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Market Research Marketing
Facts About Market Research Marketing
When I first became involved in marketing and advertising,
everything we did was based on wit and style. Basically, the goal
was to come up with the catchiest, most contagious slogans that we
could. Everything else was secondary. We did not bother with market
research marketing. Our clients wanted slick, young, stylish people
to tell them where to throw their money. And they threw lots of it
at us all the time.
For better or for worse, the market has changed since then.
Advertising and
marketing consulting firms are not just required to be
brilliant anymore. Instead, we are required to be scientific. You
see, in the last 20 years, marketing has reached a crisis
situation. People are so disillusioned with consumer culture and so
unresponsive to marketing that companies don't know what to do.
Commercials get ever more creative and outlandish, and consumers
get ever more bored. It isn't that people aren't buying anything –
it's just that they're not buying what we tell them to buy anymore.
Either they buy what their friends buy, or they stick to old buying
habits. Either way, marketresearchmarketing is the only
solution.
Market Research Marketing 101
Marketresearchmarketing takes many different approaches. The
most simple way of doing it is the marketing telephone survey – a
strategy that has been around for half a century by now. Basically,
by calling consumers up and asking what they think of a product or
service, you can find all kinds of useful information that
will help you with future marketing campaigns. You can find out who
you are reaching, what people like about your service or product,
what they don't like about it, and how likely you are to reach
them. Then you can use the marketing research to custom tailor your
advertising campaign to their particular demographic.
Of course, marketing research jobs get much more complicated
than that. At the market research marketing company that I work at,
we go all out. We do focus group studies, showing targeted
advertisements to small groups of people in particular consumer
segments. Carefully, we gauge their reactions to what they are
shown and use them to perfect our advertisements. Because we offer
consumer incentives, people are more likely to give us their time
and energy. We then take the knowledge that we learn from these
consumer participation groups and use it to improve the products
and the advertisement we put out for them.
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