Posts Tagged ‘research’

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The Shock and Awe of Reality

Tuesday, April 2nd, 2013

Since graduating college in 1991, I’ve had the privilege to live and work in two amazing US cities – New York and San Francisco. Both of these cities are great places to live and to visit, but the experience of life there isn’t even close to being representative of the rest of the country  - and importantly, of the people you as a marketer want to use your brand.

Let’s start with some facts – which continue to shock and awe many marketers:

-The average household income is $50,054 (SF Gate via US Census Bureau, 2011 data)
-The average  family savings account balance is $3,800; 25% of families have no savings at all (statisticbrain.com via IRS and Federal Reserve)
-The median age for marriage is 26.6 among women, 28.6 for men (About.com via US Census Bureau, 2012 data)
-The average age for women to have their first baby is 25.1 (Babycenter.com via CDC, 2008 data)The average household income is $50,054 (SF Gate via US Census Bureau, 2011 data)

-The average household income is $50,054 (SF Gate via US Census Bureau, 2011 data)

-The average  family savings account balance is $3,800; 25% of families have no savings at all (statisticbrain.com via IRS and Federal Reserve)

-The median age for marriage is 26.6 among women, 28.6 for men (About.com via US Census Bureau, 2012 data)

-The average age for women to have their first baby is 25.1 (Babycenter.com via CDC, 2008 data)

One of my favorite stories of shock and awe happened when I was an Account Executive at an advertising agency in NYC.  The president of my client’s division – company not to be named, but the product was canned pasta – decided that their “new & improved” canned pasta should sell for 50¢ more than the current product, and that we should explore how to talk to consumers about the increase in quality and price. We were in Charlotte, doing research with their target audience – lower-income families.  A woman whose profile stated that her family of 5 lived on an income of $15,000-$19,999 looked the moderator squarely in the eye and said (I’m paraphrasing here, as the conversation happened in 1996): “you tell that rich president of your company that while he’s in his big office in the big city, I’m trying to feed my family.  And just because your price goes up 50¢ doesn’t mean I get another 50¢ in my grocery budget. It just means I will have to buy less food.”

Shock.

I had a similar experience as a moderator, just a few years ago.  I was doing research with people who use pre-paid debit cards, focusing on single mothers who make less than $25,000 per year.  We sometimes do a “lottery” where all respondents who get to the facility 10 minutes before group start time have a chance to win another $50 on top of their incentive.  As I walked out of the room to get final questions from the backroom, one woman asked “do you know who won the lottery?” and I said I’d find out. When I came back in, I casually mentioned that oh yeah, Jacquie had won the lottery. Jacquie, a single-mom working at Wal-Mart, began to cry  – and the other women in the room hugged and congratulated her for the win.

Awe.

And recently, working on a project for a TV network, there was absolute silence in the room when listening to the tape of an ethno where a 42 year-old mom from outside Atlanta talked about being ready for her youngest to go off to college. Shock and Awe – because everyone in the room was either waiting to have kids or had kids in diapers or kindergarten.

These are the moments that can define you as a brand strategist, marketer or researcher.  Do you really understand and empathize with your audience – their challenges, joys, stresses? Do you know how they use their money, their time, what they value? Can you have compassion for their difficult realities? It really is so easy to think about the world through a very fortunate (and often hard earned), but less relevant, lens.  So, what to do to avoid the troublesome “shock and awe”? A few thoughts:

  1. Be armed with the facts – not big sweeping numbers that belittle reality (e.g. $50,000+), but a real and thoughtful overview of what your consumers’ lives are like
  2. Talk to your consumers – lots of them – in their real life environments, as often as you can
  3. Do research outside your comfort zone – instead of LA and NY, consider Sacramento and Baltimore (and keep in mind, Chicago does not represent the entire middle of the country)
  4. Never ever make a decision based on what you, your family or your friends might like (unless the category/product skews to people of your socio-economic level)
  5. Ensure that the senior decision makers are engaged with #1-4

At the end of the day, for most brands, the “real people” who live outside of the major business centers can make or break your business.  Avoid the shock and awe (in your financials) by really getting to know them.

