Archive for the ‘Marketing Research’ Category

Is a Google Search Market Research?

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

A Google search is not market research. However, this is not to say that search engines such as Google, Yahoo, BING, and Ask are not valuable. They can be a source of quick and easy secondary research. Google Trends can also be a valuable tool to see who and how many are searching about specific topics over a given time frame.

Just because it is on the Internet does not mean it is true, factual, real, or of decision-making substance. “Trust, but verify,” as the Russian proverb says. Use search engines to start and not finish the research process. Use search engines to help educate you on some of the terms and concepts needed to go deeper as you dive into both secondary and primary research.

Search engines cannot give you the critical tool for decision making: primary data. You can only find this from direct, new, fresh, and feet-on-the-street effort.

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Marketing Research: What is Primary Source Research?

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Primary research is new, firsthand, direct information that you—that’s right, you—collect from people and research. It comes from the horse’s mouth, as the saying goes. It is direct testimony and not hearsay. You get it, learn it, collect it, record it, code it, and apply it. Primary is gold. It’s the best and most valuable data you can find. The more you get, the better your decisions will be and the greater the chances your small business will succeed.

Have any examples?

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Is a Google Search All the Marketing Research You Need?

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Doing a Google search is NOT market research!

Google can sometimes find valuable secondary sources, but beware.  If all you do is Google and expect to find revenue-generating research, you are traveling only on surface roads.  You may not find your road to ROI.  In short, you may not get to your destination.

Solid marketing research goes much deeper than a search engine.  You have to do some thinking, legwork, and primary source research to make safer decisions.

How do you do market research?

Please let me know your thoughts…

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