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A Brand Manager’s Practical Guide to Brand Tracking
By E2E Research | December 14, 2022

What Is Brand Tracking

Brand tracking is a marketing research technique that takes measurements of a brand at regular intervals of time. The goal is to identify those things having positive or negative impacts on the growth of the brand and to make strategic changes that will improve its chances of success.

 

Brand trackers typically fall into three categories. Some focus on financial metrics such as customer, sales, market share, or price data and rely on business intelligence and data analytics. These studies typically use pre-existing, internal business data. Other trackers use behavior data such as website page clicks or search volumes.

 

Finally, some brand trackers rely on consumer metrics such as perception, opinion, and behavior data. These studies typically use questionnaires or user-generated social media listening data. Here, we will focus mainly on brand tracking using consumer metrics as measured by questionnaire data.

 

 

What are the Benefits of Brand Tracking

Brand tracking has many benefits for brand managers, marketers, and business leaders.

 

Trackers help brand managers:

  • Understand the perceptions a variety of target audiences or personas have about the brand in terms of what they think, feel, and do
  • Understand the pain points of each target audience
  • Identify the product features, messages, and channels that matter to their audience
  • Improve products and services in keeping with the needs and wants of their audience

Decorative image

  • Understand how customers position the brand within the competitive space based on product capabilities, pricing, and channels, etc.
  • Monitor the performance of competitors in terms of which ones to pay attention to because they are gaining or losing ground over their brand

 

Trackers help marketers

  • Understand how various target audiences as identified through segmentation research perceive and react to a variety of branding and messaging strategies
  • Identify and optimize under and over-performing marketing and brand strategies
  • Identify under and over-performing marketing channels that deserve or don’t deserve additional funding

 

Trackers help business leaders

  • Identify whether a brand is meeting, beating, or missing growth expectations
  • Identify concerns about a product, channel, or competitive brand before they escalate into problems
  • Discover opportunities for innovation

 

 

Key Metrics for Brand Tracking

Theoretically, there are unlimited questions that could be asked as part of a brand tracker. However, to ensure research participants remain engaged and can generate quality data, it’s important to focus on just a few key metrics. Here are some example questions to consider.

 

Brand Purchase: Brand purchase is one of the most important metrics to track as it reflects recalled behavior over perceptions. This is particularly important when you understand that people regularly buy things they don’t personally like because of cost or availability, or because those items are for other people. Keep in mind that, for some people, purchase could be more accurately described as trial – a one time purchase that they don’t plan to make again.

  • In just the last 7 days, what brands of product category have you bought? (Unaided)
  • In just the last 7 days, which of these brands of product category have you bought? (Aided)

 

Brand Repurchase: Like purchase, this metric reflects recalled behavior. In this case, it measures purchase of the brand on multiple occasions. Similar to brand purchase, repurchase could be an artifact of cost or availability rather than loyalty or brand love. However, repeat purchase is the goal of most brands.

  • The next time you go shopping, which brand of product category will you buy? (Unaided)
  • The next time you go shopping, which of these brands will you buy? (Aided)
  • Which of these brands do you buy most often?
  • Which of these brands do you buy at least once per month?

 

Brand Loyalty: Most brands are keen to create brand loyalty. People who are truly brand loyal are much less likely to switch to competitive brands even when they are more readily available or have more favorable pricing. This makes premium pricing a possibility.

  • If your preferred brand was not available in your usual store, would you buy a different brand, wait until your brand was available in your store, or go to another store?

 

Brand Preference: Brand preference indicates which brand people would choose if the appropriate situation arose. Remember that even though people may prefer a brand, they might never buy it if it’s not the right price, not available at their store, or disliked by other household members.

  • When you think of this product category, which brand do you most prefer? (Unaided)
  • From this list of brands, which one do you most prefer? (Aided)

 

Brand Consideration: When retailers offer a large number of brand choices, people may focus their attention on just a few of those brands. Your brand needs to be strong enough to stand out amongst all the competitive offerings to remain in that final consideration set. Again, consideration is not the same as purchase – someone could always keep a well-respected brand in their consideration set but never actually buy it.

