How To Use Market Research Groups Successfully
A market research group (sometimes called a 'focus group') is
a small continuous group of people used for ongoing market research.
There are six key factors that should be in place for a market
research group to work successfully:
1) The group should be willing to be part of the group. Sounds
obvious, but you need 110% buy in from the group. You may want
to incentivise the group to encourage them to take part regularly.
2) You should aim for a group size of 6 to 8 participants. This
means you will need an ongoing pool of between 15 and 20 participants.
From this pool, you can get your final group. A larger pool means
that you can run the group even if most of the group don't attend.
3) The market research needs to be consistent. The same structure
and questions need to be asked each time. The aim is to build
up a profile of how things have changed over a period of time.
If you change the questions, you will not be able to make a comparison
to previous research.
4) You need to ask open and closed questions. An open question
often leads to discussion and new avenues being explored whereas
closed questions keep things focused and allow comparison to previous
research.
5) You should be running the market research groups regularly.
Whatever time period you choose, make sure that the groups meet
at this time. Don't let things slip.
6) Use an expert to run your market research groups. You need
the groups to be run well and to be unbiased. Any hint of the
research being biased will reduce the overall effectiveness.
For more information on a market research groups, please click
the link below:
market research groups derby
Derby lies on the banks of the River Derwent in the East Midlands.
Derby and Derbyshire were centres of Britain’s industrial revolution, which in the 18th century saw many cotton spinning mills being opened.
The beginning of the following century saw Derby emerge as an engineering centre, with manufacturers such as James Fox, who exported machine tools to Russia.
This tradition has continued, with Derby’s two biggest employers being Rolls-Royce and the Toyota Motor Corporation both being in the engineering manufacturing trade. Other companies include Bombardier, who manufacture train systems and aircraft, and Alstom, who manufacture large power plant boilers and heat exchangers.
Derby’s central location means it has extensive transport links with other areas of the country, the M1 motorway passes ten miles to the east of the city linking south to London and north to Sheffield and Leeds, making it ideal as a distribution centre.
East Midlands Airport is situated about fifteen miles from Derby, with services to a variety of internal and European destinations.
Derby is home to the University of Derby, which has two campuses, the main one lies on the A38 opposite Markeaton Park with a second campus in Buxton, known as the Devonshire campus, a grade II listed building which has a dome over 145ft in diameter, bigger than that of St Paul's Cathedral in London.
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