segunda-feira, maio 27, 2013

The Insight Innovation Challenge: 22 Companies Transforming Market Research

 

 

Posted by Leonard Murphy

Wednesday, May 22, 2013, 10:20 am

Posted in category Analytics, Behavioral Economics, Big Data, Branding, Business Leadership,Business Practices, Consumer Anthropology, Consumer Experience, Consumer Technology, Data Visualization, Digital Consumerism, Digital Marketing, Economic Trends, Effective Marketing, Events,Gamification, General Information, Industry Trends, Innovation in Market Research, Market Research in the News, Market Research Techniques, Marketing, Mobile Research, Neuromonitoring, Online Qualitative Research, Online Research, Respondent Engagement, Social Media, social sample, State of the Industry, The Global View, Voice of Costumer (VOC)

 

After weeks of reviewing almost 70 candidates, the IIeX Advisory Board have chosen the companies to meet The Top 25 Unmet Needs Of Insights Clients onstage at the Insight Innovation Exchange event in Philadelphia next month.

 

Editor’s Note: Just to be clear, the list below is not to be construed as something like the GRIT 50 which is a ranking of innovative companies by the industry as a whole. These are simply 22 of the 70 companies that submitted a proposal to the Insight Innovation Challenge who met the selection criteria. There are MANY other companies working to transform MR not included here simply because they didn’t submit. The good news is that a whole bunch of them will also be participating at theIIeX event next month, so if you’re looking for a more comprehensive overview of innovative firms in MR that would be a very good place top start.

After weeks of reviewing almost 70 candidates, the IIeX Advisory Board have chosen the companies  to meet The Top 25 Unmet Needs Of Insights Clients onstage at the Insight Innovation Exchange event in Philadelphia next month.

Since we had so many worthy candidates and considering that originally 25 Challenges were submitted, we’re going to expand the Challenge presentations to 2 hours on Wednesday and allow 22 companies to present.

All are very different in their approaches to solving the business needs originally stated and we think the  attendees are going to love hearing about these different solutions to addressing client business needs. 

There are a few familiar (and  maybe even surprising!) names here, but the vast majority are firms we think are  highly innovative and/or potentially disruptive. These companies represent the pioneers who are helping to drive change in our industry and we believe they will emerge as significant players in the future of the this critical business sector. Make no mistake: they ARE transforming our industry, in most cases they are doing it from outside of the traditional definition of what market research is.

Here are all of the selected companies and the challenges each will be tackling: 

Working From The Inside Out To Predict Market Disruptions
GfK

Harnessing 360 Data For Competitive Advantage
blueocean market intelligence

Single-Source Marketing Analytics Goes Mobile
Xyte

Increasing Patient Compliance Through Implicit Understanding
Emotive Analytics

Cheaper, Faster, Better Concept Evaluation At Scale
Mizzouri

Agile Business Intelligence & Data Synthesis
Emanio

Big Data Visualization – Can Art Meet Science?
VisualCue Technologies

Using Communities & Crowdsourcing For Disruptive Innovation
Chaordix

Innovation Engineering: Fail Fast, Fail Cheap, Succeed Faster
Ideas To Go

Omni-Channel & Real-time Experience Tracking
Mesh Planning

Mobile: The Key To Sampling In Emerging Markets
Embee Mobile

Finding & Measuring Disruption Potential
RealEyes

Engaging & Understanding Hard To Reach Populations
CrowdTap

Embracing Open-Source Data Synthesis For Holistic Consumer Insights
TNS

Understanding & Leveraging Unconscious Decisions
Neurons, Inc.

Single-Source & Holistic Views Of Consumers
Whit.Li

A Better Mousetrap: Cheaper, Faster, Better Research Processes
ZappiStore

Video Analytics: Big Data Meets Videos & Images
Videntifier

Representativeness Still Matters: Sample Science In A Fragmented World
Placed

New Models Of Data Analytics & Visualization
StatWing

Enterprise Data Activation: Activating Research Results To Drive Business
Theseus DM

Omni-Channel Media Measurement : All Devices, All Channels, All The Time
Nomi

At the conference, each of these companies will be given 5 minutes to present their solution to the business issue assigned to them.

This special session will take place Wednesday, June 19th as the center point of the special Wednesday session we’re calling  the Investing In The Future Summit: Emerging Markets, Disruptive Innovation & Data Philanthropy.

So why are we doing this? The insight space is changing, but it’s not in a state of chaos: we can influence the direction of the change IF we proactively engage with the key drivers: client business needs, emerging market growth, private/public collaboration, adjacent sector partnerships, data philanthropy and the investment needs of the emerging insight solutions that will lead the future.

