The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20121006075734/http://researchaccess.com/category/mobile/

Webinar: Introducing LifeMetrix – Passive Mobile Data for Consumer Insight

Note: This post originally appeared on the Survey Analytics blog.

Survey Analytics is proud to announce the launch of LifeMetrix, a new product for passive mobile data collection.

LifeMetrix gives you unprecedented vision into consumers’ daily lives by collecting moment-to-moment data from their mobile devices. Consumers have a difficult time self-reporting behavior. LifeMetrix is an opt-in solution to collect ongoing mobile data that helps you make business decisions.

• Accelerometer
• GPS Latitude & Longitude
• App Census
• App Usage
• Battery
• Compass
• Decibel Level
• Disk Space
• Gyroscope
• IP Address
• Operating System
• Operating System Version
• Retina Display
• SSID
• Wifi
• 3G

We will hold a webinar on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 at 1pm Eastern / 10am Pacific. In this webinar we’ll give you an overview of how LifeMetrix works. We will explain the variables available, and we will show examples of how LifeMetrix can be used to gain unparalleled vision into the daily lives of consumers.

Click this link to register for the webinar.

You can learn more about LifeMetrix at http://lifemetrix.com.


Mobile Internet Users Growing

Pretty much everyone has a cell phone, right? Do you know how many access the internet on their cell? How about the number who access the internet frequently?

Thanks to our friends at the Pew Internet & American Life Project, we have these answers.

According to their Cell Internet Use 2012 report, here are the numbers for consumers in the United States.

Have a cell phone: 88%
Go online on their cell phone: 48%
Go online on their cell phone regularly: 15%

These numbers may be lower than you expected. But more than likely you (and your friends) are among those that go online on their cell phone regularly. You’re not the norm.

When it comes to mobile market research, penetration is high enough to do many types of studies.

Keep watching these numbers; you’ll see them grow, and the opportunities for mobile research will grow along with them.

Join us at Market Research in the Mobile World in Cincinnati

Research Access is pleased to be a media sponsor for the Market Research in the Mobile World Conference, which is in Cincinnati on July 18th and 19th.

We provided a live blog of the sessions in Amsterdam this spring (Day 1 Live Blog, Day 2 Live Blog), and we intend to the same in Cincinnati.

You can get a 15% discount on your MRMW conference registration if you use our promotional code when registering:  RAC15.

The conference will be two days jam-packed with insights to help you navigate the world of mobile research.  Here’s a link to the full conference agenda.

Some of the client-side companies confirmed to be attending include Cincinnati’s own Procter & Gamble, as well as Chrysler, Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson.

Click here to check out the conference website and to register with a 15% discount using the promotional code RAC15. 

We look forward to seeing you in Cincinnati!

A Conversation with Srivats Srinivasan

I recently had the opportunity to catch up with Srivats Srinivasan, a really interesting guy and Research Access contributor who runs a digital agency called Nayamode. Srivats filled me in on his Event Mobilizer app, which provides conference attendees the opportunity to give real-time feedback and provides them in-the-moment information. He also gave insight into running a creative technology shop in this day and age.

Dana Stanley: Thanks for taking some time to chat.

Event Mobilizer Feedback Screen

Event Mobilizer Feedback Screen

Srivats Srinivasan: Absolutely. My pleasure.

Dana Stanley: Your latest solution is something called Event Mobilizer. This is really cool; can you tell our readers a bit about it?

Srivats Srinivasan: Sure. The idea is that traditionally, people have gone to events, anything from a corporate event, whether it’s for their internal sales force or just a marketing event, or it could be an event for their partners or their customers. Or think of events which are on the lines of large trade shows, whether it’s a Consumer Electronics Show or something else, which are organized at these convention centers and basically get thousands of attendees over several days.

If you think what the experience has been traditionally, it can be overwhelming, in terms of the amount of stuff there is, and the amount of stuff there is to see, the number of booths you need to go to, the number of sessions you’d like to attend. And that information, while it’s always available on your laptop, as in on their browser, it’s not easily accessible when people are actually at the event. And traditionally, organizers have handed out paper schedules, paper feedback forms, and so on and so forth, which honestly, in this day and age, are little bit outdated.

This is where our Event Mobilizer app comes in. It’s a cloud-based, hosted solution that is platform independent. So basically, it’ll run just as well across iPhone and Android and Windows Phone and BlackBerry without any download, without any installation. And provides some really, much needed and compelling features for the users.

And those features are everything from the basic, ‘What’s the schedule,’ to how do I provide feedback, whether it’s on this booth, or on this session, et cetera, to I need a virtual concierge to answer questions, to a networking module which allows people to basically opt-in for networking.

Event Mobilizer

Event Mobilizer

Our approach is that we offer a little bit of an a la carte kind of approach to our customers on this. As in, “There are a dozen different things you could do here. Which are the things that you actually want to offer?” And they also get the ability to offer a very customized UI and UX for their users, so that it’s very specific to them. And they can actually make it their own.

So that’s something that, like I said, has been already deployed and is now getting deployed for several other customers. And we’re getting a lot of interest in it from, literally, places all around the world.

Dana Stanley: And for the conference or Event Organizer, I suspect there’s some kind of analytics they can tap into during the event.

Srivats Srinivasan: Absolutely. So the beauty of this is partly because it’s completely cloud-based. So everything is real time, everything is always up to date. And that includes all of the numbers and reporting that we can do. And the reporting is everything from how many people are accessing this, to what kind of feedback are we getting on this, to what kind of information are people looking for the most, or where are people come from, where are they going to, et cetera.  So there’s a whole bunch of rich reporting that’s made available through a pretty rich admin back end that we provide that the organizers can get access to in real time.

Dana Stanley: So, for people who may not quite be familiar with Nayamode, could you give an overview of what you guys do?

Srivats Srinivasan

Nayamode CEO Srivats Srinivasan

Srivats Srinivasan: Sure thing. Nayamode is an integrated digital marketing firm based out of the Seattle area. And we’ve been in business since late 2005 and currently work with several Fortune 500 companies, such as Microsoft, Wipro, Conde Nast, amongst others. But we also work with several much smaller firms, start-ups and similar, that are in the Bay area or other parts of the country.

When I say integrated digital marketing, our focus is on how do we combine rich, creative work with smart technology solutions. Because if you think about it, traditionally, people have turned to firms for one or the other. And I believe that in today’s world, you actually should not have to choose. And you need somebody who can bring all of those competencies under one roof. And that’s exactly what Nayamode does.

To give you a sense of the services that it covers, it ranges from core content and collateral for our customers that can be both offline and online, extends of course to how do you take those and create an online presence for them, via regular dot com websites or internet portals for our customer companies, to one of our fastest-growing areas, which is in the mobile arena, which is, how do you actually extend our customers’ campaigns into mobile devices, whether they be smartphones or tablets, et cetera.

And then finally, because of our technology strengths, we often come up with custom solutions for specific problems that off-the-shelf solutions would not work.

Dana Stanley: That’s all very interesting and very current. How do you balance the technology and the artistic or creative side of what you do?

Srivats Srinivasan: That’s a great question. There’s a couple of different ways in which we do this. The part that I did not mention earlier is that I think of us as a truly global firm, in that we have our headquarters here in the Seattle area, but we also have our development arm offshore in India. And one of the interesting things about how we bring our solutions to bear is that the marketing or creative side of our solutions are delivered from our Seattle offices, whereas our development is done largely out of our India offices.

Now, this is not this is not really so much a cost play as much as asking where can we go to really find the maximum efficiencies in terms of the right resources, as well as how can we optimize for literally a 27 by 7 kind of operation. So to answer your question, how do we find the right balance, I think we find the balance in terms of where we find the people to perform those functions. And we do not bring, say, the creative side or the technology side in a gratuitous form to our customers’ problems. Our approach is very much on the lines of, let’s understand what your situation is, what is the problem you’re trying to solve, and what’s the optimal solution for this.

And sometimes, it’s going to be largely a creative solution, and oftentimes it’s going to be largely a very technology-oriented solution. And that’s how we allocate our time and effort and resources to that particular problem.

Dana Stanley:  You’re truly operating in the new way of doing business, which is having people distributed, and sourcing people where people are that have different skills. And it must be an interesting challenge to get the best of everyone and yet have account managers and the like who understand two quite different disciplines, creative ad and campaign creation and technology.

NayamodeSrivats Srinivasan: You’re absolutely right. And this is something that, honestly, we’ve taken a few years to really fine tune and hone. Because what we do today and how we do it is certainly different from how we were doing it, say, three or five years ago. And that’s not a surprise, because there’s obviously a learning curve involved, and there’s really an understand of how do you maximize both the productivity and efficiency in how we’re doing things.

And I think the best testament to how we’re doing is the fact that our customer base is continually growing and most of our business comes from referrals. And I often joke that our best sales people are our customers, because they’re the ones who actually do the most for us.

Dana Stanley: That’s so neat that you have been reinventing and evolving how you do business. And it’s very fitting, given the name of your company.

Srivats Srinivasan: Thank you. Yes. In fact, people often ask me ‘what does Nayamode mean?’ And I tell them, that there’re are a couple of different meanings. One is Naya in Hindi means new, and mode is just a way of doing things. So I tell our customers, when you work with us it’s a new mode of doing things, not necessarily something that you will be exposed to, but that’s how we are delivering, that’s how our execution model is based on.

But Nayamode also means a new turn in Hindi. And it was a new turn my life when I started the company after spending several years in corporate America.

Dana Stanley: Excellent. What are some examples of challenges that clients have when they turn to you for solutions? What are the pains that they’re experiencing or the opportunities that they see before them?

Srivats Srinivasan: Let me take a few different examples to illustrate that. I think the classic example would be, you’re either a new company or you have a new product or a new campaign that you’re trying to launch and you need an agency that can actually literally hold your hand through that process.

And that’s where we come in, literally from starting up front with consulting on, thinking through what problems we’re trying to solve, and what’s the best means to actually go and solve that problem, to figuring out what the execution plan needs to be. And then that plan will often be a combination of creative and technology pieces. And then actually executing that.

So as an example when we work for some of our customers over at Microsoft, who use us for their product or campaign launches, we’ll come in early in the process, help define what the plan is, help identify what the various options are by way of solutions, and then those could translate into a whole bunch of core collateral and content that we create for them.

It would translate into a whole bunch of digital assets that we create for them, assets such as everything from online properties to web banners and so on, to actually creating the online presence for them, whether it be a dot com site or a SharePoint site or another CMS, extending it to mobile devices, which is becoming more and more a requirement these days. And then doing the last couple of things, which are driving traffic to their site through search optimization or search marketing, obviously, driving the right analytics and reporting for their campaign, and then in certain cases also integrating social media aspects to their efforts. So that, hopefully, gives you a sense for the prototypical example of what we do.

Now, we’ll often also come in to solve a specific point problem that our customers may have. For example, they may be in the middle of a campaign, but a piece of it isn’t working well, or their website isn’t doing anything for them and they need somebody to come in and really change how that’s working. And that’s something we might do.