Sara Schor, Sterling Strategy

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Why it’s Important to Understand the Difference Between Jeff Spicoli and Snooki: Gen Y vs. Gen X

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

spicoli

I was recently at a happy hour with some clients, and somehow the topic of pizza came up, which led to “isn’t it ok to have a little food on our time…it is our time, yours and everyone else’s” which led to Jeff Spicoli. As one of the most senior (in terms of job title and age) people in the room, I was delighted to hear that name again.  But my enthusiasm soon faded as I noticed the blank stares around me. Mr. Hand? Vans? Phoebe Cates on the diving board (well known to every Gen X male)?  And this once again reminded me of the differences we in the world of marketing face: Boomers and Generation Xers creating product, marketing and ideas for Gen Y (also known as Millennials and a host of other creative names).

A more relevant story. Doing some focus groups with a bank client, the entire team was in awe as to how many of their consumers still like to use the phone. They couldn’t possibly understand how anyone would prefer the “old-schoolness “ of the phone to the “new schoolness” of the computer.  Which led the most junior person (25 years old, a Millennial in her prime!) in the room to say: “Guys, the computer is on its way out. It’s all about the phone again”.

Silence.

It’s not that we as Boomers or Xers aren’t aware of the mobile revolution, it’s just that our frame of context is different.

Millennials are a huge audience, and cannot be ignored.  And generational differences are real. (Ask any company who employs a large number of Millennials – they’ll have a lot to say about it).

Advice for all of us Boomers and Xers: be sure get to know the generic “soundbites” around this audience (“they are entitled,” “they are the CTO of the household”) but then really get to know them by looking at the world from their point-of-view, from their world context.  Spend time with them outside of 6 focus groups, away from your home environment, beyond the latest Mintel report or episodes of Jersey Shore.  It’ll be surprising and inspiring to see the world through their lens.

And ps.  As an Xer, it really hurts that everyone knows Snooki, but not Spicoli.

Sara Schor, EVP, Strategy

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The Difference Between Research for Strategy and Research for Research

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

At Sterling Brands, all of our strategists are moderators, and so all of our moderators are strategists. We see this as a core point-of-difference and an essential approach for building strong, highly differentiated and actionable brands strategies.

Why?

1. Moderators moderate a discussion; strategists pursue a strategy

In research, we are looking for insights that allow us to make an intuitive leap to a really great and differentiated strategy.  This is different than traditional research that looks for answers to a bunch of questions. It’s the difference between finishing the guide and delving deep into the strategic questions.

Only a strategist will use the guide as, well a guide, and let the discussion direct the exploratory.  Strategists understand the business and marketing situation, the company or brand strengths and weaknesses, competitive advantage and landscape, and use it to direct and inspire the discussion.

2. We really get that consumers are not strategists

It is impossible, and not particularly wise, to expect consumers to tell you what to do when it comes to developing your brand strategy.  They can’t really look forward. They can’t really think different. What they say and what they do are often two different things. And consumers simply don’t think in terms of “strategy,” they think in terms of products on the shelf, ads on TV, headlines in magazines.

Our job is to gain insight on what’s really happening in their lives and how they think about the category, and apply it to the strategic discussion; it’s about understanding the consumer and marketplace momentum and then attaching strategy to it. It’s judo (going with it), not karate (going against it). Judo lets us use consumers as consumers. And it works really well since that is what they are very good at.  Karate assumes they can do our job of being a strategist. But we’ve found time and time again, they can’t.

3. Challenging weakly-held beliefs

It’s a tough marketplace these days. With so much clutter, the odds of getting noticed are low.  Your competition is trying as hard as you are to find the “big aha” that will help them break-through, and they are likely doing the same research you are. So it’s important that strategy is driven only by strongly-held beliefs, not lip service or top-of-mind points-of-view.

Any decent moderator in any kind of research will try to get to the “why”. But it’s just not enough to ask a consumer “why”.  It’s our role to challenge consumers – what they say may or may not be a strongly-held belief. This is the only way we’ll get real insights rather than just good answers.

Since “research” is essentially an unnatural act and forced environment for people, what they say or claim may simply not be that true. And even if it’s totally true in the conference room, shop-a-long or home environment, it may not be true in real life.

It is our responsibility to be rigorous, understand how robust their points-of-views, needs, attitudes are.  This takes a disciplined and firm, yet personable approach. If your “gut” says a consumer is handing you a lot of BS, call him/her on it.  It something the consumer after 90 minutes seems to contradict something they said earlier, call him/her on it.  Not in a way that is angry or defensive, but in a way that is curious and clever. To weed out the weakly-held beliefs and get to the strong ones that will help you break-through.

4. Ideas over words

Creating a strategy requires fully understanding the hypotheses that underlie it.  To “validate” a strategy, we strive to deconstruct it into its constituent parts, and test the strength of each one.  We do not believe validating “words”.  We do not want consumers to get caught up in (either positively or negatively) language they will never see (because there is a big difference between communications and strategy).