Those themes run through-out  the Insight Innovation Exchange conference, but the Investing In The Future Summit is an intensive half day “bonus session” that will focus exclusively on these big issues.

Attendance is limited to 200 and will be on a “first come, first served” basis. Reserve your spot now if you plan to attend.

This is the part of the IIeX event that we believe will create significant long term impact in the insights space, where we’ll stop talking about these topics and instead focus on launching initiatives and solutions to guide the transformation of the global insights space. And the companies we’ve selected for the Challenge are likely to be leaders in this transformation.Now is your chance to meet them first hand and engage with them as potential partners.

We want to build bridges between all of the key stakeholders involved in the industry so that we can establish new collaborative opportunities to support the growth and positive impact of market research. Sound idealistic? Maybe, but these sessions are designed to establish the framework to try it.

And by the way, the Insight Innovation Competition is running right now as well; that is sure to add in even more innovative companies that have been flying under the radar of the industry to the agenda. Combine that with the over 100 industry thought leaders and change agents already speaking and I can guarantee you that this event will deliver more new thinking and, most importantly, solutions, than any other conference this year.

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About Leonard Murphy

Leonard “Lenny” Murphy has been in the Market Research industry for over a decade in various senior level roles, most notably as CEO of full service agency Rockhopper Research, CEO of tech-driven start-up BrandScan360, and Senior Partner of strategic consultancy Gen2 Advisors. A major aspect of his work focuses on collaborating with multiple organizations to help advance innovation and strategic positioning of the market research industry, most prominently as the Editor-in-Chief of the GreenBook Blog and GreenBook Research Industry Trends Report, 2 of the most widely read and influential publications in the global insights industry. Mr. Murphy is a key consultant to numerous insight-focused organizations on both the supplier and client side and an advisor to several technology focused start-ups via his consulting practice. He is involved with numerous organizations including the Insight Innovation Exchange, The ARF, NY AMA, NewMR & MRGA. He also Chairs and produces conferences globally in collaboration with other leading organizations, and speaks about the future of insights and how to deliver maximum business impact at many events annually. He lives in Atlanta, GA with his 5 (yes, 5!) children, Should- be-Sainted wife, dog and a clinically insane cat.

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Audience Measurement In An Age Of Chaos

 

 

Audience measurement has never been easy, but over the last decade or so the complexity of it has reached absurdist proportions.

http://www.greenbookblog.org/2013/05/23/audience-measurement-in-an-age-of-chaos/

By Tom Ewing

I saw a presentation last year about digital audience measurement of the Olympics. First of all the presenter showed a slide about the 2004 Olympics, and it showed a single line – web traffic to highlights sites. Then up came the 2008 Games. Three criss-crossing lines, for smartphones, and web visits, and streaming video. And then the 2012 Games. Mobile web, mobile apps, tablets, streaming video, web visits… the graph had become a thicket of lines. Our visuals for measuring a newly wireless world were uncomfortably, ironically reminiscent of the tangled cluster of device leads around every 00s TV.

Audience measurement has never been easy, but over the last decade or so the complexity of it has reached absurdist proportions. Not only must you measure across a range of channels which grows by the year, you have to get to grips with how those channels interact – and that’s even before you start worrying about effectiveness.

So it’s fascinating to look at the program for a conference like the ARF’s Audience Measurement 8.0 – happening in New York next month  – and see how researchers and channel owners are reacting to this complexity.

Some are gamely embracing it – there are plenty of presentations on second-screening and the unstoppable rise of mobile. As “Mobile Is Eating The World”, an excellent set of slides from Enders Analysis points out, mobile is not simply a shift from one platform to another: it’s an unprecedented and colossal shift in scale for global audiences. The audience measurement industry is further ahead in dealing with this than most parts of the research business.

But more complexity can’t always be the answer. The human mind is not wired to deal with complexity – and this is as true of media buyers and CEOs as it is of audiences. There is a desperate need for simplicity – research which can cut through that thicket of lines, boiling down people’s disparate media activity into easy, useful killer metrics.

This next stage in the measurement game isn’t here yet, but it’s coming, and many of the most interesting presentations at Audience Measurement 8.0 look to anticipate it. The first day Keynote is striking this note of optimism – Starcom MediaVest talking about the need for convergence. Some look to Big Data as the game-changer here – take this interesting bit of speculation, Why Google Will Crush Nielsen, as an example. The argument being Google will win because it can integrate user behavior so completely.