Or another example would be, just recently we’ve been working with the Windows Server team at Microsoft and helping create all the core content and collateral for them for their upcoming Windows Server 8 launch. So the point is, we can do either pieces or all aspects of a product, program, or campaign launch for our customers.

Dana Stanley: Interesting. As a Research Access contributor, you know quite well that our readers tend to be focused on marketing research and, more broadly, analytics and data. How do you incorporate analytics and data and reporting and customer insight into your services?

Srivats Srinivasan: One of the fundamental principles that I’ve always believed in, even when I was in the client side several years ago, whether it was at Microsoft or Coca-Cola or Johnson & Johnson when I was running large marketing campaigns or other programs was, you’ve got to be able to measure it. Because if you cannot measure it, you really don’t know what your money’s doing for you, or whether your efforts are really being successful.

So if you start with that premise and then you figure out, OK, what are the aspects that I want to measure– And that’s going to vary depending on what kind of a campaign or program you’re trying to run. Everything from whether it’s visits or satisfaction or downloads or what have you. I think that’s really a function of what problem you’re trying to solve.

And then thinking very clearly upfront about, OK, these are the problems I’m trying to solve, and this is how I’ll know whether I’ve got toward or closer to my solution. Then have some very clear idea around, what will indicate to me whether I’m successful or not, and how do I measure that.

Now, the thing that I love about digital marketing today compared with– and I’m going to date myself a little bit here– the marketing that many of us were doing back in the early ’90s, is how much more measurable things are right now. And the ability to be able to track down to the user level, the ability to be able to get granular information on whether it’s feedback from your audience or what have you on whether they like the product, whether they’re going to recommended it, so on and so forth. That is just invaluable.

So to me, it’s really about identifying what goal you have, identifying how you’re going to measure success, making sure you’re instrumenting for the right measurement, and then, whether it’s using an off-the-shelf solution such as a Webtrends or Google Analytics or whatever, or in several of our cases where we’re actually instrumenting custom analytics for our customers. So as an example, the Digital Asset Manager is a custom solution that we deploy for several of our [INAUDIBLE]. And most of the analytics on those are actually custom built by us, because there’s specific requirements people have in solutions are very different from what would get measured by the standard analytic solutions.

Dana Stanley: Interesting. And how does mobile come into play in all this?

Srivats Srinivasan: Well, I would say you’ve got to be living under a rock to not see that mobile is becoming more and more an integral part of any digital marketing effort. And the interesting part of mobile is, a lot of people know they’ve got to do mobile, but they’re not sure what to do. And they’re not sure how they’re actually going to measure success.

And the space is evolving so fast, both in terms of users, in terms of platforms, in terms of solutions, that honestly most marketers that we know are stymied by just the rapid pace of innovation, and trying to figure out, what do I need to do? I know I need to do something, but what do I need to do?

So our efforts on the mobile front actually began in a couple of different ways. And one of them was our partnership with the Microsoft Tag team. If you’re not aware of what that is, Microsoft Tag is a proprietary version of 2D barcodes with several features that we believe are actually superior to the regular QR codes. But the point is, we were an early partner of the Microsoft Tag team, and they worked with us to actually develop a whole bunch of solutions that we could bring deploy for our common customers.

It began there, but if you really think about it, whether it’s Microsoft Tag or QR code, those are great technologies. But at the end of the day, they are triggers or means to an end. And by that what I mean is they’re a means to get people to be able to get to your mobile site or to have that mobile experience.

And that is of where we’ve evolved to right now, which is over the last year or so, we’ve been specializing more in creating those actual mobile experiences, creating a lot of technology and solutions that live on the back end, often in the cloud, that power those mobile solutions, and really enrich them and provide their end user a much more engaging experience.

So at this point, we’re largely agnostic whether our customers want to use a Tag or QR codes. And our focus is much more on, OK, now that you know you want to get your people to a mobile site, and you have the means to do that, let’s figure out what are we going to do with them. How are we going to engage them? Are we educate them? Are we going to inform them?

Are we going to entertain them? Are we going to gamify the experience? Are going to have sweeps and contests? Or are we just going to provide information that’s very time-sensitive, it’s very contextual, it’s very location-based? The idea being, find people where they are, when they are, and give them exactly what they need at that point.

And keep it simple. Because the other challenge that a lot of people run into when they’re trying to do something on mobile, is to over-complicate things, because they want to try to fit the regular desktop paradigm into the mobile space. And clearly, that doesn’t work. So you’ve got to really think through what’s the bare minimum that I need to be able to provide this person with so that it’s something that will engage them and get them hooked.

Dana Stanley: So help me understand the experience. Where would somebody encounter a tag or a QR code? And then what would happen when they scan it?

Srivats Srinivasan: Great question. I’ll give you a couple of examples which have been actually super successful in our context. And the first one is a campaign that we’ve been running for Conde Nast, specifically in several of their magazine properties, such Allure. And this is a contest that is triggered when people, readers, are going through a copy of the magazine and they see a reference to this contest. And they were asked to participate by way of Microsoft Tag in the pages. And when they see that and they read that, people effectively scan the tag, they’re taken to a mobile site where they’re entered into a mode sweeps. And then a few different steps later on, you have people who either win or come back.

And the campaign has been super successful. They’ve got about half a million scans in less than a month in one of the months that we did it. And it’s been repeated pretty much every year since then, because of its overwhelming success. The back end is reasonably complex, but I don’t need to bore you with the details. But that’s one example of where people would find a tag and how they would engage, and what the payoff is, and how successful it can be. In fact, I believe it’s the single most successful such campaign anywhere.

Another example of where people would find these tags and how they would engage would be another campaign that we’ve been doing for the Compass Group, a hospitality services company. Specifically in some of their cafeteria promotions. So an example is what we’ve done in their Microsoft Cafeteria business, where people scan a tag and they get one of several outcomes.

They can choose to get information on what are the menu choices today. They can get an instant coupon to redeem at one of the cashiers for a couple of dollars off for their mean or the coffee or whatever. They can enroll in a scavenger hunt. They can take part in a March madness contest, which was, obviously, relevant in March, and so on and so forth. Again very, very successful. It’s been now running for about a couple of years and continues to get great feedback.

One of the things we did with that more recently was to actually use tags to get feedback from customers in real time on what they thought of the food. And that was actually very well received as well and got a lot of traction, both with users as well as with the cafeterias.

Other examples would be, literally, I think most of your readers would have seen QR codes and tags. They’ve become so ubiquitous now, whether it’s at a retail or outdoors or in a magazine. They’re pretty much everywhere now, and the usage is growing exponentially out here.

Dana Stanley: Well, thank you so much for telling us about Nayamode and about Event Mobilizer. And I look forward to working with you on Research Access in the near future.

Srivats Srinivasan: It has been my pleasure, Dana. Thank you so much.

Why Recall Must Die: Capturing the Point of Emotion

Emotions

Living in the Past

Market research relies heavily on human memory. Attempting to measure recall about what respondents thought or felt about a product or service is a standard approach for market researchers.

Surveys often consist of long lists of memory tests. So many surveys contain phrases like, “Thinking about the last time you used XXX”?  And of course, focus groups always rely on the subjective recall of emotional states.

The assumption underpinning the standard market research operating procedure of directed recall is that we can reach into our experiences and retrieve complex information.

But is that true? Can respondents accurately retrieve memories and emotional states in response to a survey questionnaire?

Most market researchers give little to no thought to their reliance on recall. They fail to challenge themselves to better understand respondents, and in so doing they fail their clients and themselves.

Market research lives in its respondents’ past. The problem is that the current market research modus operandi of asking respondents to recall memories and emotions may be faulty at its core.

Memory is increasingly being understood by academicians as fluid rather than a concrete object that can be picked up and read at will.

The dominant theory of memory for many years has been so-called “working memory”, with researchers such as Alan Baddeley, Graham Hitch and Nelson Cowan producing a robust literature. These researchers concentrated on the cognitive aspects of memory, acoustic and visual buffering systems, episodic memory formation processes, and, finally, longer term memory processes.

In parallel, neuropsychologists and neurophysiologists searched for the “holy grail” of memory research, identifying what was known as the engram – the physical imprint that a memory must somehow make on the brain. More recent work seems to be getting researchers closer to understanding the physiological nature of memory.

Almost all of this is resolutely ignored by market researchers.

Researchers tend to see memory as a concrete object, something that can be brought back and returned to memory. It can be lost like an object too. When we simply can’t recall things, we say we have lost the memory, as if we possessed a thing such as a key.

In Wired Magazine’s March 2012 issue, Jonah Lehrer provides an interesting summary of recent research on memory, focusing on the work of Karim Nader at McGill University in Canada.

Research on alleviating the terrible symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) has begun to challenge the idea that memory is like a set of photographs we can access, look at, and put away again in the same condition.

PTSD can be regarded as a super-strong memory. A memory has been imprinted so powerfully that it cannot seem to fade away, as many memories do over time. PTSD is a breakdown in forgetting.

Nader’s research overturns the idea that memory is static, that it is a concrete object that can be read repeatedly in the same way. He found that the process of recall can cause the memory to be rewritten, so that we constantly modify memories as we recall them. Hence there is hope for victims of PTSD.

There is no engram.

Memory is not static; it can be amended by the conditions under which we recall it. Recall is rewriting memory.

The ability for us to forget is vital for us to function in our lives. As the famous Russian psychologist Alexander Luria documented in his book “The Mind of a Mnemonist,” remembering everything can be crippling for someone. The man in Luria’s book, called “S”, was not able to forget. He lived a confusing, cluttered life.  Everything he did or heard brought back a flood of memories and feelings from the past.

Without forgetting we can’t have new experiences. We have to forget: we have to forget childhood, we have to forget most of what we do to remain able to function in the future.

The necessity of forgetting is itself forgotten by market research. There is a pervasive idea that respondents actually can remember all these subtle impressions and emotions and then record them on a 11 point scale days or weeks after an event.

The truth is, mostly, they can’t. We have to forget most of what we experience. Trips to the mall or the supermarket are low on the list of things we have to remember because, mostly, they don’t matter. What grades your child got last week are a much higher priority.

The obvious problem is that market research needs those impressions that are forgotten. While we may not be able articulate with any accuracy what we have felt, the emotional residue will influence behavior in the future.

The core dogma of recall has to be rejected.  The problem becomes: what will replace it ?

We can’t have interviewers follow all of our panelists or respondents around and constantly monitor what they do in the hope of catching those fleeting moments of emotion about products or services that they experience. Those memories of emotions are soon lost, washed away in the stream of consciousness that allows us to function from day to day.

The Point of Emotion

It’s not often that new technology is really a revolution. Too often, vendors hype technology way beyond its boundaries.

However, smartphones just may deserve the hype. The smartphones that 65% of the US population now carry around with them have astounding processing power and connectivity. This power is being harnessed to give us a view of the consumer which is radically different from anything we have seen before.

Consumers are also using smartphones in various settings that were heretofore unheard of: on the toilet, while waiting in line for coffee, in transit, and just about anywhere there is idle time for the consumer. Smartphones and their addictive connectivity have users carrying these devices every waking moment in their lives.

