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TMRE live

Using Neuroscience for Marketing Research

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Using Neuroscience for Marketing Research

Mark Potts of MindShare and Dr. Andrew Pradeep of NeuroFocus gave an excellent presentation about the process of using neuroscience for marketing research in their workshop presentation titled: Neurological Testing Reveals the Truth of Audience Engagement.

Here are the basics:
Who:
Respondents are recruited based on research objectives (as in traditional studies).
What:
Respondents wear a "full cap" on their head with 64 sensors attached. These collect data 2000 times every second. This coupled with eye-tracking is the "data collection" methodology.
Why:
Consumers can't tell us everything they're sensing. For example, a consumer may look very closely at something on a grocery store aisle that grabs attention but the subconscious areas of the brain don't "tell" the conscious what they think, feel, etc. But it can, however, be measured through brain activity.
How:

3 metrics are measured directly at the brain.

  1. Attention: what are you paying attention to....this is based on the science behind ADD/ADHD clinical diagnosis
  2. Emotion: how are you emotionally engaged ....this is based on the science behind mania & phobia clinical diagnosis
  3. Memory Retention: what is it that you're experiencing that activates your memory....this is based on the science behind Alzheimer's

When:
As with all new technological tools in research, this is not a catch all approach but 3 of the areas where it can be used is when trying to measure:

  1. Purchase Intent
  2. Novelty
  3. Awareness

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The Skinny on Facebook

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The Skinny on Facebook

Well, I am here for the first session kick-off at The Market Research Event in Las Vegas. What a great first session to blog about: Facebook. Meg Sloan, research lead at Facebook and Brant Cruz of Chadwick Martin Bailey shared a little glimpse of what life inside Facebook is like.

Currently, Facebook has 300 million users worldwide and at least 1/2 of their users go to the site daily! Wow! How do they do it? Here's a tidbit....

Their guiding principles include:

  1. Proactive
  2. Scalable
  3. Expertise
  4. New School
  5. Synthesis & Story-telling

Meg also gave us insight into how they view their small marketing research team:

  1. Try our best to act like the rest of the org
  2. Radical focus on the roadmap and prioritization
  3. Making sure we all are doing things we feel strong at each day (staying motivated)
  4. Supporting each other/sharing information/work etc.
  5. Be nimble and use our resources and relationships to their fullest
  6. And last but not least: Ruthless Prioritization as well as Have Fun and create an awesome workplace. Their Q3 planning meeting involved pedicures--sign me up!

You can see more about life inside the marketing research team at Facebook. Check out this video about

"life at facebook." Oh, and by the way, they currently have a marketing research position open for anyone who is interested..I'm now a little more motivated to spend time on my facebook page

...

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Live at TMRE in Vegas

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Live at TMRE in Vegas

Well, hello. Here I am, blogging again for IIR live at The Market Research Event 2009 in Las Vegas. We are at the Red Rock Resort and Casino and it is rockin'! Wow, what a great conference site--here's the view from my room!

It is cool to be back for the 2nd time. Last year was my first Market Research Event. This year, I recognize a few faces and have met a few of you throughout the year.

So, if you're reading this and you're here in Vegas for the event, please let me know if you have something valuable to add to the blog.

Hope to meet you.

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When Time is Short and Money is Tight

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When Time is Short and Money is Tight

I attended another interesting workshop last week at The Market Research Event. Speakers, Tina Bronkhorst, Vice President Digitas and Jennifer Drolet, Vice President, iModerate gave a compelling story for the benefits of a hybrid research approach.

"Current consumer demands and expectations for 'real time' dialogue are changing the way we, as marketers, need to think about research", say Tina and Jen. Below is a bulleted summary of their reasoning:

  • It’s harder to be heard : 20 years ago, just 3 exposures created awareness, now it takes 150
  • Consumers have an amazing ability to multitask
  • Consumers aren’t as overwhelmed by information as they used to be
  • They trust their peers more than they trust marketers
  • Real time dialogue is everywhere (myspace, facebook, blogger)
  • They are coming together with common interests. One example of this is the Starbucks gossip site, which lets those who have a similar feeling toward the brand chat together.
  • And there are a host of others: blog, microblog, online chat, RSS, widgets, social networks, social bookmarks, message boards, podcasts, video sharing sites, photo sharing sites, virtual worlds, wikis...and the list will be greater as we move forward.
  • So, marketing doesn’t own the brand completely anymore
  • And, consumers trust their ability to make smart choices and they aren’t afraid to trust their instincts (Yankelovich Monitor 2004/2005)
  • Instead, they prefer to take a chance with a personal experience, instead of playing it safe
  • Thus, we need to focus on listening more instead of shouting louder (active branding)
  • Stop push marketing and start pull marketing

They gave practical examples of how to develop hybrid approaches, where qual and quant data are collected at the same time. These include conducting:

  • Online survey with IM-like chat intercept (iModerate)
  • Online focus group with closed ended, open ended, IM-like chat and redirects (invoke)
  • Online communities (communispace, passenger)


April Bell

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TMRE 2008--What Participants Thought

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TMRE 2008--What Participants Thought

As I've continued to receive feedback on last week's conference, I thought it would be appropriate to share a quick interview I conducted with one of the delegates. Jason Archambault, Director of Insights at Red Lobster and I had a chance to chat during the conference and he is one of many who have been attending the conference for several years. His comments reflected what I heard from several others.