It’s a possibility – but they aren’t the only player. As I type, my Twitter feed is full of reaction to the announcement of the Xbox One, a possible fruition of the long-anticipated “one box to rule them all” convergent living room device. A simplifier for consumers, perhaps – but just another thing to measure for researchers.

As for effectiveness, the picture from Audience Measurement 8.0 is more mixed. Facebook promise “census-level” data which links marketing to outcomes, but elsewhere it’s a familiar story of new technology meeting old assumptions. A presentation promising to reveal “how much entertainment in advertising is too much” is barking up a very old, rotten tree in a world where switching and skipping has never been easier.

But the job of conferences is to reveal every angle on a problem, not just the ones you agree with already. As one presentation puts it, we are living in an “Age of Chaos”. The ARF’s new CEO, Gayle Fuguitt, is revamping the ARF’s conference offerings to bring them up to date in a scarier world – it looks like Audience Measurement 8.0 is a big step in that direction.

quarta-feira, maio 08, 2013

Tablets Grab Nearly Half of Mobile RTB Share Worldwide





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Five keys to creating measurable mobile consumer engagement


Five keys to creating measurable mobile consumer engagement

venture-beat-article-photo-2This sponsored post is produced by Jeff Michaud, Vice President of Marketing, 3Cinteractive.

1. Develop intimacy with your customer's "mobile profile"
In today's mobile-centric world, different demographic and psychographic consumer groups will display varying expectations and demand for mobile interactions with your brand. This makes it critical to understand and segment your customer's demand for mobile in order to build an effective mobile strategy that meets their expectations.

A simple way to build this profile is to conduct a customer survey to measure their satisfaction with the quality and quantity of your current mobile interactions. Combine this with survey questions that gather basic demographic data and you will have a solid base to begin developing mobile profiles of your customers. For a more sophisticated analysis of your customer's mobile profile, Forrester, a global research and advisory firm, provides a comprehensive measurement known as the "Mobile Mind Shift Index" that will put you on the path to truly understanding your customer's demand for mobile.

2. It's not about inventing, it's about improving
Too often today, line-of-business executives responsible for mobile get caught up trying to invent the "next cool thing" to do with mobile. This can lead to a lack of decisive action, or even worse, to a great deal of time and money wasted on mobile apps that don't produce results. Remember, your business hasn't changed because of mobile! Just like the Internet did, mobile improves the way you provide service, support, and commerce to your customers. A good rule to go by when thinking about this is "follow the money." Meaning, take a look at all of the customer interaction points that drive revenue for your business – and apply the appropriate mobile technology to improve those processes.

So, don't get caught up in all of mobile's "bright shiny objects," and remember, it's not about inventing, it's about improving. I think a quote from Gartner report "Cool Vendors Supporting Multiple Nexus Forces" says it best: "Mobile enablement was, and should be, subservient to clear business goals."

3. Rethink what a "mobile app" actually is
In 2006, my firm deployed a mobile application using text messaging that drove a double-digit increase to our client's bottom line. Two years later, we struggled to convince anyone that a mobile strategy was about more than an app you could download to an iPhone. Even today, we still fight against the "there's an app for that" mindset. As great as native apps are, they are only one component of driving true, rich consumer engagement via mobile. Today's devices support sophisticated mobile web apps, highly interactive messaging and voice apps, location services, mobile payments and more. A successful mobile consumer engagement strategy will encompass many or all of these mobile application channels to provide your customers with real utilities – and the tools to manage their relationship with your brand.

4. Integrate to automate "right-time" decisions
I am confident that in the near future, big data tools will allow brands to derive sophisticated consumer profiles and predictive analytics that will make contextually aware mobile engagement a marketer's utopia. Until we get there, however, there are plenty of simple and highly effective ways to make "right-time" decisions about when, where, and how you engage your customers. Start by thinking of the customer event data you already have in your CRM and ecommerce systems and identify points where an automated, proactive engagement mechanism could drive a commerce event (i.e. when a prescription refill is due, when a customer is up for renewal, when loyalty point thresholds are achieved). Once you have identified these points, integration with a mobile platform can enable you to automate proactive notifications via SMS that will drive consumers to take a desired action leading to a commerce event. Remember, 95% of the time, text messages are opened and read within the first five minutes of receipt. This type of basic messaging application may not be sexy, but it can drive results – and you can do it today.