Our need to be connected drives this smartphone ubiquity. This also presents an opportunity for research and feedback to live “in the moment” – in real time, not in recall time.

We call this the Point of Emotion (POE).

The Point of Emotion is the point in time when a consumer is using a product – drinking coffee, using toothpaste to brush their teeth. Technology allows us to capture emotions as they happen.

There will be many technologies that will allow us to leverage the Point of Emotion, the current technology we see as the most significant is QR codes.

Smartphones with QR code embedded feedback systems allow us to capture four critical pieces of paradata:

  • Timestamp – When the emotion was experienced.
  • Location – Almost all smartphones have GPS or wifi-enabled location triangulation.
  • Context – Embedded QR codes give granular context about products.
  • Unique Device ID – Unique identifers enable linking of data from different temporal phases.

Researchers, rejoice! We no longer have to rely on recall to capture the customer’s viewpoint.

The Point of Emotion is closer than ever. It’s for this reason that mobile technology is truly a revolutionary force in market research. There are millions of people carrying around technology that gives us a window into their lives. All we have to do is shed our own biases and make of use of what’s right in front of our eyes.

The 10 Most Memorable Moments from MRMW Amsterdam

Market Research in the Mobile WorldThe Market Research in the Mobile World Conference in Amsterdam is now completed. On my way home to the United States I’ve had a chance to think about which moments to me were most memorable to me personally.

Some of the moments I’ve chosen are whimsical, while others are serious. Some are substantive, and some are not. That is the very nature of an “in-person” conference; it is not simply the academic points which leave the greatest impact. It is often the interpersonal, very human moments which leave the greatest impression on us, a point perhaps worth remembering as we increasingly focus on all things digital.

That said, here are my 10 most memorable moments (not necessarily in order).

- When David Brudenell of Pureprofile displayed a graphic of a giant gravestone representing the death of the old market research paradigm.

- When Betty Adamou of Research Through Gaming tweeted her sketches of selected speakers.

- When Robert Moran of the Brunswick Group emphatically stated we should do away with the term “market research.”

- When, during the Research Club event at Escape, Chelsea scored against Barcelona and a fan in front of me exploded with joy.

- When Ken Peterson of Ipsos Loyalty said the day he met Vivek Bhaskaran of Survey Analytics and SurveySwipe was a day that changed his life.

- When the conference was suddenly interrupted by sounds coming through the sound system that could only be described as having come from a seriously disturbed person, the room exploded in laughter, and Jasper Lim of the Merlien Institute ran out of the room to find the culprit (he did, and he returned with a classic sheepish grin on his face).

- When Kristin Luck of Decipher queued up a jazzy tune to play while conference participants attempted her mobile questionnaire challenge.

- When Tom de Ruyck told an anecdote about his market research university students co-creating a new course name, resulting in a dramatic increase in enrollment.

- Picturing Lenny Murphy up in the middle of the night back home in the United States as he tweeted away as if it were broad daylight.

- When I met in person people whom I had heretofore only known online, including Ray Poynter, Edward Appleton and Elias Veris.

Share your own most memorable moments in the comments section below.

MRMW Live Blog – Day Two

3:54 p.m.

Elias Veris of Insites Consulting discussed the use of mobile in MROCs. He said mobile qual gives you an in-depth understanding of the hows and whys; it’s about digging deep. The 21st century method of digging deep is MROCs. MROCs are about engagement and social dynamics, they are longterm and asynchronous, and they are about unsolicited and maturated feedback.

Insites uses gamification to help keep people engaged. They award points, allow people to “level up” if they post enough content, and they give challenges. One example of a challenge given to MROC members was asking them to “prove” their city is cooler than others, which led to a strong outpouring of participation.

Veris said the right inflow at the right time will enrich your online community. It’s about the picture shared, the social pressure (feedback generates more feedback), and the discussion stimulated.

Veris said not all their participants engage via mobile, but mobile participants are more engaged. Mobile is personal and contextual. He said mobile and MROCs are friends with benefits, and different friends ask for different benefits.

3:32 p.m.

Robert Moran of the Brunswick Group spoke about his writings about the future of market research, which draw heavily on ideas taken from futurism.

Moran outlined the 6Ds that will change commerce, and eventually market research:

- Disruption Ethos
- Disintermediation
- Digitization
- Dematerialization
- Democratization
- DIY

He said futurists have two ways to forecast the future:
- the incremental approach – create the baseline forecast, the “official future,” then bend the official future in a number of different directions.
- the stretch scenario approach – take the top two uncertain drivers and create a two by two matrix

Moran then gave sample of “Toffler-esque future shocks” in market research. The first two, Moran said, are inevitable.

- moving beyond the survey
- the growth of the emerging markets

The others are:

- Data abundance
- Asking-observing shift
- Democratization
- Convergence
- Strategic imperative

Moran’s writings pose 22 possible market research futures. Three examples are:
- Power to the people – the rise of co-creative design communities
- Portal power – all data is consolidated into dashboards, which becomes the most important real estate in market research
- E-agency – market research firms are replaced by individual e-lancers

During the Q&A session Moran said we should kill the term “market research” and start over, perhaps crowdsourcing an alternative.

2:16 p.m.

Rebecca West of Civicom presented a case study of qualitative mobile data collection in a study about stroller purchasing. The respondents reported at the point of purchase via audio and text. Audio comments were transcribed and analyzed. Photos were also shared by the respondents, and those photos were assocated with the relevant text. There was extensive coding of the text responses. The audio responses were seen as particularly valuable by the client.

The stroller manufacturer got several key insights from this study, including the positioning of a celebrity endorsement, the need to market to men as well as women, and the need to explain the value for the substantial price. None of these insights came out in an associated quantitative survey.

1:52 p.m.

David Brudenell of PureProfile gave a case study if his company’s collaboration to create the Reputation Index for Australia’s major banks. Executives’ bonuses were tied to brand reputation. The incumbent was only collecting 1,000 completes quarterly. PureProfile collects a big sample size of 36,000 per year, with 4 weight sets applied daily, weekly, quarterly and yearly.

Brudenell advised that understanding why to innovate will help you understand how to innovate.

He quite dramatically displayed a message on a grave stone saying that the traditional market research value chain is dead. He added that data collection and analysis premiums are gone, that traditional market research skills are hard to fit into new technology. At the same time, the age old pressures still apply – speed and quality.

Brudenell presented a checklist to follow when creating an innovative product. This checklist was used when creating the Reputation Index.

- find a big data source
- apply old school rigor
- link data to everything possible
- collect meaningful data in modules
- automate it
- syndicate it
- make it sexy for customers

1:28 p.m.

Mikhail Zarin of Mobiety and Artem Tinchurin of Tiburon Research presented data from a test of mobile research done in Russia. Mobiety is a Russian-based DIY tool for mobile web-based surveys. Tiburon is a data collection company with access panels in Russia.

Zarin gave some statistics about internet and mobile in Russia: 67% of Russians are online; 20% of Russians surf the mobile web at least once a month; 84% of Russians have a cell phone; 34% have a cell phone only; and half of 12-24 year olds have mobile access.

There were 5 conditions:
“Mobile CATI” – voice interviews on a mobile phone
“CAWI access panel” – WAP surveys to members of an access panel
“SAWI access panel” – Smartphone surveys to members of an access panel
“SAWI river” – Smartphone surveys where respondents were invited to participate in the study at mobile top-up boxes, which are quite common in Russia (approx. 180,000 in the country).
“SAWI spam” – Smartphone survey among people on a (legal) mailing list but who were not part of a panel.

Response rate was much higher for the mobile CATI condition (52%); it was lower for CAWI and SAWI using access panels (30% and 20%), and it was much lower for SAWI river (2%) and SAWI “spam” (0.3%).

Key findings:
- representativity doesn’t exist, but rankings tend to match
- “spam” is bad; even if it is legal the sample will be biased
- SAWI access panel – workable but noticeably biased toward more affluent and active users
- SAWI river – technically works but needs further research

11:48 a.m.

Guy Rolfe of Kantar moderated a panel on the role of trade organizations in the new market research paradigm. Here are some nuggets of wisdom from that panel.

- Mike Cooke of ESOMAR indicated that the most important role for a trade organization is to represent the common interests of researchers legislatively, importantly including respondent privacy issues.

- Tom de Ruyck of BAQMAR said it is critical that organizations work together; for example, it is not necessary for there to be three separate policies for social media. De Ruyck said we are a small industry, and if we do not unite, we will not be able to distinguish ourselves from the marketing and advertising industries.

- Wim van Slooten of MOA said a lot of suppliers do not consider themselves to be part of our industry. Some newcomers are “cowboys” who are not educated on important areas of our business such as privacy.

- Mark Michelson of MMRA said his organization was founded because at the Atlanta MRMW event last year there was a wide-ranging discussion of issues including privacy and there were a lot of participants who do not consider themselves connected to or part of the market research industry.

- Michelson said that the reason market researchers have not developed policies for newer technology-related issues because technology is developing so quickly. It is in part a definitional issue. For example, what exactly is mobile?

- Cooke said we have to regulate ourselves in a real context, not a historical context. The role of government is to protect people, and it is alarming that people are willing to trade their privacy for rewards. We have to make very clear to people exactly what we are doing with respect to their privacy. Not only we but also social media has failed in this so far; people don’t fully understand what cookies are.

- De Ruyck said changing technology alters the way people want to interact with us and brands. The biggest challenge is that we debate all the time without moving forward. Otherwise cowboys from outside the industry will charge forward.

- Van Slooten said there are no standards and no codes of conduct with respect to passive data collection. Engaging in passive data collection without proper privacy considerations is a danger we need to face.

- Sandy Janzen of MRIA said one challenge is legitimizing some of the newer forms of research. We have to usher in new methodologies and educate our members about proper use, while at the same time looking into regulation and legislation.

- Michelson said trade associations’ roles are advocacy, education, community building and standards.

- De Ruyck told an anecdote about how he engaged his students in a market research course in France to co-create a new title for the course. His enrollment had been dipping from 20 to 15 and the students said the course should drop the words “contemporary” and “research.” The new title is “New Ways to Connect with Consumers.” His enrollment increased dramatically to 60 students.

- Janzen indicated we have responsibilities to the public to protect them and look to the future of how new data collection techniques may affect them.

- Cooke said the role of trade organizations is learning from the past and looking to the future. Education is a real opportunity and should be deployed aggressively for the future.

- De Ruyck said trade organizations should be curators of what’s important for members to know.

10:52 a.m.

Anne-Marie O’Sullivan of Qualvu spoke about the power of mobile qualitative video research. This methodology allows insights into real moments in real lives, without having to rely on recall. With the digital revolution, there has never been so much access to rich, real video. When you watch these videos you are absolutely with them at that time, that’s very powerful for researchers and clients.

O’Sullivan quoted Anne Mulcahy, former CEO of Xerox: “We’re drowning in data, yet starving for insights.”

Some clients have indicated current mobile research is quite impersonaal. Researchers need to collaborate with clients to turn mobile data into insights, replicating the scenario in the back room of a focus group where researcher and client collaborate face-to-face. Collaboration must be as innovative and vibrant as data collection.

