Market Research Birmingham
You need a systematic, planned and regular way to ensure a flow of unbiased and useful feedback from your customers. This will help you to detect problems quickly before customers defect, and will provide pointers towards changes in market demand, the competitive environment and opportunities to introduce new products and services.
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Smart Media
0121 7722411
119 Gibb Street
Birmingham
Smart Media
0121 7722411
119 Gibb Street
Birmingham GB.B94AA
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Oakley Wilkinson Bryan Ltd
0121 2503568
Holt Street
Birmingham
Oakley Wilkinson Bryan Ltd
0121 2503568
Holt Street
Birmingham GB.B74BB
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Steve Coxon Creative
0121 6937277
406 The Greenhouse
Birmingham
Steve Coxon Creative
0121 6937277
406 The Greenhouse
Birmingham GB.B94AA
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Bha Advertising
0121 7662345
180-182 Fazeley Street
Birmingham
Bha Advertising
0121 7662345
180-182 Fazeley Street
Birmingham GB.B55SE
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Q D P Ltd
0121 3563327
27-28 Park Street
Birmingham
Q D P Ltd
0121 3563327
27-28 Park Street
Birmingham GB.B55JH
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Watermark Pr
Birmingham
Watermark Pr
Birmingham GB.B74BB
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Adrian Gale Advertising Photography
0121 4400502
44 Highgate Place
Birmingham
Adrian Gale Advertising Photography
0121 4400502
44 Highgate Place
Birmingham GB.B120DD
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Client Communications
0121 3333504
61 Curzon Street
Birmingham
Client Communications
0121 3333504
61 Curzon Street
Birmingham GB.B47XG
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The Open Consultancy Ltd
0121 2446919
Bradford Court
Birmingham
The Open Consultancy Ltd
0121 2446919
Bradford Court
Birmingham GB.B120NS
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S Coxon
0121 6937275
The Greenhouse The Custard Factory
Birmingham
S Coxon
0121 6937275
The Greenhouse The Custard Factory
Birmingham GB.B94AA
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Receive Feedback from Your Customers | You need a systematic, planned and regular way to ensure a flow of unbiased and useful feedback from your customers. This will help you to detect problems quickly before customers defect, and will provide pointers towards changes in market demand, the competitive environment and opportunities to introduce new products and services. The most common way to get feedback from your customers is by using a survey. The most popular forms of customer feedback surveys are: - Personal (face-to-face) interview, which accounts for about 55% of all survey activity. This is popular with consumer markets
- Telephone, 32%. Frequently used for surveying business customers rather than consumers
- Test, discussion and focus groups, 7%. This is where a group of customers sit down together to answer a range of open-ended questions, usually moderated
- Post, 6%. Popular for industrial markets
- Internet-based questionnaires. These have the merit of being quick to produce and can be accompanied by self-analysis software, letting you know, for example, that a certain percentage of a particular type of customer is satisfied or dissatisfied with a particular aspect of your relationship
Telephone, internet and postal surveys are clearly less expensive than getting together a focus group. Telephone interviewing requires a very positive attitude, courtesy, an ability not to talk too quickly and listening while sticking to a rigid questionnaire. Low response rates on postal surveys (less than 10% is not uncommon) can be improved by: - An accompanying letter explaining the purpose of the questionnaire and why respondents should reply
- Offering small rewards for completed questionnaires
- Sending reminders
- Providing a free reply paid envelope
There are six simple rules to ensure whichever route you choose you get the maximum amount of useful customer feedback: - Keep the number of questions to a minimum. More than a dozen will call for a dedicated respondent with a powerful reason to provide your answers
- Keep the questions simple and preferably multiple choice, ie. yes, no, don't know, don't care
- Avoid ambiguity by using precise rather than vague words and look for facts rather than opinions, ie. prefer, "do you take the paper every day", to "do you take the paper regularly"
- Test out your questions on a small representative sample to iron out bugs before going live
- Have an identifying question to show a cross section of respondents. This could cover demographics by asking about age, sex, education, income and job title, for example
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