5. Determine ROI models, measure, and invest
Once you have identified the areas where mobile engagement can directly impact a commerce event, work to determine the ROI derived through that mobile engagement. With the right mobile partner, this should not be difficult. It is important to remember that the velocity at which consumer technology evolves has altered traditional budget processes. Marketers are making more and more technology purchases and obtaining in-year budgets based upon the ROI they are generating. According to the report "Breaking Out of the Funnel" by DemandGen, over 70% of budgets for technology purchases are allocated outside of the traditional year-end budget processes – most often after an ROI was proven. So, drive towards proving out these ROI models, and you'll find that obtaining budget dollars to invest more in mobile will be easier to justify.

To recap, to make mobile consumer engagement drive measurable results for your business, understand your customer's mobile profile; think business goal first, mobile technology second; rethink the concept of mobile app and open up all mobile channels; seek out where you can use mobile to drive "right-time" decisions around commerce events; and measure ROI on your mobile investments to get the budget you need to achieve your goals.


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YouEye is your eye in the sky for cloud-based user-experience testing


YouEye is your eye in the sky for cloud-based user-experience testing

VentureBeat by Christina Farr on May 7, 2013

Ever wanted to watch people as they browse your website to figure out what's working for them — and what's not?

YouEye does just that, and today it closed $3 million for its unique approach to usability testing it describes as "UX in the cloud." Angel investors include Saba Software CEO Bobby Yazdani, software engineer Brian McClendon, and Iranian engineer Dr. Hossein Eslambolchi.

visitor_reactions-c33daa54The startup claims that customers such as Airbnb, Microsoft, and Eventbrite use its service. Customers are using the technology to watch testers browsing their websites through webcam, and they can listen in to any feedback.

CEO Kyle Henderson got the idea when he listened in to a presentation from a company that had started using eye-tracking technology to study onsite behavior. The results were extremely helpful, but the the price was well over $40,000 for several months. Henderson was determined to create a cheaper version of this technology for companies of all sizes to use.

YouEye's secret is its "emotion recognition" functionality — the engineering team has compiled a dataset of 50,000 microexpressions and can pinpoint when visitors to your site are happy, surprised, confused, sad, or disgusted.

Got a target market in mind? Customers can request a specific type of tester by demographic factors like age range, gender, education level or income. Another option is to Insite, a new feature released today. By incorporating a line of code, customers can ask any visitor to their site to participate in a usability study, and then capture the full video and audio if they opt in.

Prices start at $39 per participant, and customers can expect to get a full run-down of usability results within 48 hours.


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Funding daily: Bitcoin, crowdfunding & other trends


Funding daily: Bitcoin, crowdfunding & other trends

ss exchange bitcoins

In a rare twist, the majority of startups closing funding rounds today are targeted to consumers. We've recently seen business-focused tech dominate the deals channel.

Bitcoin, crowdfunding, foodie, usability testing, mobile events, and community sports startups landed a round of venture capital and/or angel investment. Apologies for the torrent of buzz words!

Without further ado…

Foodpanda suited up with $20M to conquer online food delivery

Foodpanda, based in Berlin, has raised $20 million to continue expanding its delivery service around the globe. In the past few months, Foodpanda and its affiliated brand hellofood entered 15 new countries, and it's now active in 27 different markets. Read the full story on VentureBeat.

CircleUp raised $7.5M to feed hungry consumer-products startups with capital

CircleUp is using crowdfunding to get your favorite snacks onto store shelves. This startup, which connects up-and-coming consumer product businesses with accredited investors, has raised $7.5 million to build out the platform. Read the full story on VentureBeat.

Chute raised $7M and gets its first dose of user-generated advertising

San Francisco startup Chute has raised a second round of institutional funding: $7 million led by Foundry Group with participation from existing investors Freestyle Capital and U.S. Venture Partners. It also announced today the advent of Chute Ads, which use "real-time," user-generated content as commercial fodder for big brands. Read the full story on VentureBeat. 

FTBpro got $5.8M to bring its fan generated sports platform to new markets

FTBpro, a UK-based fan generated platform for online football (soccer in the U.S.) has secured $5.8 million financing from Battery Ventures and Gemini Israel Ventures, as the startup continues to expand into key geographical markets. The platform is driven by 1,000 regular contributors, generating over 200 daily articles in English, Spanish, German and Italian.

Coinbase got $5 million in the biggest funding for a Bitcoin startup

The online platform that lets people buy a virtual currency called Bitcoin nabbed $5 million from Union Square Ventures. In April, the founders told the Wall Street Journal that it has grown to 116,000 members who converted $15 million of real money into Bitcoin.

Canada's mobile event app QuickMobile pulled in $3.2M

QuickMobile, a provider of mobile event app solutions, announced that it has closed a $3.2 million round of funding led by existing investors, BDC IT Venture Fund and Vancity. The startup will use the funding to expand internationally.