O’Sullivan also showed how Qualvu’s platform enables coding and analysis of video qual data output. Ways to deliver mobile insights for impact are: present directional highlight reels, collaborate with the client on key themes, plan your report to engage cross-organizational stakeholders, and deliver voice of the consumer in reports.

10:25 a.m.

Aaron Pazurik of Confirmit said we should take inspiration from how marketers approach their subjects. By contrast, only 15% of researchers adjust their online surveys to make them suitable for smartphones. He gave examples of several poorly executed mobile surveys – one which required Flash to be enabled, and another which presented an unsuitably large grid on a small phone screen. He also noted that 65% of senior leaders want market researchers to be a strategic partner, but only 25% view us that way.

Pazurik gave 3 examples of techniques for getting deeper insights with mobile research.

1 – Doctors were given the opportunity to respond to a survey question by a voice-recording. This was quire popular among the respondents and is an example of getting better insights through better survey experiences.
2 – Best Buy ensures that people who express negative opinions or specific problems during customer satisfaction surveys are responded to immediately. This is an example of respecting the value of an opinion.
3 – Legacy, a smoking-cessation company, supplies respondents with a BlackBerry and asks them to record every instance of craving or smoking. If the respondent needs help they are routed to a specialist in smoking cessation. This is an an example of “always-on insights.”

9:53 a.m.

Kristin Luck of Decipher said her company tends to do more WAP than app-based surveys. She indicated the mobile future is about much more than apps and reminded the audience that unlike those present, many people don’t have smartphones.

Luck said researchers need to think about the “blending debate” do you take respondents out who attempt to take a survey on their mobile device, or do you offer the survey both ways, mobile and non-mobile? She has a preference for the latter. If respondents want to come in on mobile, she said, that’s what they’re going to do.

Luck listed some things Decipher has observed about mobile respondents in their surveys: they complete surveys more slowly and they give shorter answers to open-ended questions. However, they showed no clear differences in satisfaction ratings.

She also discussed what she called the tablet opportunity- tablets are particularly well suited for qualiquant investigations.

Luck gave two acronyms for remembering important privacy issues:

OMG – online tracking data, metadata and photos, geolocation
WTF – wandering device IDs, too complex privacy policies, fees for SMS and data streaming

She also gave some best practices: keep surveys short; minimize a non-essential content, and keep the look of the survey simple and minimize distraction.

Luck then conducted an experiment in the room; she handed out traditional questionnaire and asked participants to convert it to a mobile format.

Tips for doing so are:

- limit survey length
- limit total number of pages
- limit text boxes per question to one
- avoid other specifics
- avoid rating scales and grid questions
- when using grids, limit to 3 columns or fewer
- keep column text short
- keep topic to point, limit iterations

9:20 a.m.

Andrew Reid of Vision Critical presented some statistics about the dramatic growth of mobile in India and China and about the dramatic growth of mobile advertising around the world. By 2015 62% of mobile phones will be “smart.”

Vision Crtical runs over 500 community panels, most of which are dual mode (online and mobile). They also run mobile-only communities. Usability is key in mobile.

Reid outlined some key advantages of using mobile in community panels: panelists have already been screened and profiled, allowing shorter surveys; survey field windows can be greatly reduced; clients can get answers in hours; and panelists can participate when it’s convenient for them, yielding better data; surveys can be incredibly targeted; and breakout mini qual groups are possible.

Reid also spoke about augmented reality, which is a live view of a physical part of the world which is supplemented by computer generated data. He said QR codes will soon be like “MC Hammer pants”: something that existed for a short time but was replaced by something much better.

Reid outlined two ideas for how augmented reality could work in market research. In his first example, you start with a community, find out how many have smart phones, profile them, find out who fits in a segment we care about, have them download an app, give them an exercise every time they come in contact with that brand, scan the logo, push the respondent a survey, sync that survey up with the respondent’s deep profile. What we could learn from this is: occasion data, ad recall for the whole marketing mix,, and creating a link beteween encountering ads and brand usage.

He outlined another scenario for package testing, whereby the repondent enters grocery store and is asked to scan a package, then they are delivered a survey “in situ.” This methodology could also incorporate gamification.

8:52 a.m.

Simon van Duivenvoorde of Wakoopa, a passive measurement technology startup, spoke about the effects on privacy of changes in technology. He described the way people consume information by using the example of how he and his girlfriend shop for furniture for their new apartment. They bounce all over the place online, from Facebook to email to Google and beyond. He said there is not straight line anymore when it comes to the way information is consumed. Van Duivenvoorde described this process as “information snacking.” You can have information whenever you want it, however you want it, on the device where you want it.

He said this change makes researchers’ jobs difficult because it is difficult for respondents to estimate their behavior. He gave an example of a study where respondents were asked about their online behavior visiting news sites and that was compared to behavioral information from passive tracking; people estimated their news consumption inaccurately by a factor of two.

Van Duivenvoorde stated pithily that “information snacking leads to data obesity.” An important question, he said, is how do we go from big data to big insights? The change in information consumption forces a fundamental shift in the market research industry; we have gone from not enough data to too much data. The challenge is how to sift through and extract insights from data.

Another question is how we deal with privacy; this is an even bigger issue with mobile because it’s such an intimate device. There has been a shift in consumer perception about privacy. People now understand their data is worth something. In 2008 50% of people would give up their information for something; in 2011 it was 62%. People understand better it’s a deliberate choice, but they want to be in control. These changes force innovation.

8:28 a.m.

Kay Schneermann of Gruner + Jahr presented data from a mobile ad awareness study conducted in Germany. The study included a control group and an experiemental group which was exposed to mobile ads for 4 established brands (Lufthansa, Marc O’Polo, DKV Insurance and Nivea) and one new brand entrant into the German market (Kinnie soft drinks). In each instance there was a significant positive effect in the experimental condition on brand awareness. Among the established brands there was also a positive effect on measures of brand image and purchase intention.

Schneermann’s conclusions from the data are as follows: mobile display ads are noticed and recognized; mobile advertising works for established and unknown brands; mobile advertising even works as a sole channel to produce an advertising impact; mobile advertising promotes the brand image and targeting means greater efficiency; and mobile advertising creates purchase intention.

Areas for future research include qualitative studies and measuring the impact of mobile advertising as compared with other channels.

MRMW Live Blog – Day One

5:29 p.m.

Diane Gardiner of Latitude Insights discussed a mobile qualitative project for Kraft among 4-year olds in Australia. Mobile qualitative research is growing, but there’s a lot of opportunity. Latitude uses mobile qualitative to add more insight to panel communities. They collect ethnographic data such as videos and photos of meal preparations, home decorating, etc. The qualitative study explored kids’ and mums’ opinions with respect to Freddo, a chocolate frog. Respondents were given tasks and challenges over 14 days. One task was to give the child $5 to spend at the supermarket. Another was for the children to select a snack from a “mystery box.” She played videos created by respondents speaking candidly about the product. Benefits include: removing the “researcher effect” with youth research and collecting data in the kids’ natural environment. Clients really valued being able to see the mums interacting with kids in their natural environment. This is powerful material they can show their internal clients. Challenges included: that average consumers aren’t tech-savvy, it is difficult for the researcher to sift through and manage all the videos and photos, and that we’re asking the consumer to be both the researcher and the respondent – there is limited to no ability to probe responses.

5:10 p.m.

Remy Bleijendaal from TNS Nipo said that mobile devices are highly personal and emotional. A lot of businesses want to tap into the mobile circle of trust, but it’s hard to get in because a lot of companies don’t add value. People are online more in the morning and the evening. Mobile’s always connected nature drives “now.” Consumer expectations are raised with respect to convenience and transparency. TNS Nipo did a study among Android users in the Netherlands. People spent 69 minutes per day on mobile apps; social and gaming are the top uses for applications, but shopping and email are done less. Ninety-five percent of the time spent is on apps as opposed to the web.

4:45 p.m.

Dominic Jarville of Research Now described his company’s building of a mobile application. The morning after they activated their iPhone app, 1,900 people had downloaded and installed it with no prompting. He listed some myths about mobile research which have been debunked: that respondents don’t want to take surveys on mobile devices; that mobile respondents don’t take care when completing surveys; that device size matters; that it costs more to reward mobile panelists. They tried a 200-question mobile survey internally; it worked but the user experience was terrible. They consider mobile to be “panel rep,” but not nationally representative. Connectivity continues to be a problem, particularly in US rural areas. It’s not about the app, it’s about the panel too; they do a lot of hybrid studies. Mobile surveys are currently focused on experience; in the future it will be more about measurement.

4:01 p.m.

Florian Tress of ODC Services described a multi-country study his company, a panel provider, to determine how best to create a mobile access panel. ODC profiled its existing online panel in terms of mobile penetration and device details, as well as willingness to participate in mobile surveys and to download survey apps. About half agreed to take surveys on a mobile device. Mobile responents are still far from being representative of the general population, so ODC has a standard modus operandi of combining mobile and online samples. Respondents can decide which device to use. Among those who would not participate in a mobile survey, the top reason cited was cost of an internet connection.

3:40 p.m.

Surag Patel of InMobi, a mobile ad network, gave a case study of a multi-country study conducted in order to understand global differences in mobile media. Respondents were recruited from across the InMobi mobile web and app network. Globally the average mobile web user consumes 7.2 hours of media per day. Thirty-nine percent globally multi-task when watching TV – 71% in the UK, 17% in China. For mobile web users, mobile was the preferred channel for getting information. Fifty-nine percent now see mobile as their primary means of going online – 82% in Indonesia, 26% in Taiwan. When asked why they go online on mobile devices, 45% globally each cited “it’s easy to use” and “it’s always there.” When asked where they go online on a mobile device, 67% said in bed, 47% waiting for something, and 39% when watching TV.

3:18 p.m.

Pankhaj Jha of Millward Brown talked about mobile research in India. He cited a stat that the number of mobile phones in India and China combined is greater than the number in the entire developed world. He also pointed out that 80% of phones in emerging markets are “not smart.” Challenges to mobile market research in emerging markets are poor infrastructure, low literacy levels, and oost sensitivity. He presented a case study about ad testing on mobile phones in India. It was a comparison of of ad testing completed on mobile to traditional paper and pencil. One challenge was balancing the size of the app with the resolution of the video. At the lower end of the spectrum, repondents were watching the video on “smart enough” feature phones. Another challenge was survey navigation – they ended up doing one question per screen, removing the “back” button, adding a “next” button, and adding a progress bar. Responses to the study were “well in line” with the PAPI results. Most of the study was conducted face-to-face as panel and online ad recruitment were more challenging. There was low familiarity with the app download process. Perceived high data costs were another factor causing rejection among some users, on the order of 25%.

3:03 p.m.

Ludger Kesting of Questback outlined 4 phases of research methodology development. Mobile surveys, research apps and location-based surveys are part of Phase 3, which is where we are now. Phase 4 includes multichannel feedback, feedback with multiple devices and context-sensitive feedback. He showed a graphic demonstrating the heterogeneity of mobile devices along a number of dimensions: hardward, equipment, operating system, browers, standards such as Flash and HTML5, internet connections and geograpical differences. He gave an example of the development of QR codes as a link between real world objects and the digital world.