  • When you think of this product category, which brands would you consider buying? (Unaided)
  • From this list of brands, which ones would you considering buying? (Aided)

 

Unaided and Aided Brand Awareness: Unaided awareness occurs when people are asked about brands in the category and they choose to name your brand. Aided (prompted) awareness is typically higher and reflects the percentage of people who recognize your brand in a list of competitive brand names or logos.

  • When you think of this product category, which brands come to mind first? (Unaided)
  • From this list of brands, which ones have you heard of? (Aided)

 

Brand Recall: Hours, days, or weeks after seeing your brand in a campaign or in the news, do people remember seeing it? High recall occurs when messaging is intriguing or relevant enough to generate notice and retention.

  • In just the last 7 days, what brands of product category have you seen advertised on TV? (Unaided)
  • In just the last 7 days, which of these brands of product category have you seen advertised on TV? (Aided)

 

Brand Perceptions: Brand perception metrics are far more nebulous than the previous metrics discussed. They generally reflect opinions, attitudes, and emotions people have about the brand, whether conscious or unconscious, and are typically measured via attribute batteries or lists of ideas. These metrics are most helpful at supporting or driving the other metrics.

  • Which of these words reflect your opinions about this brand?
  • What 3 things do you like about this brand?
  • Please explain the differences between Brand A and Brand B.
  • Which of these brands is most innovative? Fun? Likeable? Effective? Different?

 

 

 

How Often Should You Run a Brand Tracker

 

The key differentiator of trackers is that they are run at regular intervals over time, perhaps daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, or annually. Here are a few key criteria to keep in mind as you decide.

 

How active is your brand? Think about whether you launch new campaigns, run webinars, make major announcements, or change product features daily, weekly, monthly or less often. If people see new and different activity from you on a regular basis, you may need to conduct your trackers more regularly so you can identify which items have hit or missed the mark.

 

How active is your category? If your category experiences rapid innovation, news headlines that constantly change, or new competitors constantly entering the arena, you might need to track more frequently. Consumer opinions could quickly and easily change based on any of those and you’ll need to identify and act on external risks to your brand as quickly as possible.

 

What is your measurement tool? Social media data, sales data, online purchase ratings, and consumer generated reviews are easily tracked on a daily basis, even an hourly basis. In rare cases, questionnaires have been used for daily tracking but they’re more often used for weekly or less frequent tracking. If your metrics are best measured by social media data, you could choose more frequent intervals as long as they don’t eat up someone’s time unnecessarily, (e.g., manual preparation or analysis).

 

Remember, just because you can track and measure something more often doesn’t mean you should. Track your metrics as often as is necessary to be proactive and reactive in your category environment.

 

 

How to Conduct a Brand Tracker Study

 

  1. Identify your brand purpose, mission, and vision. In order to know what to track, you first need to know what your brand stands for, and what you want your consumers to think, feel, and do about your brand. With this information, you can ensure your data collection tool addresses key concepts and can generate relevant results.

 

  1. Identify your target audience. It’s easy to think only about your own customers but that will generate an incomplete picture of your brand. Also consider people who might eventually purchase your product whether for themselves or for a friend or family member. With this information in hand, you can ensure the questions you write will make sense to both users of the product and buyers of the product.

 

  1. Identify the key brands. You might be tempted to include every product your company makes in your tracker but that will lead to an unfocused and disorganized questionnaire that people can’t answer accurately. Focus on one brand in one category. Then, identify the key competitors of that brand, including the brands you admire, are jealous of, and worried about. This will give you a baseline metric to understand whether you’re over or under-performing in your category, and to identify which brands you’re taking share from – or which brands are taking share from you!

 

  1. Identify the key metrics. As previously described, there are literally hundreds of potential metrics to choose from. Identify the ones that are most relevant in identifying the success and failure of your brand. Don’t let your ego or chasing KPIs prevent you from seeing the negatives. Without those, you won’t know what needs to be fixed in order to achieve huge growth.

 

  1. Identify what success looks like. You need a clear definition of success to prevent confused interpretations of the data and to keep yourself honest. For struggling brands, status quo might be success. For huge brands, 3% growth might be success. But, fresh brands might only find success with growth higher than 35%. Decide on the success requirement for each key metric prior to data collection.