YouEye nabbed $3M for its new approach to usability testing

Customers like Airbnb and Eventbrite are using the technology to watch testers browsing their websites through webcam, and they can listen in to any feedback. Today it closed a $3 million angel round for its "UX in the cloud." Read the full story on VentureBeat.


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domingo, maio 05, 2013

A startup lawyer’s take on winning over a venture capitalist


A startup lawyer's take on winning over a venture capitalist

startuplawyer
This is a guest post by startup lawyer Mick Bain. 

As a lawyer who advises startups, I'm increasingly asked by clients how to make the company more appealing to venture capitalists.

This doesn't surprise me, given the industry's navel gazing over the so-called "Series A Crunch." And it's true that the growth in the number of new startups has outpaced growth in venture capital outlays, creating a more competitive funding environment.

So what do I tell startup founders who ask this question? I often respond by asking, how killer is your idea? That's still what matters most to VCs.

But the conception of what constitutes a good idea has evolved in the last several business cycles. Like most of us in today's economy, VCs are under pressure to do more with less. Venture asset classes have lost value in recent years, so limited partners are favoring startups that aren't capital intensive, and that can demonstrate a strong likelihood of generating real revenues in the first few years.

The upshot is that VCs are favoring ideas that solve big but practical problems. Often these ideas respond to large-scale needs of businesses, rather than consumers. The ideas also don't require the imagination of a futurist to understand their potential market value. They are a product or service that is clearly needed now and is likely to be adopted with relative alacrity and limited risk.

If a VC is sold on an idea, he or she will then consider other factors that influence a startup's success, such as talent, experience and technical resources. Unfortunately for first-time entrepreneurs, those who have already started a successful company will have an advantage in this area.

VCs also prefer companies that don't require big capital expenditures for expensive assets like manufacturing equipment or telecommunications infrastructure. Doing more with less is a watchword that continues to carry weight in Silicon Valley, Boston and New York.

It's also important to demonstrate a keen understanding of the micro and macroeconomic trends and dynamics that affect the broader economy and your market niche. Show that you know your sector well enough to adapt to changing circumstances. It can take months, or years, in some cases, to bring a new product to market. During that time conditions can change — are you prepared to make the quick decisions needed to remain a viable force for growth?

The last thing I often tell startup founders anxious about first round funding is to remember that many companies have been successful without it. Today's technology is relatively affordable and accessible, often allowing entrepreneurs to create valuable companies with very little overhead. Part of being an entrepreneur is finding a path to realize a vision regardless of the barriers. In the end, vision and commitment of this kind are the most important assets of any emerging company.

Bain_MickMick Bain is the partner in charge of WilmerHale's Waltham, Massachusetts office and co-chair of the firm's Emerging Company and Venture Capital practices.

Top image of a consulting lawyer via Shutterstock


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quarta-feira, maio 01, 2013

The Top 25 Unmet Needs Of Insights Clients

The Top 25 Unmet Needs Of Insights Clients

We asked market research clients to tell us their most pressing unmet need from insights suppliers. Here is what they told us. Is your firm up to the challenge of solving them?


insight-innovation-challenge-logos[2]

A few weeks ago we launched a new initiative as part of the upcoming Insight Innovation Exchange event to really zero in on the whitespace opportunities for suppliers to step-up and deliver solutions to meet the unmet needs of client organizations. We call it the Insight Innovation Challenge.

Over the past two weeks 25 challenges have been submitted and voted on by client-side stakeholders, presenting a unique opportunity to understand what this all important constituency is looking for that they can't find currently. Think of it as a crowdsourced concept ideation project.

Our goal in doing this is pretty simple; to match supply with demand. We envision the IIeX platform essentially as an ecosystem driven by the basics of a free market. We work with client organizations to understand their needs and areas of interest and then work to identify, engage and support suppliers that can deliver the solutions needed for today and tomorrow.

Since IIeX is an open ecosystem we have multiple partners from across the value chain that we work with to achieve this vision: entrepreneurs, investors,established firms, public sector organizations, media outlets, trade associations and clients. There are a lot of moving parts involved to pull this off, but we think the Insight Innovation Challenge, along with The Insight Innovation Competition (re-launching this week; stay tuned!), to be the heart and soul of our efforts. The research industry simply can't sustain itself unless it transforms to meet the evolving needs of the folks who pay the bills; many other players are standing by to fill the gap if we don't.

Identifying needs and supporting innovation to meet them is the only way our market will grow.

