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Research for Your Marketing
1. Types of Research
Five areas provide key market intelligence.
1.1
Customer research looks at who you sell to and who else might buy.
- You need to know the numbers and types of people who might become customers.
- You need to understand as much as possible about customers' and potential customers' behaviour, needs, expectations and buying patterns.
- You are looking for groups of people to whom similar sales messages will appeal. The more precisely you can identify each market niche, the more you can sell to it.
- Loyalty and satisfaction levels among your existing customers are key factors. Any shortfall by your competitors' products or services offers you an opportunity.
- You need to know how customers view your customer service.
1.2
Product research looks at what you are selling, how it compares with other products and how it might be refined and developed.
- You need to establish how your products compare with competitors.
- You need to test the potential acceptability of new products and services.
- You need to be aware of new technology that may provide opportunities or threats.
- Research can help you understand where your products are in their life cycles.
1.3
Promotion research looks at what impact your marketing spend is having.
- How effective is each campaign?
- How do you use your sales force?
- How effective are the various elements of your marketing mix, such as e-media and traditional advertising, point-of-sale materials, mailshots, search engine optimisation and website?
- Does your company's image (brand) help - or does it work against you?
1.4
Pricing research tests whether you could be selling your product for more.
- Investigate perceptions of price versus value, both among customers and among non-customers in your target markets.
- You need to know whether your product's positioning is right for its price point.
- Full and up-to-date data on competitors' prices is important.
- You need to know, preferably before you try them out, what the effects of discounts or loyalty bonuses would be.
1.5
Distribution research examines how your product gets to the marketplace.
You may not be aware, until you do the research, of all the direct and indirect channels your product passes through.
- Who are the intermediaries that stand between you and your customers? Do the brokers or wholesalers who matter recommend you to end-users?
- Which media and thrid parties serve the same market segments as you?
- Are the transport methods you use cost-effective and appropriate to the size, weight and fragility of your product?