 

  1. Identify the sample size. Once you know what your metrics and your success measures are, calculate the sample size required to accommodate them. For example, if success for you is an increase in purchase rates from 5% to 25%, you might only need a sample size of 100. But, if success is an increase from 5% to 8%, you’ll need a much larger sample size to be able to reliably detect it, perhaps up to 1000.

 

 

  1. E2E Research Decorative imageBuild the tool. Now that you know what your metrics are, build the tool to measure them. That could be a questionnaire, social media listening data, click stream data, or sales data. Using a combination of two or more methods will allow you to cross-validate your findings so your conclusions and recommendations are more trustworthy. As you build the tool, make sure to measure both positive and negative aspects of the brand. Chasing positive KPIs rather than understanding your brand means you won’t be able to prevent or fix problems and the brand will suffer in the longer term. And, take the time to create an interesting tool that will help participants remain engaged and pay close attention.

 

  1. Collect data. Take care to not add bias to your data by insisting on extremely short field times. Collecting data over 2 weeks ensures that shift workers, weekend and evening workers, technology avoiders, and people traveling all have the opportunity to participate. Without these people, your data could be biased towards people who are at their keyboards at the moment you launch the survey, a small minority of people.

 

  1. E2E Research Decorative imageAnalyze the results. When brands take small or few actions throughout the year, tracker results can be stable and minimally useful. As a result, in addition to basic frequencies and averages for the total sample and subsamples, use dashboards to search for unexpected or unusual results. Those serendipitous results could be random chance never to be seen again, but they could also be an amazing discovery. Be prepared to conduct ad hoc research to confirm or deny those discoveries.

 

  1. Act on the results. Based on your data analysis, change your branding, messaging, advertising, marketing, or business processes to improve negative aspects and leverage positive aspects. Remember that consumers need adequate time to notice, remember, and truly internalize the messages you’re sharing so don’t worry if you don’t see the numbers you hoped for after the first wave. And, if you notice issues or flaws in the data collection tool, improve those as well. Remember, you CAN change a tracker.

 

  1. Repeat. You won’t need to completely repeat each stage each time, but you should at least review and consider whether any stages need to be updated or improved.

 

 

What’s Next?

Are you ready to take proactive steps to understand your brand and make strategic changes to improve its chances of success? Email your project specifications to our research experts using Projects at E2Eresearch dot com. We’d love to help you turn your enigmas into enlightenment!

 

 

Learn more from our case studies

 

 

Learn more from our other blog posts
Discovering Brand Awareness to Identify Effective Channel Development | A technology survey case study
By E2E Research | November 22, 2022

Research Objective

  • A B2B technology services provider needed to understand the level of brand awareness among their client base.
  • They needed to understand which types of their clients were aware of their brand, and what those clients expected to receive from suppliers such as them.
  • They also wished to understand which channels would be best suited for reaching their desired audience with marketing communications.

 

Scope & Methodology

  • We designed a 15 minute survey targeted to middle and senior buyers and leadership at the targeted businesses in their desired industry.
  • The survey identified brand awareness of a number of competitive brands for comparison, the types of services expected from each of these brands, and a set of potential media sites that the client would be willing to consider as advertising channels.

 

Value Delivered

  • As a result of this study, the client learned that their brand awareness was lower than anticipated. They were able to determine which channels would be most efficient for reaching their desired target audience.

 

Client Quote

“The results are really useful for understanding our presence in the market, how to position ourselves in future and how to reach our audience. Many thanks for your help with all this. I’m sure we’ll be back in touch for further research in future!“

– Director of Marketing

Developing competitively superior hot meal formulations | A fast food CLT sensory test
By E2E Research | July 5, 2022

Research Objective

  • Our quick service partner was expanding to additional high growth markets and needed to understand consumer perceptions of several food categories and formulations against a key competitive brand.
  • They needed a trustworthy partner with extensive global experience who could manage all aspects of the project including professional consulting, recruitment, field management, and analysis and reporting.

 

Scope & Methodology

  • More than 1000 participants were pre-recruited reflecting GenPop category non-rejectors. Quotas were placed on age and gender.
  • Over a period of 6 days, a sequential monadic preference taste test compared a set of ingredient formulations across several product categories. Product brands were concealed.
  • Using tablets, participants rated each product across a range of sensory metrics, including flavor, texture, temperature, level of cooking, color, and many other features.