2:21 p.m.

Alastair Hill of On Device Research noted that people keep their phones with them at all times. He presented a mobile diary case study about outdoor media. A panel of consumers in London recorded more than 13,000 individual interactions with brands. They measured the amount of emotion associated with different types of media – radio had the most at 80%, whereas outdoor advertising was at 62%. Online was the lowest amount of emotion at 49%. The stages of the customer journey are: absorbing brand information, planning a purchase, obtaining the product or service and sharing information about the product or service. They evaluated how much of each type of media affects each of those four stages. TV is particularly strong in the absorbing stage. Online is key in the planning stage. He also shared figures on the proportion of internet users in different countries access the internet only through mobile devices – the figure for China was 38% mobile-only.

1:55 p.m.

Jan Schottelndreier of Cluetec talked about how his company helps researchers migrate from paper and pencil to CAPI and mobile CAPI surveys. He shared advice they give to clients. Logistics are critical when planning a mobile CAPI project – such as shipping data collection technology to project locations. For studies conducted outside, environmental factors such as weather, internet access as well as battery life should be considered, as well as the social/economic environment. For studies conducted inside, wifi quality is critical. In some location, such as hospitals and some trade shows, wifi is not allowed. Also important is considering the technical and literacy skills of the target population. Usability is critical. He showed an example of what not to do which is rendering full computer screen rating grid on a tiny mobile screen. It is also very important to choose the right device.

1:37 p.m.

Leslie Townsend and Tariq Mirz of Kinesis presented on doing mobile research in Europe. They project 3G mobile access to be at 90% in Europe in 2014. Kinesis’ research exhibits a 60% response rate on mobile surveys, higher than any other data collection mode. Response is much lower among similar studies in the U.S. In Europe mobile surveys are collected on a wide range of devices, while in the U.S. iPhone is currently dominant with 75% of Kinesis’ surveys completed on that platform. Email still rules and will rule for a very long time for multi-mode surveys.

11:08 a.m.

Siamack Salari of Ethos and Peter Harrison of Brainjuicer presented a case study on mobile ethnography. Respondents were asked to take videos of and commentate on their consuption of food and beverages. Harrison stated that mobile ethnography is in its infancy; there are not experts in it because it’s too young. He also shared instances where data collected were richer vs. poorer.

11:15 a.m.

Edward Appleton of Avery Dennison spoke about the client perspective on mobile. He talked about the fact that mobile is changing people’s lives “big time.” But according to the GRIT Report, only 17% of clients reported actually using mobile research in 2011. Will mobile be THE new thing or A new thing? Mobile advantages include: immediacy, fewer recall issues, shorter surveys leading to higher data quality, contextual richness, greater youth engagement and respondent convenience. Issues with mobile include: normative data include more positive top box scores, richness of self-reported disgnostic data, screen size, user experience and questionnaire length. Appleton also noted that researchers need to translate insights into business advice within the corporation, otherwise we are simply troublemakers. Avery Dennison is actively considering mobile options.

10:53 a.m.

A.J. Johnson of Brainjuicer discussed the model of thinking popularized by Daniel Kahneman, whereby there are two cognitive systems, System 1 and System 2. He described Brainjuicer’s approach which attempts to factor context into decisionmaking. They prefer the term “contextualized research” rather than “mobile research.” He described an experiment about environmental decision factors where the type of music played (French or German) affected the amount of French or German wine purchased. He also described social factors and personal factors (“hot states”). Context changes the way we think and behave. He described a study where they tracked a woman’s emotional states through her journey to a shopping experience and during the experience. They showed faces and asked the respondent to choose which face expresses how they feel right now. Happy shoppers spend about 9% more. Hungry shoppers spend about 8% more. Tired people spend 46% more. The way we feel has a direct impact on the way we behave. Too much current market research ignores context. The mobile device is well-suited to collect in-the-moment context.

10:35 a.m.

Michael Oxfeldt of the Danish Broadcasting Corporation, Reineke Reitsma of Forrester Research and Martin Lloyd of Greenpeace served on a panel discussing the effect of the SoLoMo (social/local/mobile) convergence on marketing insights. Lloyd discussed some of the challenges of being an activist organization operating in China. Reitsma discussed how Forrester is taking mobile into account in how it produces research reports. Lloyd said Greenpeace has studied how mobile technology played a part in both the Occupy movement and the Arab Spring. Reitsma said in the next 5 years, you cannot have a significant presence if you don’t have both a social and a mobile componennt.

9:38 a.m.

Betty Adamou of Research Through Gaming talked about her company’s creation of research games, which she said is a first in the research industry and and a first in the gamification industry. She described a research game created for BBC Magazines’ children’s publications. Children are notoriously difficult to research population. The study was intended to assess advertising and evaluate which celebrities are most influential. Prior to the study RTG conducted focus groups which made it clear that children take information quite literally and that has to be factored in to the design. Response was extremely high – the field period took less than half the allotted time of two weeks. The children made an avatar of themselves and explored a virtual house. The goal was to find stars in the house; each star waa associated with a survey question. There were separate paths for boys and girls. There was a game within the game where respondents had to guess celebrities from pictures which were slowly revealed in stages. Some children came back to play the game after the data were already collected.

9:12 a.m.

Stefan Knect of GfK Nurago talked about the big change in our lives which is the ubiquity of technology. We are always connected. He gave examples of the importance and penetration of mobile technology in the developing world. He said there is no mobile web – there is just the web. There is also no desktop web or tablet web. He said that mobile is taking a bite into traditional media, and that money follows attention, so more money will flow into mobile. He gave statistics indicating mobile’s growth resembles online’s growth 10 years ago. He also talked about the fact that geolocation data is meaningful only in context. GfK’s approach is to measure passively when possible, and if that fails ask the respondent. He said mobile devices are our exobrains. Kids will not know anything other than smart devices.

8:48 a.m.

Mark Melby of Lumi Mobile talked about opportunities to measure instant feedback with mobile. He talked about Lumi’s technology which is for both smartphones and non-smartphone mobile devices. He discussed the importance of usability and gave examples of diary research on mobile where usability is key, including clear icons and simple navigation. He discussed the ability to send push reminders. He said client completion rates and satisfaction scores are impressive. He also discussed passive metering, and gave an example of a panelist, “Molly Bloom,” whom they were able to profile in great detail due to passive metering. Moderator Ray Poynter raised the question of whether changes in technology are simply measuring changes in behavior or are in part causing those changes.

8:32 a.m.

Vivek Bhaskaran of Survey Analytics and Ken Peterson of Ipsos Loyalty outlined the dramatics growth of mobile.  They mentioned the difficulty respondents have in recalling information for traditional surveys.  Mobile allows researchers to collect data at the “Point of Emotion.” Ipsos Loyalty approached Ikea with SurveySwipe to revamp their customer satisfaction research.  They created a mobile panel and cut the traditional customer satisfaction survey to 5 minutes.  The surveys include GPS push notifications of customers when they enter the store.  The surveys also include photo question types.  The surveys give Ikea Immediate Response Opportunities (IROs) where they can respond to issues before the customer leaves the store.  Customer satisfaction scores have been moving up significantly.

Research Access to Live Blog MRMW Amsterdam

Market Research in the Mobile WorldIt’s finally here!

Along with many others, I’ve been looking forward to the Market Research in the Mobile World conference in Amsterdam all year.  The event is set to kick off on Wednesday morning at 7:00 a.m. CEST.

Research Access is a media sponsor of the event, and I will be “live blogging” during both conference days, Wednesday and Thursday.  Check Research Access regularly for real-time updates from the conference.

Here are some of the things I’m looking forward to most in Amsterdam:

Wednesday

- Ray Poynter of Vision Critical serving as chair on Day One of the conference; I only know Ray from his social media and NewMR work, so I’m looking forward to hearing his wisdom in person.

- Vivek Bhaskaran of Survey Analytics and Ken Peterson of Ipsos Loyalty kicking off the conference with a case study of how Ikea implemented mobile market research.

- Betty Adamou of Research Through Gaming giving examples of gamification around the world.

- A panel discussion of the effects of the SoLoMo (social / local / mobile) convergence on market research, with representatives of Greenpeace, the Danish Broadcasting Corporation, and Forrester Research.

- Edward Appleton of Avery Dennison providing insight on the client perspective on mobile research.

- The after-hours event organized by The Research Club (sorry, I won’t be live blogging the party!).

Thursday

- Decipher‘s Kristin Luck giving tips on converting existing studies to mobile.

- A roundtable discussion of the role of trade organizations, with representatives of ESOMAR, MOA, BAQMAR and MMRA.

- A presentation on mobile research in Russia from Mikhail Zarin of Mobiety and Artem Tinchurin of Tiburon Research.

- A session from Elias Veris of Insites Consulting on mobile MROCs.

The world is changing fast, folks. Things that were unthinkable very recently are now possible, sometimes even routine. I’m composing this post on my iPad in the Dublin airport (on a layover en route to Amsterdam). In fact I’m fittingly going “laptop free” for the conference, with only my iPad and iPhone (it’s going well so far, but I’m very glad I brought my Bluetooth keyboard!).

Let me also thank my friend Lenny Murphy of GreenBook, who was slated to chair the conference but had a late change of plans. Lenny, you will be missed in Amsterdam, but you will certainly be here in spirit. Thanks for your tireless work in organizing this conference.

SoLoMo and Market Research

mobile-social-localThank you to all who joined us on March 29th for Research Access‘ joint webinar with GreenBook, “SoLoMo: How Social Media, Localization, & Mobile are Redefining Marketing Insights.”

Here, in all its grandeur, is the text of the full webinar.

The panel included Charlie Rader, Digital Insights Tools Leader, Procter & Gamble; Steve Rappaport, ARF Knowledge Solutions Director and Author, Listen First!, and Andrew Jeavons, President, Survey Analytics. The session was moderated by Lenny Murphy, Editor of the GreenBook Blog.

Click here to access the webinar video and slides.

Leonard Murphy:  Good morning, good day, good evening, depending on where you are in the world. Thanks for joining us today in the ongoing MRX Ideas series of webinars. That is also our Twitter hashtag, is #MRXIdeas, so you’re welcome to submit questions or comments via the webinar interface, but also please do it on Twitter. So it is my great pleasure to introduce our panel for our conversations today. First, we have Andrew Jeavons, who is president of Survey Analytics. Next, we have Charlie Rader, who is Digital Insights Tools Leader at Procter and Gamble, and then last but certainly not least, Steve Rappaport, ARF Solutions Director and author of Listen First, which is a fantastic book if you have not read it.

We’re going to be talking about SoLoMo, how social media, localization, and mobile are redefining marketing insight, and we can go on to the first question, please. So now, just to set the stage for the audience, this is a conversation between four guys over a virtual lunch, and you’re going to listen in, so we have some questions kind of predefined to give some broad structure to the conversation, but these are just to kind of kick things off, so we may digress. We may not get to everything we want. We’ll certainly make sure to incorporate anything that you want to know on this topic, though, so I’m going to throw it out there to Steve and Andrew and Charlie. Each of you, give me your take. When you define SoLoMo, based on your experience and background, what do you think about? What does it mean for you? Charlie, why don’t we just start with you and then Steve and then Andrew?