We talk through ideas.  It’s not – do they like this word or this statement or paragraph? It’s – do they like the idea behind a set of words, or even a conceptual idea?  Is the idea relevant and meaningful? Does it feel different?  We then translate the ideas into a set of actionable words for the use of the marketing organization.

In the world of research, there’s a lot of debate about leading respondents.  Again, that’s the difference between words and ideas. As a strategist, if there’s a great idea dangling out there, throw it out there.  Who cares if it didn’t come up naturally?  If it’s a great idea (or not), talking about it is the only way you’ll learn something. Let’s push this further. Let’s say the team is convinced there is a killer idea out there, but it’s too new or too different for consumers to embrace right away.  So, consumers always say “no” to the idea. We say, push it a little. Help respondents understand it, show how it aligns with their life, encourage them to think “forward” and “different.”  No report will say “consumers LOVED this idea” but your strategy will be much more robust based on the learning.

5. The importance of research within the organization

While we don’t allow consumers to “validate language”, we do recognize that a final strategy does live on paper, in a set of words. And in order for them to embrace and activate a strategy, the words do matter.  So we suggest checking-in with the internal team to understand; do they “get it”? Does it inspire them? Does it tell them what to do, and what not to do? Is it focused enough, clear enough? Are they excited to own it?  The best idea won’t work unless it can be well articulated to the people who have to do something with it.

This is especially important when the strategy will be activated by people other than the marketing team. Say, you are creating a new payment product that will be sold in the bank’s retail environment. If the people in the branches don’t understand and embrace the idea, then they won’t want or be able to sell it.

6. For the love of insight

The best insights come from a strategist who thinks research and positioning are fun. And because it’s fun, the strategist is fully present and aware, engaged and curious.

Only if you are fully present can you hear what people are saying. It’s not enough to just listen. You listen to words, agreements, answers. You hear insights, contradictions, patterns, confusion, enthusiasm. If you are aware, you can gain a more holistic understanding of what’s happening in the research environment:

  • What is body language telling you?
  • What are the intonations in how respondents talk that might give you a more authentic response?
  • How does the energy in your research space indicate consumer attitude?

Research is about human-to-human interaction, not a facilitator and a bunch of people being facilitated. The more engaged you are with them and what they are saying, the more they will open up. The more curious you are, the better you will explore and probe the subject.   Ask her kids’ names at introductions, and use those names when you ask about being a mom or whether this new website is relevant to her family.  Ask him where he wants to go on vacation someday, and bring it up when you talk about dreams and aspirations. Laugh when someone says something funny, be awed when someone says something (they think) is amazing.  Be engaged with them, and they’ll engage with you. Demonstrate that you love what you are doing, and they’ll love it too.

The best people who do research are curious. About people, situations, ideas, thoughts, attitudes, products, categories. Even the most banal categories can be interesting if you really care about gaining rich and juicy insights.  It’s about recapturing your innocence, not being afraid to ask why and how and explain this to me.  It’s about assuming you know nothing, and desperately wanting to learn and understand.

Curiosity might’ve killed the cat, but it saved the strategy.

Sara Schor, EVP, Strategy

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Sterling Buzz…

Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

Our head of Innovation, DeeDee Gordon, gets profiled on GraphicDesign.com.

deedee

The-Collaboratory is a key element of how we approach innovation at Sterling. 
We believe in innovating in the context of the culture. We look at each innovation challenge as it exists within todayĘĽs society and all of the things going on in the world that are impacting the specific opportunity—the brandĘĽs truths and business objectives, macro trends, category trends, marketplace dynamics, consumer expectations and needs, etc. 
We use the-Collaboratory to co-create with consumers and develop new products, services, and experiences that truly resonate with a given audience. It provides a constant feedback loop for our own work as well as for the work of our clients, and this direct link to consumers is truly priceless.”

Read on to see how Sterling’s The-Collaboratory, our unique innovation co-creation tool has been redesigned for maximum results, and to learn everything you wanted to know about DeeDee…

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Emotions on the Rise

Friday, November 12th, 2010

This week I was one of nearly 1000 attendees at the Annual Market Research Event that took place in San Diego, California. There are all sorts of reasons why people attend this conference – for me, it was the opportunity to hear the chatter from within the research business and to get a sense of what’s important to this tribe of bright people and specifically what they are thinking and feeling about the future.

So let me start with a few personal observations: (more…)