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Branding decisions drive branding market research design. Brand development is a mix of creativity and marketing information to uncover brand positioning opportunities in cluttered market spaces.We manage the branding process recognizing the vastly different mindsets -- creative and analytical -- required for positioning success. Branding research studies often begin with Brand Base research, followed by Brand Qualitative research and targeted quantitative Brand Screening Survey studies.Here's a flow for a brand development engagement showing the integration of creative and research.
Mixing creativity and market researchJust great chefs, or potters at the wheel both evaluate and create at the same time, a successful brand development and branding research process requires the same blended intuitive and analytical mindset. Success comes with creative branding ideas and astute market understanding. Often, branding research can present a dilemma for marketing decision-makers and a tug-of-war among the pros they rely upon. Creative and advertising people -- whether inside or agencies -- who conceive exciting concepts may voice that brand ideas come from creative insight and genius, not research. Research and analytical types might espouse a "customer-driven" approach to branding and brand opportunity discovery. Our view is to design a process that draws on both: creative power, and marketing information. Further, we view branding research as useful primarily to feed, rather than judge, the process. This is especially true with brand concept creation and brand naming assignments. Our tact is a process we call "creative branding research." Powerful positioning and the branding to execute the positioning strategy, first, requires understanding the marketplace. The Strategy Newsletter talks about the notion of finding and owning a market space as the basis of successful brand positioning. The issue is "How do we find and own a market space and build or rebuild a brand?" Branding Research Method DiscussionQualitative Research: more detail...Time-Extended Online Depth Interviews...Once hypotheses about brand positioning and market opportunities are articulated from our initial limited round in our Brand Base Research, and initial depth interviews, we may expand the qualitative exploration to a broader set of Time-Extended Online Depth Interviews. This unique method engages each participating respondent over a period of one week or more thinking about and reporting their perceptions in a running dialog. We have successfully used this innovative tool and process with many high profile clients. While primarily qualitative, our online implementation has some important quantitative features for segmentation and attitude measurement.The Value of the Qualitative Step...We believe sound qualitative research is a vital component in decision-oriented marketing research. It is especially useful in developing hypotheses about consumer motivations. These help us understand from the consumer's perspective and in the consumer's own language. Qualitative research, which is characterized by free-ranging, open-ended interviews among a limited number of respondents, is primarily an exploratory motivational technique. We use it here to identify important marketing variables and to suggest the relationships among those variables, to focus the creative process and lay the design groundwork for the later quantitative screening research stage.The main point here is the value of getting in-depth insight into the buyer belief and attitude structure, and use this insight for business strategy development. For example, when scanning for strategic opportunities they can uncover important consumer and business buyer attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors that may precede an emerging trend. Non-directive techniques and projective research techniques are especially useful in defining buyer motivations . Customer discussion groups -- another term for "marketing research focus groups" -- can be useful in the early stages of strategy decision-making. For Creative Branding Research, we tend to prefer in-person or online time-extended depth interviews, our preferred methods of getting inside the buyer's mind which may offer equally rich, or better, marketing information at an overall lower cost. We will recommend focus groups when the following conditions are important...
While group discussions are very popular among qualitative techniques, there are many important "do's and don'ts". It is critical that the researcher knows how, when and where they can be used, and where they should be avoided. The January 2001 issue of the StrategyNewsletter updates the basics and some new issues brought on by the advent of online focus groups, and other tech offshoots. Content analysis to understand the brand language Aside from market research focus group discussions and depth interviews, we might use other methods to understand customer brand perceptions and screen your branding options. Content analysis is a process of examining customer diary entries, articles by observers of behavior, advertising, and other language used by advertisers, customers and suppliers in the product category. Ethnography to 'watch' what people do Our branding exploration research may involve special observational qualitative methods such as ethnographic studies. Photo ethnography, uses various methods, such as self-directed-video to watch what people do in and around the brand category. We watch as customers and prospects engage in store shopping, using products in their home, and their interactions with other people when the product category or brand is involved. A pet food company may employ a video ethnography study and ask pet owners to video tape their pet. Contact us for more information about our Creative Branding Research capabilities. | BACK TO TOP | |
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focus groups | market research panels | executive surveys | qualitative methods | ethnography | data mining market surveys | online surveys | motivational research | competitive intelligence | idea generation | |
branding | pricing | product research | customer satisfaction | web site evaluation | market segmentation |