Charlie Rader:  Sure. Well, to say it funny, I would say SoLoMo is – now, I’ll give our audience just a little bit of background. I know we didn’t do formal bios or anything like that, but I tend to be in the product development side of stuff here at P&G, so a little bit of a different take on understanding the marketing aspect to stuff. I’m interested in how folks are using social media and mobile-based technologies. The Lo part isn’t as well-defined for me as we listen to our consumers and what they’re looking for in the products and services that - whether it’s Charmin bath tissue, Pantene shampoo, any of those types of things – but it’s really great – especially with mobile, to be able to narrow what I call the recall gap, that gap between when consumers experience our products and then are able to give us feedback about what they think about that.  So the fact is that on the local side, this is how I’m kind of bringing this definition into being – the local side is these tools give us access to consumers wherever they’re at, and whether that means having mobile-based tools or online-based tools to talk to our consumers, whether they come in for an interview that day, they’re doing some sort of a homework assignment, so to speak, and so it’s very local. They give us some free, qualitative understanding. We can read that and make that the springboard for a face-to-face interview, or it can be regional to global. I think there’s a lot of great pieces to this entire movement as we are able to listen to our consumers, so that’s kind of a little bit on my take on SoLoMo.

Leonard Murphy:  Thank you. Steve, what do you think about it, from kind of the macro view, from the ARF?

Steve Rappaport:  Sure. Actually, I was glad to hear Charlie, because what I did, I had time to actually think through it, and I wrote a definition, so I can give you the current ARF definition of SoLoMo, which may be subject to revision, but it’s about a half-hour old now, because in this world, you have to time and date everything.

Leonard Murphy:  That’ll definitely change 30 minutes from now.

Steve Rappaport:  So anyway, this is my definition: marketing that centers on an understanding of customers and prospects that helps them do what they’re interested in doing wherever they are and whenever they want, so it really conforms to Charlie’s point about the Lo – I mean, the Lo is really wherever a person is. It’s not necessarily a specific location, and not looking at it from the tools perspective, but really looking at it from the marketing perspective and the company perspective, it really is about providing people with the ability to accomplish things in their lives as they would like to, rather than the way that marketers and advertisers might want them to.

Leonard Murphy: That’s a great definition, and hopefully that will now last a little bit longer than the next 30 minutes, Steve.

Steve Rappaport: We’ll have to memorialize it in some way.

Leonard Murphy:  Right, you heard it here first. Andrew, you guys are doing a lot of work, particularly around the Mo piece of things, so what – anything different?

Andrew Jeavons: Actually, the first time I heard the term SoLoMo, I thought, “It’s an opera by Verdi,” but a nice prosaic little acronym. I’m kind of leaning towards Charlie’s definition. I mean, for us, from what we see, from what clients are doing and what they want, this is a sort of mix of technologies that they’re allowing to capture what are starting to the turn the points of emotion regarding any event as a consumer, and so I think the bits that seem to be coming out, the most important are the local and the mobile – there is this huge interest now in all things geolocational with surveys and where people are going, and asking them at that point what they’re doing. I think the social thing probably fits more in the marketing perspective. Then the people also have the ability at that moment to communicate with their social network immediately what’s going on with them, and while I hear often resistance from people saying, “Well it’s very intrusive and privacy and all that,” I think everybody really secretly likes this, I mean, particularly the younger age groups.  I think it is this thing of allowing us to be plugged into what people are doing in many different ways in terms of their social network and their current location.

Leonard Murphy: You know, this leads into our next question. I view all this as convergence, and it’s not just convergence of technologies, also the convergence of our lives in accordance with the technologies, so, digital – the future of all communication is digital. The future of digital is mobile, so we’re talking about, at least for me when I think about it, that there is, with online or social media or mobile, there’s a false separation between those three. They are effectively one thing, and moving more and more in that way, till we have that 24/7 point of experience, the ability to engage with consumers and share that, so for me, when I think about that, that is convergence. Now, that idea has massive implications on the marketing end of things, particularly. It changes the paradigm to almost the Nth degree, which, by default, then has massive implications for those of us who try to help marketers understand the effectiveness of that, so my next question is, what is the impact of convergence on the marketing function? Steve, we’ll start off with you on that. I think, again, you may have kind of a macro view.

Steve Rappaport: Thank you. I had some thoughts about that, and for me, what came up is really the way that marketers think about their customers, and I didn’t have an answer to this question as much as challenges, and there were a couple. I think there were a couple that are worth talking about.

One is the challenge to understand customers and prospects dynamically, because – and probably Andrew can speak to this much better than I can, but the traditional way that companies understand customers is largely through surveys and focus groups and things, where they’re looking at forced responses and sort of historical information about their customers, but the promise, really, of the social/local/mobile is to really understand the data streams that are happening in real time – the signals that people are giving off about who they are, what they’re doing, what they’re interested in, what they’d like to accomplish and so forth.  So the ability to move from sort of slow information – and I don’t mean that negatively – to really bringing together streams of signals that need to be captured, processed, analyzed, interpreted, and acted up on very short time frames and time scales is extremely challenging for the marketers.

The second is the challenge for marketers to view their customers as something other than deal hounds, because a lot of what comes across that I see is really about couponing and hitting people when they’re walking by your store, and all that sort of thing, and there’s an important place for that, but if we do think more broadly about these technologies, the convergence and the ways that people are using them to get on with their lives, there’s really the challenge of understanding this.

One is, how are people using social and mobile? There’s some really interesting work that I came across by Jerry Zaltman and Joe Plummer on sort of the different ways that people view social networks. A lot of us think that social networks are used in one way, but from the users’ point of view, they’ve identified sort of three different segments for the way that people approach social media. One is as a place to do activities. A second is a place where people can be onstage and announce themselves, and then the third is to use it as a campfire, so, assuming that these are useful distinctions – I mean, this is just in our early work – how many of us are really thinking about the different ways that people are using these tools and what they’re using them for, and then using that understanding to help shape and influence the marketing that we do to those folks? In addition something that we’ve seen for a number of years now is that there are new models of advertising that have emerged that succeed, really, the interrupt and repeat model, and that’s where these models are around service, so reducing friction, helping people accomplish things.

Another is providing information on demands so that people can act themselves, and then the third is engagement, so the convergence of all of this on the marketing function is really to challenge marketers to think much more – not only holistically, but much more integratively about these technologies, how people are using them in their lives, what these technologies and convergence mean to people, and then use that as a window to really understanding folks, and then using that to market and advertise effectively, so that’s my answer to the question.

Leonard Murphy:  That’s – thank you. That’s a great impression.

Charlie Rader: Wow.

Steve Rappaport: Well I’m a big picture guy. I can’t help it.

Leonard Murphy:  So Andrew, Steve kind of pointed out that maybe you have a perspective on that. What’s your take?

Andrew Jeavons:  As Steve said, challenge to understand the customers dynamically, and I think one of the big things that I see is in the past, when we worked with surveys and, we had a set of demographics that we’d use because they were convenient and easy, and because they were all we ever had. Now, we get all these data, and instead of saying to me, “Well, how many times did you go to the market last week?” you can actually know that.

And it is a challenge, because we’re going to get a lot more data. We have a lot of data that’s very different from the form of data traditionally used when we use surveys. We can have streams of data about how active people are physically. We can use the geolocation on the smartphones to find that out. We can have all sorts of information of where they’ve actually been and when they’re been there, and ask them things. We can have people taking pictures or videos of what they do and don’t like, and all this is going on now, and so we have a radically different set of types of data, which will lead to different demographic classifications, which will change the image of a consumer quite surprisingly.

I think there’s going to be one of these revelations where suddenly there’s going to be a lot of realization that the way people are seeing maybe traditional demographic methods just don’t work, but it is a big challenge, and I think one of the things that we’re working very hard on, or a lot of companies are, is making sure that there are mechanisms to understand that data at the moment. We get a lot of pictures uploaded, sort of mobile ethnography. You’ve got to work out new ways of managing that, because it’s just different from what we had before.

Leonard Murphy:  Well, so, Charlie, what about the impact of this – we’re talking about marketing, but from a product development standpoint, how are these technologies actually changing the way you think about products that you’re introducing into the market, and how you’re engaging with consumers in almost a co-creation process, and give me some insights that way?

Charlie Rader: Things that we have – actually, both Steve and Andrew hit on a number of points that, as I was thinking through this question, and I’ll take marketing in a much broader perspective, as in how does P&G as a company – we as a marketer, so to speak, look at these things, and then bring it into product development land. Well, the first thing is that in both social and local and mobile, is like, how are we delivering information to our consumers? That is going to be a critical value add, I think, for our consumers. How do they find things out about our particular products? Is that placing QR codes on our packages and saying, “This is how we’re being eco-friendly as far as our packaging materials are going. This is the top – see a video here,” and then sharing those things in a Facebook, Twitter type of way? Information is going to be another layer to the product development, the total product experience for our consumers, I think

Then, of course, as we’re looking in social media or utilizing co-creation platforms, that type of thing where people are much more used to chiming in and helping out in increasing the value of a product, just not to say, “I’ll probably buy this,” or, “I’ll definitely buy this,” but really saying, “Hey, I can engage in what this company’s going to do, and what this product eventually will look like.” I think to drop a name, we’re looking at something like a Quirky.com, where you see normal folks just getting in on how a product is designed, from first ideation to what colors are going to be chosen for the final product? Those types of things are very open.

We’re not quite that open at P&G yet, but the fact is that we’re looking at that type of crowdsourcing ways of engaging with our consumers, people that both like us on Facebook, as well as just standard, ad hoc panel recruitment to get a broader view of things. That’s the kind of thing where lots of these, both big data, as it’s been called, all the time stamps of where you’re at and when it’s happening, to just figuring out how we’re going to be creating apps for folks to learn more about our products.

Leonard Murphy:  Very cool stuff.  So as we think about what everybody has talked about in terms of the revolutions on both marketing channels, product development, research, let’s expand out a little bit and think about, the next two to three years. Let’s all play Nostradamus for a minute. Two to three years out, what do you think the overall impact of this overall model of convergence, of SoLoMo, will have on business as a whole?

So Charlie, let’s go back to you and think about P&G. Where do you see P&G being from – within your area of expertise around product development in preparation for the overall marketing, how do you see it in two or three years out based on these technologies?

Charlie Rader:  I’m sorry, I can’t comment on that right now – I’m just kidding.

[LAUGHTER]

Leonard Murphy:  You have to sign an NDA to be able to discuss it, right?

Charlie Rader: Exactly.

Leonard Murphy:  The vendors are listening.

Charlie Rader: And being recorded too. No, I think it’s certainly no secret. Bob McDonald, our CEO, has said it pretty clearly to market analysts, and certainly within our own company, that we want to touch more consumers in more parts of the world more completely. That’s how we’re going to grow. It’s part of our purpose. It’s inspired growth strategies, and so digitization is one of our key ways of doing that. It’s going to make us more productive by being able to reach out to more consumers in this digital, local, mobile way. We’re going to be able to talk to folks that we’ve never been able to talk to before because they weren’t in the major markets that we’re normally recruit a group from, and I think we’re only going to be increasing in how we’re going to be looking at digital-based research. It’s pretty simple. It’s certainly not what I’d call proprietary by any means. It’s fairly obvious, really, where lots of the market research tools are headed.

