3 minutes to read. By author Michaela Mora on June 21, 2011 Topics: Business Strategy, Market Research
One of the presentations I enjoyed the most at the recent 2011 Market Research Annual Conference in Washington DC was the one by Barry Blyn from ESPN. He provided superb examples of how market research should be implemented and add value to an organization.
First, Blyn made an important distinction between Measurement and Insights. Measurement tells you what people did, while Insights tells you why they did it and how to get them to act in the future. In my view, this is where market researchers can add the most value.
ESPN’s research efforts are led by these guiding principles:
According to Blyn, ESPN has become fanatical about listening to their audience. In 3 years they have conducted more than 400 in-depth interviews all over the country and 15,000 surveys. In the search for insights, they have been combining traditional and innovative types of research with consumers trying to get at the heart of the business challenges ESPN faces. Blyn presented two examples of how these guidelines are implemented:
This is a brand tracking program that is seen as an orchestra where different research methods are thought of as instruments and are combined to reach the ultimate goal: monitor ESPN’s brand strengths and hunt for weaknesses making sure ESPN is always in touch with fans’ perceptions about the ESPN brand. In this program, ESPN combines qualitative and quantitative methods such as:
This is by far the most provocative research approach Blyn presented. In this case, they paid $400 to 60 avid sports fans (30 who only used ESPN TV and 30 who use ESPN TV and other platforms to get sports news) for abstaining from watching ESPN during football season. The main objectives were to:
In this study, ESPN allowed participants to provide feedback through different channels: video and audio journals, focus groups (“therapy” sessions), before and after surveys, and in-depth interviews. From this research, it became clear that ESPN needed to align its different brand properties from a fan-centric point of view.
In a time when many believe the market research industry has just missed the train, the ESPN case shows that to make research relevant to organizations today, market researchers need to:
I think we can all do that.
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