 

Value Delivered

  • Using JAR analysis, penalty analysis, and a priori action standards, our partner discovered which formulations were preferred for each product category.
  • They also learned which primary and secondary features of each formulation and product needed to be retooled to further increase their odds of success.

 

30 Questions Food and Beverage Market Researchers Need to Answer
By E2E Research | January 13, 2022

There’s more to creating a successful food or beverage product than selling something you love eating or drinking. Consumers are always on the lookout for food and beverage options that are scrumptious but also better quality, healthier, affordable and easily available.

 

If you’re hoping to move a product from successful with kids in your household to successful with kids in your country, many questions need to be identified, answered, and acted on. This list of questions focused around the five Ps will ensure you gather the information you need to get there.

 

 

Better Understand the Product: Nutrition, sensory, packaging

Decorative imageAt the heart of a successful food or beverage business is a carefully researched and designed product that meets the key needs of its target audience – yes, even food and beverages products have key needs. By conducting well designed surveys and product/sensory tests via IHUTs or Central Location Tests, you can understand:

  • What nutritional, sensory, or emotional needs are your shoppers and consumers trying to meet and what unmet needs need additional development?
  • How is the food or beverage used to meet unexpected needs such that new audiences could be targeted? E.g., are slow foods being converted into fast foods, are meat foods being converted into meat-free foods, are solid foods being converted into drinkable foods?
  • What features, whether sensory, emotional, packaging or otherwise, of the product are unique within the broader, competitive category and how could they serve as your unique selling points?
  • How are the package and eating implements “correctly” and “incorrectly” used suggesting needs for redesign or improvements?
  • Does the memorability of your food or beverage require improvements in terms of its sensory features, packaging, branding, colors, or logos?
  • Should certain product lines be expanded or reduced based on growing or decreasing market needs?

.

    Review a product case study:

 

 

Better Understand the People: Cooks, bakers, shoppers, eaters, snackers, caregivers, meal planners, meal preppers

Decorative imageBefore a new food or beverage product is even launched, it’s important to understand the perceptions of all key stakeholders. From eaters to shoppers and those who will be preparing or recommending the product, it’s imperative that each group understand the benefits and drawbacks of the product to ensure maximum success. Using questionnaires, business intelligence, and secondary research, you can understand a number of key questions:

 

  • Who are your target shoppers and consumers in terms of their demographic, psychographic, family, social, economic, and health characteristics?
  • Which stakeholders come into contact with your food or beverage e.g., caregivers, shoppers, cooks, bakers, eaters, snackers, meal planners, meal preppers?
  • Which stakeholders will influence your target audience to consider using or buying food and beverages?
  • What does each stakeholder group need, want, feel, and prefer, and how do their needs conflict with each other?
  • What drives each key stakeholder group to choose, use, buy, and recommend your brand vs competitive brands?
  • How does the shopper journey evolve from discovering a need through to shopping, comparing, and buying while also considering nutritional, emotional, financial, and social needs at each stage?
  • What personal histories and experiences do people have with the food or beverage product and category including with your brand and competitive brands?

.

    Review a stakeholder case study

 

 

Better Understand Placement, Industry, and Competitive Market Space

Decorative imageEvery food and beverage product exists within a broad ecosystem of competitive brands and companies. By conducting engaging questionnaires or secondary desk research, you can understand a wide range of business problems such as:

 

  • Who are your primary and secondary competitors locally, globally, and virtually?
  • What sensory, product, physical, emotional, social, and economic needs is the market failing to address?
  • How has the competitive landscape changed over the last year and how might the food and beverage category evolve over the next 3 to 5 years within your region and potential expansion regions?
  • Where are the white spaces to develop new food and beverages, or new service locations?
  • Can secondary data help you understand how large your existing market is and how large it could be while still remaining profitable?

.

