While most marketers understand the importance of market research, if not done well, research may end up yielding shallow insights that donât help in decision making.
It is somewhat understandable that smaller companies often tend to avoid top quality research because of financial constraints. But itâs not only the smaller brands that are guilty of wasteful research. In fact, the larger brands are more prone to undertaking research just for the sake of it, thereby wasting loads of money without getting decisive inputs.
Here are some signs that your brand is most likely doing the same:
1. You know the attributes, but not your brandâs DNA.
Through traditional research you can get attributes, but it cannot bring out a brandâs real DNA. Every brand has a distinct image and a differentiated profile in the minds of consumers, but traditional research usually fails to reveal them.
Research often provides a brand insight about the different attributes it has, for example, innovation, modern, design, quality, reliability, etc. However, if the research is shallow, all a brand will get is these separate attributes, without getting a clear picture of the brand itself. Of course, trying to track brand attributes can be tricky.
Sometimes if a respondent already has a good impression of a brand, there could be a âhaloâ effect when he or she answers questions about brand attributes. For example, if a consumer already perceives Volkswagen as a better brand than a Hyundai, it will show higher scores on most brand attributes.
2. Your brief to your communication agency is complicated and full of generic words.
A briefing to the communication agency is often long and loaded with data and graphs, but without clear cut indicators for the creative guys. A creative agency might receive words describing the product or service that actually do not help the team â for example, âa spacious carâ or âtasty potato chipsâ, which would be what typical research findings may offer. This is where brands can get deeper insights â By asking your target audience to explain what they mean. To the middle-aged car buyer, for example, a âspaciousâ car might be one which allows enough space for kids to feel comfortable, while a younger buyer might take it to mean a âspaciousâ car which could fit in a surf board. And the creative agency might have a whole different take on the concept of “spacious” and focus on the head space requirement.
3. You can’t explain to your grandma why consumers buy your brand.Â
Some of the deepest things in life are actually very simple. If you canât explain why consumers prefer your brand over its competitors to your grandma, you have probably not understood the fundamentals of your brandâs DNA. So try to avoid explanations such as, âOur brand is seen as more tasty than D, but not as tasty as C, while consumers find it more crunchy than A, but less crunchy than B. And our flavour is not as good as A, B or Dâ.
You should be able to simplify it to the level for any layman to understand. Hereâs an example:
Consumers buy car Brand A because they find it âsportyâ and âattractively designedâ while a major challenge the brand faces, is in its perceived âqualityâ due to some of its accessories having a âplastic look and feelâ â simple, to the point and yet a clear representation of consumer perceptions.
4. You are aware of the broad concepts, but not the right words to communicate them.Â
Often the key insights are revealed by the research, but because they came from traditional closed-ended questions, it is impossible to find semantic associations with those words. If I want to communicate my brand of potato chips as being âconvenientâ what are the words I need to use? Research using open-ended questions, might be able to reveal that the most used words for âconvenientâ are âpracticalâ and âhandyâ, but not âalways availableâ and ânot heavyâ.
To cite another example, unprompted responses allow us to understand subtle differences between semantic words used for one brand compared with another, even if the broad concept is the same. Mercedes and Peugeot are both perceived as brands with âattractive designâ, but for the former, consumers tend to use words such as âelegantâ and âclassyâ while for the latter, they use words such as âdesignerâ and âstylishâ.
5. Your research springs no surprises.Â
Lastly, brand marketers often end up with a report on their table which, despite being detailed and exhaustive, fails to provide anything new and is hardly inspiring. The main reason for this, is that the researcher inadvertently ends up asking predictable questions, thereby generating predictable responses. After going through this huge pile of data, you realise you probably knew more about your brand and category than what this brand equity study has provided.
There is however, a possibility that you are restricting your respondents to what you already know, and not allowing them to open themselves up to what is actually in their minds. So the attributes you wish to find about, stay limited to the ones that you have pre-decided upon. This kind of research will always end up with expected results and bring in what is commonly known as a âconfirmation biasâ.
Many marketers make the mistake of doing quantitative research when they should be doing qualitative research, or vice-versa. The ideal situation lies in the proper blend of both, which is what Relevance Tags Âź methodology offers. The qualitative aspect keeps room for surprises and allows fresh insights to emerge, while the quantitative aspect makes it numerically robust and statistically representative.
The BottomlineÂ
Too many marketers are using market research without being able to extract the best out of it, due to their lack of openness to newer approaches. Traditional quantitative research cannot reveal deeper insights into consumer perceptions, due to their close ended approach.
Most of these grey areas can now be eliminated, through the intelligent usage of open-ended questions, which adds an element of qualitative depth to the robustness of quantitative research. This is precisely what Tags Âź methodology aims to achieve, by bringing the best of both worlds together.
In the coming days, marketers will have access to more data than they can handle. While this will allow them to understand the âwhere, when and who?â better than ever before, if they cannot complement that data with the âwhy?â, the overall insights will continue to lack depth and remain incomplete.



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