Recent reports from NielsenWPP, and Ipsos regarding the decline in their traditional research businesses sharply underline this point and should serve as a loud alarm bell to all involved in this industry that the tide is turning rapidly and innovation must be the focus of the future.

So, with all of that in mind, the first phase of the Challenge is over now: we have a strong list of ideas that enterprising suppliers can take and run with , so it's time to move on to Phase 2: identifying companies that think they have a solution.

Here is what will happen now.

I've listed the Top 10 Challenges by vote counts below. Upon reviewing the remaining 15, 14 of them seemed to be variations on a theme from the Top 10, so I've added them where I think they best fit as "sub concepts" to the 10 core Challenges. There are some very interesting opportunities here that run the gamut from the traditional research wheelhouse (sampling & targeting models, opportunity assessment, concept testing, field work optimization, etc…) to behavioral economics/unconscious drivers of decisions, media measurement, Big Data, advanced analytics and data visualization. What they all seem to have in common thematically is a need to deliver ROI, increase speed and efficiency, and deliver more value across the client organization, all of which are attributes that traditional MR is perceived to be notoriously weak in.

The final one is a "wildcard" Challenge that didn't fit with any of the others, and frankly it is fairly niche so it was at the bottom of the league tables, although looking at it objectively it's a critical issue for a VERY large niche (healthcare) and could be applied in a very impactful way in other sectors as well.

This is where it gets fun! The goal now is to identify companies that think they are up to the challenge of solving these problems. There are a few ways we're going to do that.

  1. If you think your company has a solution, email me at lmurphy@greenbook.org and tell me about it.
  2. If you know of a company that you think has a solution, either comment on this post or email me at lmurphy@greenbook.org
  3. We'll also be reaching out to our network  to identify firms though our own scouting efforts.

The goal is to find 11 companies to match the 11 Challenges and they will be invited to IIeX in Philly to give a 5 Minute presentation on their proposed solution in front of prospective clients, partners and investors. We'll be working with all involved to line up any needed follow-up meetings and engagements.

When combined with the already cutting edge agenda topics and presentations scheduled at IIeX, the other initiatives we'll be launching connected to all of this, as well as the Insight Innovation Competition, we believe we'll have constructed a comprehensive "virtuous circle" to enable the matching of supply with demand.

Without further ado, here are the Top 25 Unmet Needs Of Insights Clients, in vote order from most to least. Bear in mind the subconcepts did not make the Top 10 themselves, but I think you'll agree with me that they fit where I've put them.

If you're a supplier, now's your chance to shine. Good luck!



1. Show me what categories are ripe for disruption and why.

Businesses both large and small are always on the lookout for categories/fields that are ripe for disruption (e.g. Netflix disrupting video rental, Napster/iTunes disrupting the music business, MapQuest disrupting maps, Turbo Tax disrupting tax preparation).  Each of the fields that were disrupted likely have some common consumer complaints/frustrations/pain points.  What are the categories that are ready to topple next?  Why?  What are the pain points?  I'm looking to understand the deep needs/desires of those categories that make the category ripe for disruption so companies can focus their energy there and ultimately better serve consumers.

Sub Concepts:

1.1 Measure Product Category Disruption Probability

Can someone give us a metric that indicates the ability for a new product to transform an existing category or create a whole new category that doesn't exist? A few ideas would be:

1. Read reaction to "Just Gotta Have It" discontinuous propositions.

2.  Indicators of Category transformation/creation potential

Ideally the approach would give a more accurate read on consumer reactions for new/discontinuous products via spontaneous reactions vs. traditional methods that rely on rational structures.

1.2 Identifying and creating genuinely disruptive innovations.

Chaos is the new reality.  Linearity and incrementality is the pathway to doom. Disruption is the norm.  In this context, we all need new tools and approaches to creating genuinely disruptive innovation.

 

2. Reaching and changing the mind of uninterested/uninformed

It's relatively easy to survey or study the engaged. It is more difficult to engage with the uninterested/uninformed. When they are your target market (or part of your target market), it is difficult to gather an understanding of the barriers to participation. I'm thinking here about surveys, censuses and program participation – largely marketing for government.

Sub Concepts:

2.1 We need smart analytics to identify new donors/customers

In order to reduce costs and enhance traditional direct and digital marketing performance, we need smart analytics that identifies our target donors/customers and delivers our marketing only to these individuals. This involves front end modeling and predictive analytics using "big data" followed by filtering of direct mail and digital marketing to those most likely to respond. The traditional direct and digital marketing worlds need to be more sophisticated and open to these efforts.