   Review a market case study 

 

 

Better Understand Promotions, Advertising, and Campaigns

Decorative imageWith a great food or beverage innovation and a well understand target audience, a marketing campaign is often required to reach out to a wider audience and introduce the masses to your offering. Using questionnaires or data analytics, a number of key questions can be answered:

 

  • Which online and offline information channels do your consumers and shoppers use to learn about new food and beverages, gather recommendations, or make purchases?
  • What types of messaging would be most successful at reaching your target audience and differentiating your product from competitive products?
  • What types of ads would be most effective with each of your audience segments when considering likability, meaningfulness, believability and the likelihood to act?
  • What types of food and beverage marketing campaigns are more likely to be successful?
  • What types of brands, companies, or influencers would your consumers and buyers like to see incorporated in an integrated marketing campaign?
  • Which food and beverage concepts are most memorable and would generate the most action from your target audience?

.

   Review an advertising case study:

 

 

Create A Fair and Profitable Pricing Strategy

Decorative imageThere is more to pricing than picking a number that will generate profit. A price that is too high can reduce recommendations from friends and family. A price that is too low leaves achievable profit on the table. A final price can only be determined by understanding your true profit margin, market pricing, and stakeholder needs. To build the most effective pricing strategy for your new food or beverage, conduct the appropriate surveys, interviews, and secondary research first.

 

  • Based on secondary research, how are competitive products on the market currently priced?
  • Using questionnaire data, what type of pricing strategy is most appealing to shoppers?
  • What type of pricing strategy would facilitate product recommendations from influential friends and family?
  • Which user segment has the least and the greatest revenue potential?
  • Based on a Conjoint or MaxDiff questionnaire, which product features drive higher and lower prices?
  • What type of pricing strategy is fair and accessible versus out of reach to lower income people vs higher income people?

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   Review a pricing case study

 

 

Conclusion

Creating a successful food or beverage product requires a foundation of well designed and executed research coupled with well actioned research results. Whether you’re tasked with supporting the growth of an innovative cannabis beverage or helping a company understand the different needs of buyers and consumers, our team has years of experience helping researchers, marketers, and brand managers generate great quality food and beverage data and insights. Please email your project specifications to our research experts using Projects at E2Eresearch dot com. We’d love to help you convert your enigmas to enlightenment!

 

 

 Learn at upcoming food and beverage industry conferences

 

Listen to some great podcasts about food and beverage marketing

 

8 (Not-So) Secret Strategies for Great Market and Consumer Research
By E2E Research | August 25, 2021

The secret to successful research may not be a secret but in the hustle and bustle of work, we often forget one or more of them. If that describes your day today, then consider this your quick and friendly reminder!

 

 

#1 Don’t sell: solve problems.

As researchers, our job isn’t to sell questionnaire design, scripting, data analysis, report writing, and dashboards. Those may in fact be the specific services we offer but our real job is help our partners discover practical solutions to their business problems – Why isn’t this SKU selling, what new product do consumers want, who are my customers, how can I upsell to a target audience, how can I complete more projects when half my team is on holidays, how can I help a client when I don’t have all the services they need?

 

Our job is to thoroughly understand the business and research problems, and then translate them into appropriate solutions. Whether it’s concept studies, customer segmentation, journey mapping, market forecasting, or providing professional services, if we can’t translate a need into a custom solution, we’ve not done our job.

 

 

#2 Know your audience

A lot of market research starts by truly understanding a specific audience. Who are they – what are their hobbies, where do they live, where do they work, what does their family look like? It’s really easy to calculate a median age and the percentage of customers who are female but the last few years have taught us a lot about intersectionality – it’s not just “women,” it’s “disabled Black women.” In the research world, we understand this as customer segments or personas.

 

After conducting a well-designed survey, focus group, personal interviews, social listening, or analytics, you’ll have the necessary data to run a reliable segmentation and identify 3 to 5 distinct target groups of people within your ideal audience. For example, a couple of common ones are Primary Grocery Shoppers and Moms of Infants.

 

Once the data has spoken, you can then build a unique buyer persona, a fictional character, for each target group to clearly outline each one’s unique characteristics. This will make developing a set of products, prices, messaging, and marketing that genuinely resonates with each one much easier.

 

 

#3 Map your marketing

Researchers spend a lot of time mapping journeys – shopper journeys, patient journeys, student journeys, employee journeys. Building products that people want to use and buy means understanding the wants, needs, and challenges customers experience at every stage of the journey. You might discover that the most problematic stage, in fact, is not the most problematic stage.

