
Traditionally, market research has taken the form of focus groups, surveys, interviews, and even competitor analysis . But with modern analytics and research tools, businesses can now capture deeper insights from a wider variety of sources, including social media, online reviews, and customer interactions. These extra layers of intel can help companies gain a more comprehensive understanding of their audience.
With consumer preferences and markets evolving at breakneck speeds, businesses need a way to stay in touch with what people need and want. That’s why the importance of market research cannot be overstated.
Market research offers a proactive way to identify these trends and make adjustments to product development, marketing strategies , and overall operations. This proactive approach can help businesses stay ahead of the curve and remain agile .
Market research examples abound — given the number of ways companies can get inside the minds of their customers, simply skimming through your business’s social media comments can be a form of market research.
A restaurant chain might use market research methods to learn more about consumers’ evolving dining habits. These insights might be used to offer new menu items, re-examine their pricing strategies, or even open new locations in different markets, for example.
A consumer electronics company might use market research for similar purposes. For instance, market research may reveal how consumers are using their smart devices so they can develop innovative features.
Market research can be applied to a wide range of use cases, including:
- Testing new product ideas
- Improve existing products
- Entering new markets
- Right-sizing their physical footprints
- Improving brand image and awareness
- Gaining insights into competitors via competitive intelligence
Ultimately, companies can lean on market research techniques to stay ahead of trends and competitors while improving the lives of their customers.
Market research methods take different forms, and you don’t have to limit yourself to just one. Let’s review the most common market research techniques and the insights they deliver.
1. Interviews
3. Focus Groups
4. Observations
5. AI-Driven Market Research
One-on-one interviews are one of the most common market research techniques. Beyond asking direct questions, skilled interviewers can uncover deeper motivations and emotions that drive purchasing decisions. Researchers can elicit more detailed and nuanced responses they might not receive via other methods, such as self-guided surveys.
Interviews also create the opportunity to build rapport with customers and prospects. Establishing a connection with interviewees can encourage them to open up and share their candid thoughts, which can enrich your findings. Researchers also have the opportunity to ask clarifying questions and dig deeper based on individual responses.
Market research surveys provide an easy entry into the consumer psyche. They’re cost-effective to produce and allow researchers to reach lots of people in a short time. They’re also user-friendly for consumers, which allows companies to capture more responses from more people.
Big data and data analytics are making traditional surveys more valuable. Researchers can apply these tools to elicit a deeper understanding from responses and uncover hidden patterns and correlations within survey data that were previously undetectable.
The ways in which surveys are conducted are also changing. With the rise of social media and other online channels, brands and consumers alike have more ways to engage with each other, lending to a continuous approach to market research surveys.
3. Focus groups
Focus groups are “group interviews” designed to gain collective insights. This interactive setting allows participants to express their thoughts and feelings openly, giving researchers richer insights beyond yes-or-no responses.
One of the key benefits of using focus groups is the opportunity for participants to interact with one another. They spark discussions while sharing diverse viewpoints. These sessions can uncover underlying motivations and attitudes that may not be easily expressed through other research methods.
Observing your customers “in the wild” might feel informal, but it can be one of the most revealing market research techniques of all. That’s because you might not always know the right questions to ask. By simply observing, you can surface insights you might not have known to look for otherwise.
This method also delivers raw, authentic, unfiltered data. There’s no room for bias and no potential for participants to accidentally skew the data. Researchers can also pick up on non-verbal cues and gestures that other research methods may fail to capture.
5. AI-driven market research
One of the newer methods of market research is the use of AI-driven market research tools to collect and analyze insights on your behalf. AI customer intelligence tools and consumer insights software like Meltwater Radarly take an always-on approach by going wherever your audience is and continuously predicting behaviors based on current behaviors.
By leveraging advanced algorithms, machine learning, and big data analysis , AI enables companies to uncover deep-seated patterns and correlations within large datasets that would be near impossible for human researchers to identify. This not only leads to more accurate and reliable findings but also allows businesses to make informed decisions with greater confidence.
Tip: Learn how to use Meltwater as a research tool , how Meltwater uses AI , and learn more about consumer insights and about consumer insights in the fashion industry .
No matter the market research methods you use, market research’s effectiveness lies in the questions you ask. These questions should be designed to elicit honest responses that will help you reach your goals.
Examples of common market research questions include:
Demographic market research questions
- What is your age range?
- What is your occupation?
- What is your household income level?
- What is your educational background?
- What is your gender?
Product or service usage market research questions
- How long have you been using [product/service]?
- How frequently do you use [product/service]?
- What do you like most about [product/service]?
- Have you experienced any problems using [product/service]?
- How could we improve [product/service]?
- Why did you choose [product/service] over a competitor’s [product/service]?
Brand perception market research questions
- How familiar are you with our brand?
- What words do you associate with our brand?
- How do you feel about our brand?
- What makes you trust our brand?
- What sets our brand apart from competitors?
- What would make you recommend our brand to others?
