This content originally appeared on Envato Tuts+ Tutorials and was authored by Celine (CX) Roque
When you get caught by the creative spark, it's easy to underestimate the importance of market research. But there's a real need for market research before you bring a product to your customers.
Today, I'll take you through some basic marketing research concepts. I'll also explain why marketing research is important and share some resources to help you get started on your own marketing research.
If you want to stay up to date, you should also read the in-depth guide to the latest marketing trends over on the Envato Blog.
Jump to content in this section:
What Is Marketing Research?
Before you can understand the importance of marketing research, you need to know what it is. Market research isn’t about a specific method or activity—it’s just what businesses call their attempt to learn more about their target customers.
While tasks like surveys and focus groups can help, they aren't absolutely necessary, and they aren’t the only things you can do to research your target market. Here are some tasks that can be part of your market research:
- Have short conversations with contacts who are part of your target market. Let’s say you’re looking to launch a wedding photography service. Talk to your contacts who have been married or who are engaged and ask them about their experience in hiring and working with a wedding photographer. Even a five-minute conversation can give you insights on how to run your business.
- Look up Facebook groups relevant to your target market. This can provide a free, low-effort way to reach target customers online and ask them questions. Eventually, you can go back to these groups to promote your business, if the group rules allow for it.
- Add a survey form to your website. If you already have a website for your small business, you can offer potential customers a small discount in exchange for completing a survey. This tutorial on online market research forms can help you get started.
The above activities are just a handful of tasks that could be part of your market research. In fact, you can classify any task as a market research activity as long as you end up knowing your target market’s needs, behaviors, and preferences.
The Importance of Marketing Research
These are the seven reasons why market research is important, especially for smaller teams and businesses:
1. Better Understand Customer Needs
While every business has many stakeholders, the customer is always at the center of what you do. Conducting market research helps keep your customer as your business's focus.
Here is where you can avoid the disconnect that businesses of all sizes can have with their customers. Learning their perspective from first-hand accounts has its benefits, including understanding what their needs and wants are. Taking this information into consideration will help guide your strategy better.
2. Uncover Emerging Trends
Understanding customer needs also means uncovering industry trends. When interpreting your findings, it's not uncommon to identify where businesses like yours will be headed in the future.
Staying ahead of the curve has its benefits. It allows you to better serve your customers in the future. Your business will be able to better position itself as an industry leader. There's also increased trust in a business that can both cater to its customers' current and future needs.
3. Identify Potential Issues
While it's great to keep an eye on the future in market research, it's also important to pick up on any pain points your customers have. Pain points are the issues that stand in the way of your customers having a smooth experience when interacting with your business.
The more pain points you can identify, the better. After all, you can't solve a problem you don't know you have. This is why marketing research is so important: you'll be able to work on solutions that have been bothering your customers with the data to support your efforts.
4. Easily Spot Business Opportunities
After you’ve done your market research, it'll be clear who you want to reach out to (your target customers), where you can reach them (your marketing channels), and what they're interested in. Once you’ve defined these, you’ll be able to easily spot business opportunities. For example:
- Form partnerships with other businesses. Learning about who your customers are, such as their demographics, can help you find other small businesses that serve them. You can approach these businesses for joint promotions that'll be mutually beneficial.
- Create profitable order upgrades. Knowing the other products and services that your customers tend to buy can help you come up with add-ons, product bundles, and upsells that increase the average value of each order.
- Find new locations to sell to. Knowing the geographical areas where most of your target customers live will allow you to create compelling targeted campaigns that suit the needs and culture of that area.
5. Lower Business Risks
Around half of businesses with employees don’t survive past the fifth year, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The way to make sure that your business survives for longer is to ensure that you've got a steady stream of sales and customers. To do that, you need market research.
Regular market research will be your way to check in with your current customers and potential customers to ensure that you’re still meeting their needs. Here’s how you can apply this:
- Test new designs and products before launching. Before you go all-in on a dramatic change for your business, you can test it on a smaller subset of your audience to see if the change would be welcome. For example, if you plan to do a redesign of a popular product, show the new design to your most frequent buyers. Test or ask them if they’re more likely to buy the new design versus an alternative new design or the old design.
- Find out why customers don’t come back. Ideally, your small business should have recurring customers. If they don’t come back, you can conduct a survey of previous customers or set up a focus group to find out why you’re not making any repeat sales.
- Get insights on problem areas. If your most popular product sees a big drop in sales for three consecutive months, you need to find out how to fix it before it ruins your profits completely. Survey your most frequent customers about the product and find out where the problem lies. It could be anything from a decline in the product quality to a glitch on your online store. You’ll never know unless you ask.
6. Create Relevant Promotional Materials
If you’ve ever wondered what text or images to put on your fliers, website, or social media accounts thorough market research will tell you exactly what to do. Since target customers have already expressed all their wants, needs, and frustrations with you, you’ll know exactly what to address and how to address it when you start creating your marketing materials.
For example, author Tiffany Sun surveyed her readers to find out which problems they were trying to solve. Instead of coming up with blog topics or headlines in a vacuum, she used the results of this survey to brainstorm compelling topics.
