How To Find A Market Research Consultant Who Can Add Value To
Your Organisation
Market research is a subject that requires the utmost expertise
to gain the maximum value from it. This is why it is sometimes
better to employ the services of a consultant rather than trying
to muddle through.
A market research consultant can bring a great array of skills,
expertise and experience to the project and will be able to complete
the project to requirements and to budget.
Before you commit to using the services of a market research
consultant, you should follow these simple steps:
1) You should clearly detail what it is that you want to achieve.
Focus on the results of the research and how the results will
fit into your strategic direction.
2) Determine a budget available for the project. Be realistic
and understand that cheap always gets cheap results. Paying the
going rate will reap rewards in the long run.
3) Search for a market research consultant. You should use the
internet, Yellow Page etc. and always contact a minimum of three
companies.
4) Contact each of the consultants and ask them to give you an
overview of what they do and a rough guide to their fees. As your
project will be specific, the fees should only be used as a guide.
5) Arrange a meeting with the three consultants.
6) At the meeting you should present your project to them and
ask for their initial input. This is the stage where you can begin
to whittle down the three to one consultant. You are looking for
a consultant that knows what they are talking about, has undertaken
similar projects before, is in touch with your budget and can
give you testimonials from previous clients.
7) Before you make the final decision, make sure that you get
a full written proposal and check that it covers everything that
you need to do. This document will become the blue print for your
project.
8) When you make the final decision, contact the market research
consultant in writing and confirm the project, the fees and the
timescale they have quoted. This becomes your document by which
the project will be measured.
If at any stage you are unhappy with the situation - stop. Do
not be pressured into going for a project that you do not feel
is right.
For more information on a market research consultant, please
click the link below:
market research consultant nottingham
Nottingham is a city in the ceremonial county of Nottinghamshire in the East Midlands whose prosperity was founded on the textile industry; in particular lace manufacture.
Very little textile manufacture now takes place in Nottingham, but the City's heyday in this sector endowed it with some fine industrial buildings in the Lace Market district. Many of these have been restored and put to new uses.
Nottingham is home to two universities: the University of Nottingham and Nottingham Trent University. Together they are attended by over 40,000 full-time students. The University of Nottingham's teaching hospital, University of Nottingham Medical School, is part of the largest hospital in the UK, the Queen's Medical Centre.
Nottingham is home to the headquarters of many well-known companies. One of the best known is Boots the Chemists, now Alliance Boots, founded in the city by Jesse Boot 1st Lord Trent in 1849 and substantially expanded by his son John Boot (2nd Lord Trent).Other large current employers include the credit reference agency Experian, the energy company E.ON UK, the tobacco company John Player & Sons, betting company Gala Group, engineering company Siemens, sportswear manufacturers Speedo, high street opticians Vision Express, games and publishing company Games Workshop, and the American credit card company Capital One, whose European offices are situated by the side of Nottingham station. Nottingham is also the home of HM Revenue and Customs and the Driving Standards Agency.
Until recently bicycle manufacturing was a major industry, the city being the birthplace of Raleigh Cycles in 1886 and later joined by Sturmey-Archer, the creator of 3-speed hub gears. However, Raleigh's factory on Triumph Road was demolished in Summer 2003 to make way for the University of Nottingham's expansion of Jubilee Campus.
Nottingham receives a considerable volume of tourism, with almost 300 thousand people visiting from overseas in 2005 alone. Many visitors are attracted by Nottingham's nightlife and shops, by its history, and by the legend of Robin Hood, visiting Sherwood Forest, Nottingham Castle and The Tales of Robin Hood on Maid Marian Way. Popular history-based tourist attractions in central Nottingham include the Castle, City of Caves, Lace Market, The Galleries of Justice, and the City's ancient pubs.
Nottingham is close to the M1 motorway and major roads the A52 and the A46. To the west of Nottingham through to Derby, the A52 is known as Brian Clough Way.
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