Buying behavior market research questions
- What do you look for in a [product/service]?
- What features in a [product/service] are important to you?
- How much time do you need to choose a [product/service]?
- How do you discover new products like [product/service]?
- Do you prefer to purchase [product/service] online or in-store?
- How do you research [product/service] before making a purchase?
- How often do you buy [product/service]?
- How important is pricing when buying [product/service]?
- What would make you switch to another brand of [product/service]?
Customer satisfaction market research questions
- How happy have you been with [product/service]?
- What would make you more satisfied with [product/service]?
- How likely are you to continue using [product/service]?
Bonus Tip: Compiling these questions into a market research template can streamline your efforts.
Market research can offer powerful insights, but it also has some limitations. One key limitation is the potential for bias. Researchers may unconsciously skew results based on their own preconceptions or desires, which can make your findings inaccurate.
- Depending on your market research methods, your findings may be outdated by the time you sit down to analyze and act on them. Some methods struggle to account for rapidly changing consumer preferences and behaviors.
- There’s also the risk of self-reported data (common in online surveys). Consumers might not always accurately convey their true feelings or intentions. They might provide answers they think researchers are looking for or misunderstand the question altogether.
- There’s also the potential to miss emerging or untapped markets . Researchers are digging deeper into what (or who) they already know. This means you might be leaving out a key part of the story without realizing it.
Still, the benefits of market research cannot be understated, especially when you supplement traditional market research methods with modern tools and technology.
Let’s put it all together and explore how to do market research step-by-step to help you leverage all its benefits.
Step 1: Define your objectives
You’ll get more from your market research when you hone in on a specific goal : What do you want to know, and how will this knowledge help your business?
This step will also help you define your target audience. You’ll need to ask the right people the right questions to collect the information you want. Understand the characteristics of the audience and what gives them authority to answer your questions.
Step 2: Select your market research methods
Choose one or more of the market research methods (interviews, surveys, focus groups, observations, and/or AI-driven tools) to fuel your research strategy.
Certain methods might work better than others for specific goals . For example, if you want basic feedback from customers about a product, a simple survey might suffice. If you want to hone in on serious pain points to develop a new product, a focus group or interview might work best.
You can also source secondary research ( complementary research ) via secondary research companies , such as industry reports or analyses from large market research firms. These can help you gather preliminary information and inform your approach.
Step 3: Develop your research tools
Prior to working with participants, you’ll need to craft your survey or interview questions, interview guides, and other tools. These tools will help you capture the right information , weed out non-qualifying participants, and keep your information organized.
You should also have a system for recording responses to ensure data accuracy and privacy. Test your processes before speaking with participants so you can spot and fix inefficiencies or errors.
Step 4: Conduct the market research
With a system in place, you can start looking for candidates to contribute to your market research. This might include distributing surveys to current customers or recruiting participants who fit a specific profile, for example.
Set a time frame for conducting your research. You might collect responses over the course of a few days, weeks, or even months. If you’re using AI tools to gather data, choose a data range for your data to focus on the most relevant information.
Step 5: Analyze and apply your findings
Review your findings while looking for trends and patterns. AI tools can come in handy in this phase by analyzing large amounts of data on your behalf.
Compile your findings into an easy-to-read report and highlight key takeaways and next steps. Reports aren’t useful unless the reader can understand and act on them.
Tip: Learn more about trend forecasting , trend detection , and trendspotting .
Meltwater’s Radarly consumer intelligence suite helps you reap the benefits of market research on an ongoing basis. Using a combination of AI, data science, and market research expertise, Radarly scans multiple global data sources to learn what people are talking about, the actions they’re taking, and how they’re feeling about specific brands.
Our tools are created by market research experts and designed to help researchers uncover what they want to know (and what they don’t know they want to know). Get data-driven insights at scale with information that’s always relevant, always accurate, and always tailored to your organization’s needs.
Learn more when you request a demo by filling out the form below:
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There are 8 types of market research, each with their own methods and tools: Primary research. Secondary research. Qualitative research. Quantitative research. Branding research. Customer research. Competitor research. Product research. Let’s start our list by exploring primary and secondary research first.
Not sure which types of market research are best for your strategy? Here’s your lowdown on the top market research methods and types, with examples.
In this article, we’ll explain the various types of market research you can use to solve issues and challenges in your business. We’ll throw you a freebie, too, and provide some market research tips about when to use each strategy.
In this blog, we look at 8 different types of market research studies and how they can tap into the specific insights needed to steer a business toward success. Table of contents: Brand research studies; Consumer insights research; Customer satisfaction research ; Product/service research; Competitor research; Segmentation research; Advertising ...
All market research falls under two distinct categories: primary research and secondary research. Primary research looks at any data you collect yourself (or someone you pay). It encompasses analyzing current sales, metrics, and customers. It also takes into account the effectiveness of current practices, while taking competitors into account.
What is market research? Learn the power of market research to predict consumer behavior, understand industry trends, and identify potential customers.