Here are some other ways your marketing materials will be easier to create:
- Knowing whether customers see your products and services as a necessity or as a luxury can help you design your product labels, brochures, and a website that fits their perception.
- Identifying the age range of your customers can tell you the type of language you’ll be using in your promotional materials. You'll write differently when addressing retired Baby Boomers than you would when addressing young professionals.
7. Know Where to Advertise
One of the problems that small business owners face is a limited budget. Because of this, your marketing budget should be optimized to give you the best returns possible. Your market research can help ensure that you’re reaching your intended audience in the channels where they’re most likely to see your message.
These are some of the budgetary tasks that your market research can help with:
- Buying ads on social media. If your market research shows that your target audience spends most of their time on Instagram and almost never uses X, you’ll know to direct most of your social media ad budget to Instagram and forget about X.
- Placing flyers and posters. Knowing the physical spaces where your customer spends their time will tell you where you can best place your advertising. For example, university students are likely to be on campus, so placing ads for that market means that you can try bulletin boards on campus or outside local establishments that their crowd tends to frequent.
- Targeting ads. Online ads such as social media ads and pay-per-click ads can often be targeted with precision. This means that you can target based not just on the usual demographic data, but also based on online behaviors, life stage, and interests. If you truly know your customers, you'll be able to maximize the potential for targeting. For example: here are some of the targeting options for Facebook Ads:
8. Outsell Competitors
Businesses that know their customers better tend to win more. If you can beat your competitors at finding out your customers’ needs and you aim to fulfill those needs, you've got a better chance of standing out from the competition. Here are some ways you can use market research to outsell competitors:
- Target dissatisfied customers. Asking target customers about their frustrations with your competitors’ products or reading their product reviews can help you improve your own products and market them to an audience that's ready to switch brands.
- Find an underserved customer segment. Your market research might reveal that there's a segment of the market that your competition has neglected. This will give you a new customer segment to reach out to.
- Identify unaddressed customer needs. During your market research, you might uncover some customer pain points or desires that you don’t see addressed in your competitors’ marketing materials. Try including them in your own marketing and see if the results show an increase in sales.
If you need to know more about conducting market research with competitors in mind, here are some helpful guides:
9. Set Better Goals for Your Business
When business owners set goals for their business, they're typically related to growth in sales or customers. But without market research, you won’t be able to know if your goals are achievable and how to achieve them in the first place.
You might say that you want to double sales by the end of the next quarter. How would you know if this goal is feasible if you don’t know whether the size of your target market is more than twice the size of your current customer base? Without knowing the current size of your potential market, you’ll just be setting arbitrary goals.
With market research, you’ll be able to determine the specific ways you want to expand your customer base. For example, do you want to reach new customers via a new untapped market segment? Or do you still have room for growth among your current target audience?
If you need help setting growth goals for your business, the following tutorials can help:
10. Decision-Making Becomes Simple
The importance of marketing research frequently comes up when making tough business decisions. Instead of having arbitrary criteria for the decisions you make as a business owner, you can always go back to your market research report. Based on that report, will this decision lead to more customers? Will you be able to reach more people who are likely to buy from you? Will it be clear to them that your business can meet their needs?
While not all decisions should be solved by market research, many of them can be, such as:
- where to spend your advertising or marketing budget
- whether there’s a demand for a new product you want to make
- if you should open a storefront in a new location
- which products to discontinue and which ones to merely improve
- how to price all your offers
There's a real need for market research because it provides you with solid facts. Through market research, you'll make more informed decisions rather than resting the fate of your business on guesswork.
Discover the Importance of Market Research for Your Business
Now that you understand the importance of market research, you're ready to get started. Your business doesn’t have to spend tens of thousands of dollars on focus groups and extensive surveys to conduct market research. But it’s important that you do market research in the first place, and present your research findings with your team.
As long as you end up with a thorough list of your target market’s demographics, needs, and frustrations, you’ll be able to reap the above benefits as you grow your business. Why not get started with your marketing research today?
Learn More About Marketing Research
Now that you see the importance of marketing research, you can learn even more about the process. Our instructors have many great tutorials and guides that will help you on your way to better understanding your customers. Dive into these articles to continue on your learning journey:
Present Confidently as a Research Marketer With Envato Elements
Being able to present your research and other marketing activities is crucial for any business. Instead of spending hours designing and editing, use the premium assets from Envato Elements. With a low monthly fee, you can download unlimited premium assets that you can use for your work or personal projects.
Sign up for Envato Elements today and start downloading as many premium PowerPoint templates, photos, and audio tracks as you want, without caps or worrying about licenses.
This content originally appeared on Envato Tuts+ Tutorials and was authored by Celine (CX) Roque
Celine (CX) Roque | Sciencx (2018-08-24T12:03:51+00:00) 10 Reasons Why Marketing Research Is Important to a Business. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2018/08/24/10-reasons-why-marketing-research-is-important-to-a-business/
Please log in to upload a file.
There are no updates yet.
Click the Upload button above to add an update.