 

Build a plan to understand every stage of the journey from end to end. As eloquently shared by Biz Davis from Abacus Agency, you need to understand whether your brand is lacking in awareness, interest, consideration, purchase, or advocacy, and whether consumers want to be entertained, inspired, educated, convinced, or delighted.

 

 

#4 Think like you search

If you’ve written a questionnaire before, you know how important this tip is. Sure, you could write a questionnaire as if you were Charles Dickens showing off his stunning, grammatically correct 200-word sentences with multiple, embedded clauses.

 

Or.

 

You could search on TikTok and Twitter and find out how people really talk. Use phrases regular people use. Use words everyone understands even if there’s a technically more precise word. Write questions and answers the same way people search and you’ll end up with a questionnaire that people want to answer!

 

 

#5 Promote your content

In the marketing world, this means thinking about native ads, social sharing, and cross-channel marketing. But for researchers, it means sharing your research across the company – from researcher to brand manager to innovation team to development team to marketer.

 

When everyone in the company is familiar with the results of your research, they can each do their part to amplify the outcome of the insight.

 

 

#6 Tell a great story

How do you get colleagues to share your research? Easy! Well, it’s not that easy. Storytelling is a necessary skill that will carry your research results throughout the company. Let people know what is exciting about the insights, how they could be used to reach consumers in unexpected ways, how they could personally benefit from understanding the results.

 

And sure, though the bulk of the research will be educational, informative, and standard, be sure to incorporate just a small bit of fun along the way.

 

 

#7 Become an authority

Don’t rest on the laurels of the research you did last year. That’s old news now. The theory may be correct but times and technology have changed. Follow up last year’s study with one that builds on what you’ve learned from your colleagues, seen among your competitors, and witnessed in related industries.

 

Show your colleagues what your brand could become if everyone worked together to leverage new, innovative research methods, techniques, and skills. Become the expert at your company who constantly pushes everyone forward towards building a better product and a better company. Get that seat at the table.

 

 

#8 Start small to grow big

You could build and execute a 5-year research plan.

 

Or, you could start small with a single project that gives you a solid overview of one product or target audience. Inhale it, memorize it, internalize it.

 

Then build the five-year plan. Because at this point, you’ve seen all the strengths and weaknesses among a specific product, how your colleagues work together, how your company systems work, and what’s happening in your industry. You have perspective now.

 

Now you get it. Now you can think really big.

 

 

My inspiration for this post?

I watched a webinar given by Biz Davis from Abacus Agency in Toronto in which he shared a bunch of his secrets for building an effective marketing strategy. The webinar will be posted on their website very soon so do go have a peek.

 

While watching, all I could think was how relevant his secrets were, in particular, for market and consumer researchers. The headers are his words, and I riffed on the ideas to bring you the research tips.

 

Are you ready to plan a great market or consumer research project from End to End? Email your project specifications to our research experts using Projects at E2Eresearch dot com.

 

 

Learn more from our other blog posts

Identifying Optimum Price Corridors to Predict Volume Share | A Food and Beverage Simulation Case Study
By E2E Research | July 27, 2021

Research Objective

  • The client had limited information about consumer price responsiveness and the extent of competitor price fluctuations. They needed to predict:
    • Gain/loss in volume share based on price movements in the category.
    • Optimized prices to achieve targeted volume share in the event of competitor price actions.

 

Scope & Methodology

  • The project included building a predictive model to understand interactions among client’s and competitors’ price elasticity. It identified price gaps/thresholds which could result in significant share changes.
  • Further, we created a simulator to help identify optimum price bands to operate in given the competitors’ price changes.

E2E Research Case Study E2E Research Case Study

 

Value Delivered

  • We proactively identified the maximum price threshold to respond to a List Price Increase
  • The tool was extensively used to identify best price strategies in the dynamically changing market.
  • The client was able to maintain an optimum price differential against fluctuating competitor pricing.

 

Check out other related case studies

Customer Behavioral Segmentation to Support Targeted Marketing | A BFSI Business Intelligence Case Study
By E2E Research | July 13, 2021

Research Objective

  • An asset management firm with a large customer base needed to be more competitive to increase their share of customers with investible assets.
  • They needed to better understand their current and potential customers and their behavior so as to grow their business and prevent attrition.

