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Market Research: Listening for the Unexpected

Most businesses have an existing product or market that they are targeting, and their goal is to learn how to serve that marketplace more effectively. Any reasonable researcher should know that if you have a virtualization management solution, it isn’t that useful to talk about HR problems.  But while you need to stay on topic, you also don’t want to miss the chance to uncover information you are unaware of and may be a huge opportunity or a weakness you must address. This is one of the real advantages of qualitative market research where you can spend time deeply understanding the nuances of customer input.

Treat “unprompted” feedback with special importance.

Sometimes the information you don’t know that you need to ask about, is the most important information to hear.  Of course research must have a goal – but work with your researcher so they know your business and can use their judgment to understand what threads are worth digging into and what will take them into a rat hole that does not forward your business. 

The most important tool for unprompted feedback is this question:  “Is there anything else?”  This is the final question Dimensional Research uses for any market research interaction. After you’ve asked all your carefully crafted and specific questions, closing with an open-ended question can yield incredibly useful information.

Of course, this is a very important balancing act and research projects need to focus on their goals – not interesting side topics.  The core questions must be asked. But Dimensional Research makes a point of going through all input from every project with a special eye for the unprompted information.  Most of it is one-offs, with each participant having a special thing that only they are interested in.  But often you can spot trends in unprompted information that are really important

We’ve done projects where it turns out there was a critical development tool that needed to be integrated with the client’s product – not something they had realized was vital until the majority of participants talked about it, unprompted, in a series of customer and prospect focus groups.

In another project we didn’t realize that customer loyalty was almost non-existent, until we went through the unprompted feedback from interviews with the highly satisfied, happiest customers, and discovered they regularly evaluated the competition – not a question that we asked about specifically.

So do stay on topic.  But keep your ears open for the “+1″ opportunities or customer issues you hadn’t recognized – especially if you hear them from multiple sources.  Possibly minor product changes or messaging tweaks can help you address a different pain, target a new and lucrative market, or address important weaknesses.

1 comment

1 Christine Fife { 04.30.09 at 6:19 pm }

Great advice for many aspects of business! Too often companies stop listening, even when they have worked hard to allow for customer feedback through expensive tools and regular monitoring. I’m sure you’ve all heard the saying, “some of the greatest things in life are total mistakes,” well, “some of the greatest feedback from the market comes without asking.”

In my conversation marketing practice we monitor our client’s market conversation and assist them on how to engage in the conversation. In this we pay close attention to the “unexpected” comments from the market conversation–not just what is said about our clients and the products, but also what’s being said about the direction of their industry. To do that, we preach this to our clients:
* Listen to current customers, prospects, industry experts and other influencers in the market space and internalize their feedback to improve your business.
* Speak to the overall market conversation with quality, non-marketing-speak content that people want to respond to, inquire about and pass on to others.
* Build relationships with market conversation influencers, participants and listeners based on the mutual interest of the consumer problems that need to be solved with product innovation.
* Care about what is being said about your products, company, competitors and industry, even if it isn’t what you hope to hear.
* Don’t be afraid to share your experiences—positive and negative—and your insights as you grow your company.

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