Leonard Murphy:  But what does that do, Charlie, to a company like P&G that values norms and trends and historical data for comparison, when both the methodologies are changing as a default, and a lot of the older data, it’s definitely not relevant for some of these new measurement or engagement techniques.

Charlie Rader: That’s a great question, Lenny. I think that the fact is that in the short term, in the next two years, since that’s the Nostradamus here you’re looking at, are we going to stop doing Nielsen BASES studies? No, we’re not going to stop doing that kind of stuff, but I think we’re going to start learning what, like, a Net Promoter score really means to us, and how that relates to purchase intent, so when we’re able to listen to the social media buzz about products in market, we’ll be able to start relating it back to the historical data, but also, as I’ve heard in now the Market Research in the Mobile World last July, it’s not a matter of how we validate this type of data to that type of data. There will be some places where data validation will be there, and I think the fact is that these new channels of data expose us to new consumers, and so if they’re not quite 100 percent validated between this set and that set, I don’t find that unexpected. I find that actually refreshing, because it means that we are probably reaching people that we don’t typically reach. We’re not reaching the professional panelist anymore. In my hopes, that we’re reaching people who really care about our products a lot more so.

Leonard Murphy: Thank you, Charlie. That’s an interesting perspective, and I think it’s going to be a continual piece of the conversation as we go forward within the industry as a whole. Steve, so kind of playing off what Charlie’s thinking, so you’ve been spending a lot of time around the idea of social media specifically as a multi-level tool for marketers, for market research, and a lot of the conversations at the ARF Rethink conference just wrapped up this week that we were both at. That was around trying to figure out, what are the metrics? What are we really measuring? How does it interact with what we know? What does it tell us that we don’t know? Kind of summarize that. What does that look like overall?

Steve Rappaport: Actually, I mean, probably Andrew and Charlie may disagree with me, but it – and it’s not a plug for whatever it is I’m writing next, but –

Leonard Murphy: You can plug, Steve.

Steve Rappaport:  No, no, no. I don’t have…it’s this thing – I don’t know what forms it’s going to take yet – called The Digital Metric Field Guide, and one of the reasons why I’m working on it is because the ARF – I’m sure most everybody’s familiar with it, but we have over 400 members who belong to us, and these are not individuals. These are companies, so Proctor and Gamble is a member, Unilever, Nielsen…the media companies, the research companies, agencies and so forth, and there’s a lot of just uncertainty and confusion about digital measurement, and so I said, “Well, let’s take a look at the way people are reporting it.” Now, this is not necessarily the way that it’s actually done inside of companies like P&G, but – so what I did is, with a small team, we picked out about 80 award-winning case studies. So these were Effie award winners. Ogilvy, which is the ARF research award, IPA Effectiveness awards, Cassies and things, and I’ve been, for the last couple of months, deconstructing them into this.

One is, I’ve been looking at the overall objective for the campaign, then looking at each of the individual campaign objectives, then looking at the metrics that we reported to measure the progress against those objectives, and then relating all of that to kind of a marketing process that I call – that I’ve adapted called “capture, connect, close, and keep”, so the idea here is that I want to be really, really granular and discover, what are all the different objectives? What are – and things, and I looked into measurements, and when it came to sort of especially digital and the social measurement in particular, there isn’t a whole lot of insight there. These – because the measurements so far that I’ve come across are largely about counting, and they’re about activity, and so while they may be helpful in terms of gauging certain things, right, like the growth of a fan base, what is missing so far that I’ve seen is the ability to actually convert metrics to meaningful measurement that measures progress against achieving a business objective in a truly meaningful way, and that’s where there’s lots of thinking that needs to be done and lots of opportunity, and part of what I’ll be doing in this book is trying to lay out a way that we can start doing that, because counting and activity, it’s really hard to know what that means, so when somebody says their fan base has grown by X percent, or they have so many tweets, or this, that, and same, so they’re really not getting at the business performance. They’re just measuring what is flowing from some of their activities online.

So that’s an answer to that question, Lenny, but I also wanted to add to this part of the discussion that in addition to the discussions that we’ve all had about signals, I think that we’ll also be looking at data coming from new and completely different places, especially when we think about like P&G has their billion new customer objective, and many other companies are looking to grow into truly emerging markets, so when you think about Latin America some countries and locations there, Africa and parts of Asia, much of the data that exists in more developed markets doesn’t exist there, and I think that we’ll be looking at bringing in data streams that are very non-traditional. For example, you may be familiar with the project at the UN called the UN Global Pulse, and what they’re looking to do isthey’re analyzing data from, say, cell phone companies, and they’re looking to see what are the trends in types of phones? What are the trends in types of plans? What are the patterns in the calls and things? Not to identify people individually and not to identify each individual company, but to begin to understand the patterns of communication, among them, the rates of growth and things, because they’re using these as indicators of economic development, consumer interest and such, so one of the things that we’ll be looking at in the years ahead is drawing upon very non-traditional forms of data that relate more to the transactions and the business activities of companies, and in addition to the kinds of data that we’ve worked with for years and years.

Leonard Murphy: So we start going there, and we’re thinking about – at least in my mind, it brings up the ideas around big data, and  if convergence is about the data streams coming together, big data becomes the method by which you try and analyze it and derive value from it, so how does that idea, that the converged data streams are then analyzed through both traditional and nontraditional techniques, and what does that do to the marketing organization, their ability to really deliver impact across their company?

Charlie Rader: Talk to the geeks, Lenny.

Leonard Murphy:  Andrew, you’re pretty quiet. You want to take a stab at that?

Andrew Jeavons: I agree, really, what Steve’s saying, and that’s just really where it’s going. I think there’s going to be a real change – we’re going to suspect that in the past, the idea of recall was fairly shaky, because we’re getting much more closer to the point when consumption events take place, and getting feedback at the point, or comment that we may never have got before, and I think there’s going to be the dreaded baseline shifts in all sorts of research, as snippets of information come out from mobile research, which really does give a different view of the consumer and what they’re doing. I really believe that.

Now, the convergence things and the data streams, well, tthis is great. This is a problem because we really don’t have the analytical tools at the moment up to speed. If you go out and look into the big data world, which I occasionally go and look at because of past obsessions with data, you see all sorts of complaining about, “Well, we can’t kind of run what we want to run with this, that, and the other,” and all this is tech stuff. It actually really important for live virtualizations, that they can do the sorts of analytics that they need, and we run again this thing – we’ve got all this data. It’s great. How are we going to manage it? How do we manage 10,000 pictures of a supermarket shelf that somebody didn’t like? We’re going to get that, so it’s a huge challenge, but as Charlie said, us geeks are going to fix it sometime.

Leonard Murphy: All right, well, Charlie, you got the shout out. I know that – it’s too bad that we didn’t get Mark Lloyd on here with us too, Charlie, because we had a conversation in Cincinnati recently about P&G, for instance. They’re sitting on tons and tons and tons of data that’s very siloed, and the goal, I believe, is trying – as it is for all companies, at this point – o bring those silos and bring all that data together, and try and drive that for insight, so how does that fit into things from your standpoint?

Charlie Rader: Well, I mean, just as we mentioned before, it is how we’re going to be bringing in all those different types of data streams and deriving meaning out of it. Those types of analytics products are going to start turning things around. It will no longer be, when it comes to the marketing world, “Gee, what does the marketing director think about this particular campaign?” but  “How are our consumers already talking about these products at market?” That will be driving a lot of our answers and responses to even our competitors. I think the fact is that it’s not going to be N-equal-one decision-making anymore. It’s going to be a lot more N-equal-10,000 pieces of data that’s going to help us make these choices.

Leonard Murphy:  Steve, what’s your take on that?

Steve Rappaport: Well, I agree with Andrew, I mean, and Charlie. Geeks will rule. I read something not too long ago about the kinds of people who are really scoring big when they leave college, and they are the really heavy-duty computer scientists, data analysts. They’re really becoming sort of the rock stars of companies today, but the part – what I could add to this discussion is that having the ability – like Andrew and Charlie pointed out – having the ability to bring in these streams to data, to analyze them and all of that, having all of that is extremely important, and there’s another aspect that’s very, very important too, and that is the ability to ask the right questions of that data, so that when all of the analysis is done, that the understanding that results is really going to help the business and drive it forward, because without really good, penetrating business-critical questions, it’s possible to run the risk of just analyzing and analyzing and analyzing data without really having it have an impact.

Andrew Jeavons:  I have something to add. I think that’s absolutely true, and that there is a lack of theory of, first of all, why people answer questions. I said to somebody yesterday – it was a government conference. We have no respondents’ theory. We have no theory of why people will actually answer these questions or take part, and that seems to be pretty critical. I also come from a background in neuropsychology and cognitive psychology, and there’s this lack of theory where I’m always thinking, “Why did somebody pick up the phone and answer and sit through these questions?” There’s no theories about this.

Steve Rappaport: I agree. I’m really glad we’re meeting this way, because, I’d just say I second that wholeheartedly, because it’s the absence of theories and frameworks in our business, it’s really harmful.

Andrew Jeavons: And, well, yes, and we should talk sometime. We’d have a great time.

Steve Rappaport: Sorry for everybody on the phone.

Andrew Jeavons: I’m in Cincinnati with Charlie, and he stole my iPad the other day, so –

Leonard Murphy:  He brings up a good point.

Charlie Rader: Actually, I’d like to chime in too on this one – that when I get asked internally about all these new types of market research tools that are at our disposal, and what do we want to pilot next? What do we want to learn from next? Inevitably, the question comes up is, well, what about the data validation? And my answer is very simple. It says, we will always do research among people who do research with us, and so to say that we have a rep population, or we’re getting a particular target, and people are saying, “Well, it doesn’t skew this way or that way or the other,” and it’s like, well, of course there are data skews depending on the channel that you’re looking at, but the fact is that we’re always skewed with the fact of, there’s a group of people that will answer surveys, that will talk to us in this way, and who also say very forthcomingly, social media isn’t necessarily the answer to that.

Certainly, people will talk about these things freely, but I also think that social media is an aspirational type of being. I mean, when I post stuff on social media, I want to look smart and cool, whether I’m spurring something on that I like or I’m bashing something I don’t, so the listening aspect to it, I don’t think social media will solve all of our research respondents’ validation question, but I think that this lack of theory of why people answer is something that really could stand to be understood better.

Leonard Murphy:  I think – and this is fascinating, and an important part of the conversation. We might have a whole other webinar on this particular topic.

Charlie Rader: I digress.

Leonard Murphy:  No, no, there is no digression. This is appropriate. Part of this whole idea of divergence is that we are getting to – we’re becoming part of the fabric of consumers’ lives, rather than being intrusive. A lot of this is quasi-ethnographic, observational, passive data collection and listening. I mean, we’re becoming voyeurs to an extent, data voyeurs in consumers’ lives, and the ultimate goal of that is to try and use that information to help make their lives better, while also making money while we’re doing it, right?