April Bell

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After the Fact

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After the Fact

I made it back home to Texas late last night and have had a chance to ponder a bit about my first Market Research Event conference. In a nutshell, it was cool! I definitely enjoyed helping the IIR staff blog. It was similar to an ethnography project about market researchers, and as a moderator/qualitative consultant, that's my favorite thing to do!

I came to the conference wanting to learn more about the industry, including the wants, needs, desires, and frustrations of those in market research.

And I left the conference with a lot of learnings.

So, for the next several days I will be posting snippets of my what I learned (including photos and videos) onto this site as well as my own

blog.

And I hope you’ll join me in an online discussion— feel free to respond, ask questions, post comments. I think we NEED to start an online dialogue and continue to stay connected virtually. And this is the reason: One of my biggest takeaways is that the industry as a whole is wanting to understand more about “virtual connectedness.” In almost every workshop I attended, there was reference to it in some way: online communities, social networking, digital innovation, and the list goes on and on. How better to understand what many of our consumers want than to jump in and be a part of it!

Stay posted….

April Bell

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Who's Drinking the Wine

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Who's Drinking the Wine

As you can imagine, the workshop about wine filled up quickly! Although we didn’t get sample tastings, this presentation proved to be quite satisfying!

Chris Bacon, Director of Consumer Insights & Strategy at E&J Gallo Winery led us through their occasion-based segmentation workshop.

As he discussed the segments that most consumers fall into, I began to worry that I identified with them ALL! A few of the segments he referenced include: “The Night is Young”, “Gather ‘Round the Table”, “You’re Invited”, “Unwind”, “Dinner for Two” and a few more….sound familiar to anyone?

Great workshop!
 

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It's A Small World

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It's A Small World

It’s a small world here at The Market Research Event. During Tuesday’s lunch, I reconnected with an old friend! As I was introducing myself to folks around the table, I did a double take. A friend I had not seen in over 2 years , Brooke Fagley, Vice President of Client Service at Directions Research, Inc. was sitting across from me! The last time we were together we were trying to make our way through Italian lessons at a mutual friend's house!

Here she is with a couple of other folks at our table, Beth Daush of Directions Research and John Delgado of Eastern Research:

We chatted for a few minutes catching up until the keynote speaker began his presentation. Marc Dresner, Executive Editor of RFL Communications, gave a compelling speech regarding their work to help improve data quality issues across the market research industry. Their publication, Platforms for Data Progress: The Client’s Guide to Rapid Improvement of Online Research, was distributed. His presentation gave a lively account regarding the history of its development.

For those of you who were unable to make it, he mentioned that the publication has been approved and is being distributed by the American Marketing Association. It can be found at www.marketingpower.org.

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Cool Research Deliverables

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Cool Research Deliverables

We all want to learn more more about how to communicate research findings succinctly and with a flair so key stakeholders can easily grasp and “buy-in” to the learnings.

So, this workshop, Design-Driven Deliverables: Adding Dimension to Your Research, was not only relevant but also insightful because it gave useful tips and examples of how to expand reporting beyond the Power Point presentation. Speakers, Steve Kulp and Lisa Broome, discussed creating shadowboxes , murals and inspiration stations to pull together “experiential” learnings.

By using a variety of unusual deliverables, the broader audience will have the ability to learn more through all of their senses. Some examples of these are shown below:

It was a great session of questions, answers and idea sharing. One interesting thought brought up by Dean Macko of Hyundai was the possibility of using actual respondents at the end of a segmentation study to better personify the segment learnings. Cool stuff!

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Entertainment Redefined

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Entertainment Redefined

Betsy Frank, Chief Research & Insights Officer of Time Inc. gave an extremely compelling presentation in yesterday’s Media Research track, Multi-Platform Storytelling. As the workshop progressed, my perception of “entertainment” shifted a bit. In their research at Time, Inc., they have discovered that entertainment for most consumers includes “anything I’m not obliged to do.” In fact, 77% agree “I can find entertainment value in almost anything.”

She went further to say that the more stressed you are, the more important entertainment becomes. The benefits? To relax, feel less stress. It’s an escape. Entertainment is the antidote to anxiety.

However, they have discovered that entertainment is not only about escape, it also fulfills three other emotional needs, to: Connect, Create, and Share. She shared rich insights from a study of 30 (non-entertainment) brands. 

They found certain brands resonated on some of the spectrums while at least one brand (Target was the example given) was able to connect on all 4.

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