Archive for the ‘market research’ Category

eMail Lists vs. eFail Lists - Do You Know the Difference?

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Posted by Scott Provost, Percepta

If you are in the business of selling research products to life scientists then chances are good you have probably sent out promotional information or conducted market research using email.  It is an efficient and cost effective way to reach lots of potential customers quickly.  If you are using your customer lists to communicate new products or promote special pricing via email then you are tapping into one of your most powerful resources - the people who have already proved they are interested by buying your products.  Well done.

However, your customer list may not always be the best choice for some activities for a variety of reasons.  Maybe you have questions and want answers from researchers other than your customers. You know the questions I mean - like who are you - what do you want? - and why aren’t you buying from me?  In that case the customer lists are not going to give you the answers you are looking for.  Many turn to third party rented emial lists from vendors that offer them for anywhere from a US$50 to US$500 or more per thousand email address names.   It all sounds like a great idea - and it would be except there is a great deal of difference in the quality of various life science lists when it comes to response rates and price is not necessarily a good indicator so caution is required.  Some are pretty good and some are just awful.  Beware of reports of high click through rates. Lets face it - “click throughs” are not all that good a measure of success.  You need answers, not click throughs!  A good quality list should deliver at least 1% response rates for a few hundred dollars per thousand names.

We conducted a little experiment last week and tried several rented lists for an online survey we were performing.  We chose to use a “list broker” - someone that consolidates life science lists.  We selected the categories we needed, paid in advance and they agreed to send our email invitations to roughly 11,000 rented names.   The invite we provided offered $25 in exchange for completion of a 10-15 minute survey.   When all was said and done we confirmed a total of 26 responses.  Put another way that is a 0.24% response rate!  That is not even one quarter of one percent!  We call that an “eFail list”. If you have had similar experiences give us a call and we will compare notes. 

Oh - and as a control (yes we are scientists as well as marketers here at Percepta) we sent out about 6,500 of the same invitation from the Percepta Panel, which we maintain for market research projects, and confirmed a total of 158 completed surveys which is a 2.4% response rate.  CAVEAT - Percepta normally gets about 10% response rates but this project was not perfectly in our sweet spot which is why we chose to source from 3rd party lists in the first place. 

The lesson here is just another version of Buyer Beware.  Maintaining a quality mail list is a lot of work.  People change jobs, change email addresses, sign-up even though they are not scientists.  Some lists also get blacklisted which means they have been SPAMMing.  All of this means your email never makes it to the researcher and then you don’t get the answers you need.  Instead you get “click-through rates”.   We at Percepta know it’s a big bad world and we work very hard to maintain our list and our response rates are a testament to the quality of the Percepta Panel.  We only give access to the panel through our Life Science Dashboard reports and commisioned projects.  We promise that if we conduct market research for your company we will give you answers and not click-through rates.

Your comments are always welcome.

I Want You - To Tell Us What You Want

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
I Want You - to tell us what you want

I Want You - to tell us what you want

Posted by Scott Provost, Percepta

Percepta offers a lot of different marketing services besides market research, but market research seems to be a popular area of interest.  We offer a series of segment specific market research reports that are popular (The Life Science Dashboards), but we also like to publish complimentary reports a few time a year for our colleagues in the industry.  Recently we published a report on the stimulus funding for life science research in the US as a result of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.  Previously we published a report on the customer’s perspective on life science manuafacturing in low cost countries.  Now we want your input.

What would you like to see Percepta focus on in the next free report?  Give us your comments below and we will choose from the best suggestions. Then we will conduct the research, write the report and post if for a free download.  The next topic is up to you so now is the time to let us know.

The Flux Capacitor: The Market Researcher’s Dream

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Flux Capacitor

Flux Capacitor

Posted by Michael Klein

At Percepta, our first point of contact is at times an overworked product manager blurting, “I need to field a survey on…insert topic here…and I need the data back by…insert excessively tight deadline here.  Our approach is generally to convince them to come down off of the ledge, take a deep breath, and provide us with the answers to three mission critical questions, not necessarily in the order of importance:


1)      What do you want to know?

2)      Why do you want to know this?

3)      What are you going to do with this information?

 

Question 1: What do you want to know?

Q1 identifies the missing pieces of the “knowledge puzzle” that exist at the client’s organization.  Knowledge gaps may be relatively simple, like a need for an up-to-date snapshot of the company’s market share in North America.  Or more complex, like understanding the performance specs, QC requirements and delivery schedule for bioproduction-scale culture media at biopharmaceutical manufacturing facilities.  Q1 helps us choose the proper market research method (maybe it’s not a survey), and select an appropriate target audience (perhaps biopharma process development and manufacturing scientists).

 

Question 2: Why do you want to know this?

Q2 provides the project goals and objectives, and crystallizes the overall scope of the study.  It tells us precisely what we need to ask end-users and/or potential customers, and also tells us what we don’t need to ask, which is often equally important.  Perhaps a client wants market share information to discover whether they are gaining or losing share overall.  If so, we can ask the appropriate questions now and also put a plan in place to measure performance regularly, so that the company can plan accordingly.

 

Question 3: What will you do with the information?

Q3 reveals the business decision riding on the results of the research.  For example, a client might be developing marketing campaigns based on an annual marketing budget and thus must decide how to best allocate resources across major product lines.  Here is where issues with market research projects often arise.  Quality market research must be accurate and actionable – actionable meaning it not only provides the necessary knowledge but also occurs in time to influence decision making.  How actionable is customer feedback related to unmet needs for a product that is in the late stages of design?

It’s our job at Percepta to make sure you get the “necessary knowledge” part right.  However, lacking the Flux Capacitor (Google it, if you were born after 1977), there isn’t much we can do to fix any “in time to influence decision making” issues.  But you can.

 

Get your organization to think strategically about market research.  First, add it to your budget planning. Then three months before strategic planning, meet with your product development or commercial marketing team.  Brainstorm, beginning with a focus on Question 3, to clarify the strategic decisions facing your organization in the near term.  Then, shift the focus over the next week or so to Questions1 and 2.  Identify those areas where knowledge necessary for decision support is lacking and develop a list of goals and objectives for potential marketing research projects designed to address these knowledge gaps.

 

Need help in guiding this process?  Percepta excels at facilitating cross-functional exercises to identify knowledge gaps and develop a market research plan designed to capture information that gives you the confidence you need to make the correct calls for the success of your business.

Companies that effectively coordinate market research with strategic planning excel at developing winning products and implementing the proper metrics to regularly measure sales and marketing effectiveness.  Don’t believe me?  I’ve got a used DeLorean I’d like to sell you…

 

Your comments are welcome