(Originally published in B2B Marketing)
Imagine a scenario in which you want a new book. You go to an online book retailer and sign up to fill out a survey. A customer service rep mails you a questionnaire or calls to ask what kind of person you are, what books you like, and how much time you spend reading. He may even talk to your friends and family to make sure you gave an accurate portrayal of yourself.
After the form is filled out, a week is required to manually collate the data. Then, the company sends you an email with a suggested book. You hop over to the site and pay for your personalized recommendation, and five days (13 since you started looking) later, you receive it.
See how crazy that is?
Yet most companies conduct consumer research with the same lengthy, manual-intensive approach.
Consumer Research Takes Too Long
Remember how we used to check email? We’d hook a computer up to the phone line, wait for the dial-up shrieking to end, and download our email. Consumer research today is the dial-up Internet of yesterday.
Think about it. It can take weeks at best — usually more like months — to complete a consumer research project. How relevant is the data at that point? What if the competition uncovers a solution everyone’s looking for while you’re still gathering data?
Did you miss the “moment”? Almost surely.
And It’s Just a Snapshot
Most consumer research is done manually, right? Think about those survey people you avoid at the mall or the surveys you receive via email. (Cue dial-up screeching.)
Opinions could have changed drastically while you were waiting on survey data. Today, three to six months is a lifetime in the modern marketing world.
Marketing windows are indeed compressing. CMOs today are intrigued by the target moment — the Oreos Super Bowl tweet that won such acclaim. But, for good reason, moment advertising is inherently dangerous and seat-of-the-pants assumptions just aren’t good enough to risk your brand’s reputation. You need hard data, and you need it now.
Making Assumptions is Too Risky
And yet, to capture that ‘moment’ that’s exactly what’s happening with some brands.
Big Data is a very possible answer. And yes, Big Data may be an unsexy cliché, but it’s the Bill Gates of the marketing world. In an unassuming way, it will be running the world of advertising.
But like Bill Gates’ achievements, it’s very hard work that you need to undertake with dedication. It’s onerous, but possible, to sift through tweets and Facebook posts to look for insights. Listening tools like HootSuite will let you follow mentions of your company or product across several social media platforms. Platforms like Spredfast and Salesforce are decent tools to find quantitative data and a few qualitative metrics like sentiment analysis, which can be very helpful when your audience is segmented.
Making assumptions about the tastes and personalities of your target segments without data can be too risky. Yet it’s happening more and more because the comfortable alternative is relying on outdated, expensive market research, which means you’ve missed the moment. Falling back on traditional consumer research will have you downloading that file at dial-up speeds while your competition flies past.
It’s about time market research left the dial-up era.
About Mattr
Segment your audience in hours — not weeks or months — all without asking questions. Craft campaigns and products that appeal to their personalities and unique interests.