 

Scope & Methodology

  • A comprehensive, meta-analytics solution integrating insights from segmentation data, Habits & Practices data & brand equity data was conducted.
  • Key need-states for a variety of consumer segments were identified and brands were overlaid in the market to identify white-space potential.

E2E Research Case Study

 

Value Delivered

  • Growing white-space opportunities were identified that showed the brand had potential to stretch their equity and address evolving consumer needs.

 

Check out other BFSI case studies

Building a Strategic Business Plan Grounded in Industry Data | A Healthcare Competitive Analysis Case Study
By E2E Research | June 29, 2021

Research Objective

  • A global OTC company wished to ground the annual strategic plan for all of their product categories in data drawn from category performance across all markets.
  • They needed to identify category growth prospects among top performing markets, ingredients, & brands and map their brands accordingly.

 

Scope & Methodology

  • We processed historic and forecasted data from reputable third parties for about 70 markets by category, sub-category, ingredients, brands, & companies, and adjusted sales based on latest mergers and acquisitions.
  • We conducted a root cause analysis to identify top growth prospects and a SWOT analysis to map client’s brands onto this.

E2E Research Case Study E2E Research Case Study

 

Value Delivered

  • The client was able to build a more targeted and strategic annual global plan encompassing all categories and brands that would be more competitive in the current and future market.

 

Check out other healthcare case studies

30 Questions Medical, Pharmaceutical, and Healthcare Market Researchers Need to Answer to Help Support a Successful Business
By E2E Research | April 30, 2021

Market research is the foundation of any successful business. Within the healthcare industry, it helps us to better understand perceived strengths and weaknesses of medical devices and pharmaceuticals, gain a better understanding of key stakeholder wants and needs, gain a better understanding of the industry and competitive market space, gain a better understanding of advertising campaigns and promotions, and create fair and profitable pricing strategies. Let’s address each of these areas individually.

 

(Of course, feel free to skip to the end for a list of healthcare/pharma conferences and podcasts!)

 

 

Better Understand the Product Strengths and Weaknesses

At the heart of a successful business is a carefully researched and designed product or service that meets the key needs of its target audience. By conducting well designed surveys and product/sensory tests via IHUTs or Central Location Tests, you can understand:

 

  • What needs does your product meet and what unmet needs need additional development?
  • What features of the product are unique within the broader, competitive category and can serve as your unique selling points?
  • How is the product correctly and incorrectly used suggesting needs for training or redesign?
  • How is your product used in unanticipated ways such that new needs or audiences could be addressed?
  • Does the memorability of your product require improvements in terms of its features, branding, colors, or logos?
  • Should certain product lines be expanded or reduced based on growing or decreasing market needs?

.

    Review a product case study:

 

 

Better Understand the People: Patients, Caregivers, Physicians, Healthcare Workers, Payers

While a quality product or service is being build, it’s important to understand the perceptions of all key stakeholders. From users to buyers and those who will be recommending the product, it’s imperative that each group understand the strengths and weaknesses of the product in order to ensure maximum success. Using questionnaires, business intelligence, and secondary research, there are a number of key questions you will need to understand about your key stakeholders:

 

  • Who is your target audience in terms of their demographic, psychographic, family, social, economic, and health characteristics?
  • How does the patient journey evolve from the onset of symptoms through to diagnosis, treatment, management, and recovery while understanding medical, emotional, financial, and social needs and situations?
  • What personal experiences do patients have within the category including adverse events from your brand and competitive brands?
  • Which stakeholders come into contact with your treatments, medical devices, or healthcare facilities e.g., buyers, administrators, payers, technicians, clinicians, patients, families?
  • What does each stakeholder group need, want, feel, and prefer?
  • What drives each key stakeholder group to choose, use, buy, and recommend your brand vs competitive brands, e.g., clinicians, patients, payers, buyers, sellers
  • Which stakeholders will influence your target audience to consider using or buying treatments, medical devices, or facilities?

    Review a stakeholder case study

 

 

Better Understand the Placement, Industry, and Competitive Market Space

Every product or service exists within a broad ecosystem of competitive brands and companies. By conducting questionnaires or secondary desk research, you can understand a wide range of business problems such as:

 

  • Who are your primary and secondary competitors locally, globally, and virtually?
  • What product, physical, emotional, social, and economic needs is the market needs failing to address?
  • How has the competitive landscape changed over the last year and how might it forecast into the next 3 to 5 years within your country and potential expansion countries?
  • Where are the white spaces to develop new products, extend services, or open new locations?
  • Can secondary data help us understand how large our existing market is and how large it could be while remaining profitable?