Charlie Rader: Agreed.

Leonard Murphy:  That’s the end goal, so that is a very different framework than we have had in the past, so we have accessed information, and it’s certainly unprecedented, the lack of frameworks.  I think so because we’ve never been able to do this before. Once again, technology overtook experience, so we’re in that phase now where, by experimentation and going forward with these, engaging in these ways, we’ll develop those frameworks, and we’ll go from there, and you know what? It’s funny, at least for me, being kind of a macro observer of the industry, at the same time we saw this massive growth around social media and mobile and these more technology-driven approaches, the same time, we saw a massive explosion in focus on behavioral economics, emotional measurements, and I don’t think that’s a coincidence. Now, the data aspect of things has become less of a driver of the value of the research. We’ve seen a massive shift towards a focus on trying to understand humans, and why we do what we do, think the way we think, buy the way we buy.

Andrew Jeavons: Heaven forbid we’d have psychology in market research. Dear.

Leonard Murphy:  I’ve predicted for quite some time that the future market researchers will be psychologists, anthropologists, sociologists, and data scientists, but not the – not kind of the traditional operationally-focused people that we have predominantly in the industry today, but what do you guys think about – are we entering into the possibility of a golden age now, since we’re so close to the consumers and the SoLoMo and the tsunami of data available to us is forcing us to reexamine ideas at a very basic level, of simply how we pick as humans, and why we do what we do? Are we looking at a future that’s the ultimate convergence of psychology, cognitive science, and data science? What do you think? Anybody, jump in, or I’ll pick on you.

Charlie Rader: I would say that in the short term, we’re not quite at that convergence yet. These are still fairly siloed data streams. I think while we’re looking at big data in certain ways, whether it’s social or mobile-type data, or massive data collection, you turn on your iPhone and you get GPS data for a week on a particular person or group of folks. I think the aspects of handling the ethnographic, handling the truly behavioral psychology, facial expression, neutrometric, some of those things, which can be very rich, are very singular, very qualitative in nature and not big data in nature. While certainly eye tracking measurements generate beaucoup amount of data points, it’s ultimately an N-equal-one data point.  How is this person responding? It’s the question of are we going to get to the true psychology in all these things? I’m a little bit hesitant in the short term, I would say the two, three year mark, but all these particular types of research methods get us truly closer to understanding behavior and not just a demographic.

Andrew Jeavons: Then again kind of as the token psychologist, this true understanding of behavior – they’ve never managed before.  I think one of the things that has interested me most is the sudden growth of interest in behavioral economics and Kahneman and all this stuff, and I won’t go on my Kahneman rant. I was reading Kahneman when I was 20.  It’s very interesting that this has suddenly come up, and he has some of the best theories about how people just behave in a normal mode in the mall where they are sort of that automatic process of purchasing. I think because of the sort of data we’re going to get, the market research, or whatever it becomes termed, has to build those behavioral models and has to use – everybody’s mentioned, Charlie’s mentioned – all these different streams. I think the fusion of all those streams is a tremendous intellectual problem, and I’m really excited to see who starts coming up with solutions.

Steve Rappaport: Being serious now, there’s a lot – there’s really a lot in what Andrew and Charlie said. Personally, I think that this is one of the most exciting times, because there really is such an interest in understanding people as people and not just consumers and customers.  I think all of that is great, and it’s a wonderful thing that we can really sort of understand one another as human beings with motivations and interest and goals and desires and all of that.

I just want to challenge you, Lenny, on one thing. It’s just the phrase of “for the first time” or “just now” or something like that, and I’m kind of cluing to Andrew a little bit. See, I think that there’s a lot that we know about human nature, and even behavior, that we’re just not familiar with, because as, Lenny, as you pointed out, the reemergence of the social sciences is extremely important, and things that especially this is where there’s a big opportunity, I think. There’s tons of knowledge that’s locked up in the anthropology literature about society and social change, what occurs when new technologies and new groups come into a culture, and that, but that, for whatever reason, has really not been that accessible to us. It hasn’t been as popularized and things, but there’s probably a lot that we can learn just by mining a lot of the work that was done in the past, so I just want to sort of get that said about, we have this new opportunity now.

But where I can contribute to the conversation on this topic is that there’s a gap, and the gap that I see is a gap between understanding people better and more fully and more completely, but it’s not being matched necessarily by marketers shifting their understanding of people in line with that, so what I’m trying to say is that although it’s an irony, I guess, in that as we’re understanding more about people, we’re still holding onto our old mental models about how advertising works, how business works, what drives people and so forth, and the progress that we’re making in terms of understanding people will not really be fully realized unless we marketers and advertisers also change the way that we conceptualize people and are willing to change our mental models and the way that we do our business.

Leonard Murphy:  Fantastic point, Steve, and I accept your challenge, and you’re right, so there, but I think your last point about – the ship has to curve within our organizations – I think it’s absolutely spot-on, and it circles back around to the idea we were talking about, norms and metrics, earlier, that – somebody has mentioned Nielsen BASES, and I love Nielsen, and anybody from Nielsen, don’t take this the wrong way, but it’ll be a Herculean task for advertising agencies to move off of Nielsen rating systems. It’s so ingrained into the entire ecosystem of that business. It’s just going to be tough. Same thing is we look at the focus on ad impressions. I always think about last year at ARF when George Foley from Coke said he didn’t care about impressions anymore, he wants to know about expressions. He wants to know if people were talking about his brand. Were they relating to the brand? So I think we’re really in this difficult transition period, where there’s business models across entire industries and organizations are entrenched around very specific metric models that are being challenged, but detangling, decoupling from those type of things is just going to be tough.

Steve Rappaport: Well, I’ve got lots of thoughts about that.

Leonard Murphy:  You go for it, Steve.

Steve Rappaport: No, you strapped me onto one of my hobby horses. Because the short answer to your question is, it takes guts. If you’re really going to change the system, it’s going to take guts, because what happens is – and I usually don’t talk about myself very much, but I was on a panel, actually in Brazil, and I was sitting next to the CEO of one of the major advertising companies and agency networks, and at one point, I just blurted out, I said, “When are we going to stop making the world safe for media planners and buyers?” Because – I’ll explain that one – because the rigidity of these systems is largely tied to the economic models underlying them, but what’s happened is the way that technology has developed, and the way that people are using technology, is that those models really don’t apply as broadly as they once did, and so they need to be changed, but people are really unwilling to change them because all of their buying and selling is based around it, for example.

But more fundamentally, the problem that there is with things like impressions and reach and GRPs, which I spent parts of my career calculating, by the way, is that they’re based on a model of advertising that is less and less relevant, and that’s the model of education and persuasion, because in the strictly analog era, broadcast and mass media.  It was all about getting that message out, impressions, tonnage, how many people did you reach, things like that, but because the model at the time was, you have to make people aware, you have to interest them, you have topersuade them and get them to act – but what we’re saying day in and day out is that those kinds of linear models are holding less and less, explaining less and less, and they’re being replaced by models where you don’t – at the very core, many people don’t need advertising to learn about a new product, for example, yet the whole system’s based on that, so  it’s a very complex question. I mean, it’s a very complex situation, and companies are really holding onto their ways of doing business to protect their businesses, but in fact, that’s what’s preventing progress, and so that’s why I say it really takes guts. It’s going to take someone to stand up there and say, “We’re going to do it a different way.”

Leonard Murphy:  Good stuff, Steve. We do have to start wrapping up, but I’ll tell you what, from that, this conversation alone, I have 10 more ideas for future webinars, so we’ll definitely want to invite you back to explore some of this more. Charlie and Andrew, what are your thoughts on that? Because I think just to kind of bring everything back around full circle – Steve was talking about it, is – SoLoMo is simply the new channels for engagement and for advertising, and so I was thinking about that from a research and marketing standpoint. We are – it all really does come around to this idea of it’s a new world. We touch consumers in various and sundry ways throughout the point of their lives, both deliver message and gain insight, and yet we’re fighting to get – fighting, but there’s certainly a tension between the existing modes of doing things and the unstoppable forward march of technological progress, so what does that mean for your businesses?  Steve and I have the macro view, but Charlie, what does that mean for a company like P&G? And then Andrew, what does that mean for a research provider?

Charlie Rader: I don’t know if I have something new to add here in that what SoLoMo is doing is that there is new channels of engagement, new channels of ways to learn from our consumers, consumers that we’ve never seen before, never talked to before, but there’s definitely fundamental changes that – and ways of thinking that us as P&G – we’ll be struggling with in the short term because we’ve had hundreds of years, and if you think about the official design of the focus group is 50 years plus of how we do learning from our consumer – I think they’re changing on a much more rapid scale than ever before. I think the scale from the VCR to the DVD to the Blu-Ray player, from focus group to online to mobile is that kind of rapid change occurring, so we’re definitely in the midst of that, and we’ve been challenged to do that to make our business grow, so I’m sorry if there’s not new insight there, but just – it is a wrap.

Leonard Murphy:  Good wrap statement, kind of brings it all back together, and so Andrew, the researchers’ perspective?

Andrew Jeavons: I’d just make a quick comment that the biggest changes or the biggest differences in the way people approach surveys and research is coming from some of our clients, who – one of them’s Zynga, who are in games. Now, that whole gaming genre is very new, and they do things very differently, and it’s really interesting to observe, and, in a way, break all sorts of rules, but it works out for them, and we get  development requests that we would never get from traditional survey consumers or market research departments, and I think what we are finding is that while the survey thing is still vitally important, we’re seeing all sorts of different wrinkles, like people turning their loyalty panels into consumer panels. I quoted somebody from 9 million-person loyalty panel. It’s kind of interesting that people are doing things on a huge scale, and they’re breaking down barriers, so it’s all changing.

Leonard Murphy:  It is the top of the hour, and I need to be respectful of everybody’s time, I don’t see any questions on Twitter, but lots of comments. I would say this is maybe one of the best webinars that I’ve been on recently.

Steve Rappaport: Lenny, I want to thank you for inviting me and getting to meet and have a conversation with everybody, because it’s fantastic. I really enjoyed it.

Leonard Murphy: Thank you, Steve. We will definitely do it again, and Charlie and Andrew, you guys both know you’re on the hook for a future opportunity. One plug real quick before we sign off, and it was kind of thrown out there, the market research and mobile world conference we have coming up in Amsterdam in just three weeks. We’ll be talking about a lot of these topics at that conference, and then our July event here in the United States in Cincinnati.  I can say more than hopefully, there’ll be some other folks from P&G that will join us in that event in Cincinnati as well, so we’ll continue to partner in work and explore some of these ideas and how they impact our businesses. On behalf of Research Access and GreenBook, thank you very much, everybody, for your time and energy. There will be transcripts of this available shortly, as well as some blog posts, and hopefully audio recordings. Dana, thank you very much for serving as a host in the background. Everybody, have a great day.

Click here to access the webinar video and slides.

Editor’s Note:  A special “thank you” goes out to Focus Forward for transcribing the webinar.