2.2 I want to determine tech savvy users

I would like to segment tech savvy users, i.e. they have experience using social media, are comfortable with most websites and applications. Would use social media analysis to find keywords, links, photos etc.

 

3. System 1 tools and metrics…beyond traditional qual.

With all of the talk of system 1 thinking there has been very little that I have seen from MR suppliers on the subject.  Most seem to think they are checking that box by tacking it on somewhere talking about "emotion" but I have seen very few true system 1 tools. Where the heck are they?  Further I need those insights quickly…days not weeks or months.  Deep psychoanalytic methods are great, but these are time-consuming, expensive, and not usually validated or findings replicable.  I would love to see what is out there that could help me shed light on system 1.  Help!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=di6kl4ViWgk

Sub Concepts:

Visual analysis

Eye tracking in situ is expensive and invasive; we want to understand what draws the eye in POP displays, at the shelf, and in the real world without using traditional eye tracking set-ups. Give me something scalable, inexpensive, and accurate and I'll give you my business.

 

4. I need a holistic view of the consumer

Each study and data source provide a single perspective of the consumer.  What is needed is a much more integrated view of a SINGLE consumer. If I could have all or most of the following in an easy to understand format – many of the core question for marketing effectiveness would be answered with a unified perspective.

1.  Transactions within the category and adjacent categories

2.  Attitudes regarding the category and brands.

3.  Lifestyle/media consumption

4.  Values that allow some foundational understanding of motivations.

5.  Point in time emotional drivers.

Sub Concepts:

Single source data across social platforms

As I'm asked by my internal clients to give them analytics across attitudinal, behavioral, transactional & social at the consumer level, I have to explain that no one has offered such a system yet. I can't engage with individual consumers and understand them across all of those data channels because the data is all housed in many different silos across the organization and with many vendors. The Big Data platforms are good at running models across large data sets, but synthesizing multiple data streams is not easily done. IBM, HP, Oracle, etc… don't have such a system either. Can someone who understands the marketing value of data please step in?

 

5. Better concept evaluation methodology (tried them all)

Most of us have tried the standard quant concept evaluations that every vendor offers as unique (but ultimately are similar) and they help us get slightly above average product offerings.  Yet, these same concept evaluations often fail badly when we have a innovative product that consumers don't fully understand yet.  I've seen $1 Billion+ ideas succeed in market that failed in typical quant evaluations and these stories do terrible things for the research industry's reputation.  So companies instead sometimes pursue the qualitative/focus group route, but it's painful/scary to ever push forward with products based on a feedback from focus groups where we don't know "how good is good?"  The only other option is going with our gut feel as experienced professionals.  There must be a better way, can you create it?

Sub Concepts:

5.1 A solution to radically shorten the product development lifeycle

The current process from ideation, prototype, test, refine, production, market takes waaaay too long. How can we cut down the time it takes on the front end via the insights process to create winning products faster and get them to market sooner?

Also, once we do get into market, it takes too long to enter new markets and we lose competitive advantage to more nimble competitors. How can we measure product performance faster in order to cut down on the in-market development process?

5.2 An agency that will service mobile ethnography ad hoc

Everyone wants to sell me a community with mobile plug-ins; I don't need a community! I want to conduct ad hoc ethnography with a variety of consumer segments as needed to get "in the moment" feedback. I don't have time to run it myself though so I don't want to license the platform: I need an agency that is interested in working with me based on my needs, not trying to sell me some uber-solution that I don't have budget for. Bring the tech in house and let me come to you as needed; I promise you'll get my business! 

5.3 Speed of turnaround – how to field/report a study in 2-3 wks

A quick survey should take no longer than 2 weeks to plan, field and report if it is a simple concept test, or is limited to an area of questions.  However, if you have more than one or two questions and want insightful results, most vendors need at least 4 to 6 weeks or longer to get through their process. My counterparts in the Analytics area can deliver the results of their analysis within hours.  I'm at a disadvantage with my set of tools and resources.  Who can speed up the survey process?

5.4 We have 3D Printing, why not 3D Imaging?

3D Printing is great for quick product prototyping, but why isn't there a solution to do rapid scanning of real objects and spaces (like store aisles!) and do rapid 3D virtual mapping? It would be incredibly effective for concept testing in my business.

 

6. Video analytics: how to process video data like text

We do a ton of video work today; crowd-sourced videos, ethnography, online groups, etc.. plus support fans submitting and making videos about their brand experience on YouTube and other sites. Where is the software to allow us to analyze and manage all of that content like you can do with text using social media and text analysis tools? I know the government has tools like that; why haven't they hit the market yet?