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   Review a market case study

 

 

 

Better Understand Promotions, Advertising, and Campaigns

With a great product or service built and the target audience well understood, a marketing campaign is normally required to reach out to the target audience and introduce them to your offering. Using questionnaires or data analytics, a number of key questions can be answered:

 

  • Which online and offline information channels do your users and buyers use to learn about new products, gather recommendations, or make purchases?
  • What types of messaging would be most successful at reaching your target audience and differentiating your brand from competitors?
  • What types of ads would be most effective with each of your audience segments when considering likability, meaningfulness, believability and the likelihood to act?
  • What types of healthcare marketing campaigns are more likely to be successful?
  • What types of brands, companies, or influencers would your users and buyers like to be incorporated in an integrated marketing campaign?
  • Which concepts are most memorable and would generate the most action from your target audience?

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   Review an advertising case study:

 

 

Create A Fair and Profitable Pricing Strategy

There is more to pricing than picking a number that will generate profit. A price that is too high can reduce physician recommendations and insurance coverage. A price that is too low leaves achievable profit on the table. A final price can only be determined by understanding your true profit margin, market pricing, and stakeholder needs. To build the most effective pricing strategy for your medical device, pharmaceutical product, or service, conduct the appropriate surveys, interviews, and secondary research first.

 

  • Based on secondary research, how are competitive products on the market currently priced?
  • Using questionnaire data, what type of pricing strategy is most appealing to healthcare administrators and payers?
  • What type of pricing strategy would facilitate product recommendations from clinicians and physicians?
  • Which user segment has the least and the greatest revenue potential?
  • Based on a Conjoint or MaxDiff questionnaire, which product features drive higher and lower prices?
  • Which set of product features would drive the most profit?
  • What type of pricing strategy is fair for and accessible versus out of reach to patients?

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   Review a pricing case study

 

 

 

Conclusion

Building a successful medical, pharmaceutical, or healthcare product or service requires a foundation of well designed and executed research coupled with well analyzed and actioned results. Whether you’re tasked with supporting the growth of an innovative new brand or helping a company understand their buyers and their business, our team has more than ten years of experience helping researchers, marketers, and brand managers generate great quality healthcare data and insights for the questions outlined above. Please feel free to email your project specifications to our research experts using Projects at E2Eresearch dot com. We’d love to help!

 

 

Learn at upcoming healthcare industry conferences

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Listen to some great podcasts about healthcare marketing

 

 

Consumer Perceptions Towards Online Ordering & Delivery Services | A Survey + Secondary Research Case Study
By E2E Research | April 27, 2021

Research Objective

  • A new food delivery company wished to understand consumer perceptions of online food delivery services in an Indian market.
  • They needed to understand:
    • Why consumers choose online delivery services
    • Perceptions of online food delivery portals
    • Barriers to using online food delivery services
    • The competitive environment including expansions, new product launches
  • They also needed to understand key drivers, challenges, and perceptions of pricing.

 

Scope & Methodology

  • A structured questionnaire was designed to identify which food delivery websites consumers are using and why, and focused on key drivers, pricing, and trends in the online food ordering and delivery market.
  • The target audience included students, self-employed people, homemakers, and service employees.
  • Secondary data sources included news articles, company annual reports, a variety of websites, press releases, and other relevant, trusted documents.
  • Key analyses included:
    • Understanding customer satisfaction with ordering and searching for specific food items
    • Identifying more suitable restaurant selections given the desired food item
    • Understanding desires for offers and discounts
    • Understanding concerns about on-time delivery needs and customer services
    • Understanding customer needs and wants for improving the online food ordering process.

 

Value Delivered

  • Our expert analyses enabled the client to better understand customer desires in product offerings, customer satisfaction, and regional presence of all major food delivery competitors.
  • Comprehensive findings and insights allowed them to make more strategic decisions grounded in data to facilitate the expansion of their business.

 

 

Check out other retail case studies