 

7. How do we get a representative sample?

With a decreasing number of Americans who have landlines, horrible phone response rates, non-representative online panels, how do we get quantitative measurement that is actually statistically projectable to the population at large without spending outrageous sums?

 

8. Can Art meet Science: Big Data Visualization

Data seems to be now available from all possible sources – social, mobile, web and behavioral and insights are possibly sitting as power point decks. However one of the biggest challenge is the ability to synthesize this data/insights and present this so that you can get your message across to even a novice user. The need is to have data visualizations move beyond just pie and bar charts, it should be able to make data and not just big data but MR insights tell a story, something like DIY ( Infographic in a Minute). Can the firms/agencies walk this last mile and not leave it to just a presentation?

Sub Concepts:

Strategic vs. Academic?

How can a client and vendor partner so that the first draft of the report hits the mark in a strategic way and represents the business problem/solution vs. just the research reporting? As much as we try clients are continuously re-writing vendor reports so that they are attuned to the executive audience.  Are there any reporting best practices, tools or resources that can "come to the rescue", here?

 

9. Comprehensive competitive intelligence on marketing strategy

Internal constituents frequently ask me "why did product X do so well with consumers?"  I could field a simply study to assess what consumers reacted to, but what my colleagues really want is a comprehensive story of how much they spent on marketing, what channels they bought media on, what creative was used, how they positioned the product to consumers, what drove purchases the most, and what the sales curve looked like.  They also want that information even before the product hits the shelves.  That can be both time-consuming and very difficult to recreate in many categories.  I'd love to see a syndicated offering that analyzes successful campaigns for products as it's happening (eventually filling in all stages) and in a comprehensive, standardized manner.

Sub Concepts:

9.1 Show me a way to identify key data sources

I need a way to "gin up" relevant data from diverse sources. I want to create a baseline with that data and use that information to create targeted longitudinal research on key issues.

The model would allow for continual monitoring of my transactional/social media/blogs/community and competitor data sources for changes. The model should have the flexibility needed to adjust sources based on "attuned value" (some type of scoring algorithm) defined by scope and the prevalence of mentions combined with hard sales data. Ideally, the model will simplify source analysis of data used by C-level, Social Media Managers, IT and Market Research to create simpler interpretation of positioning thus allowing for a clearer action path. This is in turn should allow our departments to align strategy, create a higher ROI on our data and research expenditures and finally allow us to remove extraneous data sources that don't provide value. Ultimately it will make our analysis more timely and our reporting more useful to multiple areas within the company.

9.2 Integrating Information into Business Activities

Generating information, collecting information, analyzing, reporting…all not a problem (only that we may do too much of it).  Gap is the ability to take what we are generating, collecting, analyzing, and/or reporting and easily integrate it back into the business.  Assumption is that the majority of what we produce is not shared with all parties that could derive value from that insight.  Vendors continue to focus on the front-end and not this critical back-end.

 

10. Omni-channel media measurement

How can I activate consumer relationships if I can't see all of the touchpoints of brand exposure in a single place? I need to measure campaign effectiveness across all media channels in the course of a consumer's day (social, online, TV, radio, in-store, etc…). The current models just don't deliver that. Whomever can nail that gets a ton of my business.

Sub Concepts:

Real time, cross channel media exposure measurement

Nielsen, Comscore, Arbitron, etc.. have dropped the ball on cross-channel and cross platform media measurement. Why has no one created a mobile app that will allow real time measurement of media exposure? If Shazam can recognize songs, how hard can it be to recognize brand messaging via digital signals and record online exposure accessed via mobile devices? C'mon people, there is no need to have panels and set-top boxes anymore, let's use the devices that almost all consumers globally have with them 24/7 and get REAL metrics!

           

Wildcard: Improve users' compliance with handling contact lenses

(Editor's Note: I suggest thinking of this as how to engage patients and reinforce compliance in any healthcare related issue)

Overwear of contact lenses (CL), even  low cost daily lenses, remains a persistent non-compliance factor causing clinical problems.  While reusing CL can be done safely, it requires active participation of the user.  The quality of this participation often diminishes over time.  The users follow the rules in the beginning, but then they follow the limits.   Common examples of non-compliance include

─topping off (the solution in the lens case),

─using old (expired) lens cases,

─skipping the required rubbing when replacing the lens,

─using water instead of formula et al.

What is needed is ideas making compliance with the protocol fool proof.  The scope is limited to the lens case and the solution.  The lens itself cannot be changed.