Why Can’t I Just Recruit My Own Customers for Market Research Studies?
When deciding to move forward with a insite research, one of the first decisions to be made is who should be included to fillthe study. Sometimes companies make the assumption that only customers need to participate, and therefore recruiting should be a breeze.
We have a few responses to this assumption. First, the
scope of the study will determine if it’s appropriate to include only
existing customers, a random sampling from the general population, or a
mix of the two. Second, even if you’re recruiting from an existing
customer database doesn’t mean that recruiting will be any easier.
Finding potential study participants is only half of the job of the
recruiter. The other half involves managing schedules, handling
no-shows, participate in surveys
and paying incentives for completed participation. Multiply this across
multiple participants and it is quickly evident why qualitative
research companies outsource recruiting to nationwide research
recruiters.
Let’s take a look at when it makes sense to recruit
your own customers. In next week’s blog we’ll explore when you should
recruit external participants.
When to recruit from your own customer database
- If your research study requires familiarity and/or a comprehensive understanding or experience with your product or service
- You’re upgrading or updating an existing product or service
- You’re upgrading or changing usability functions and want to test the changes with customers familiar with your existing platform
- You want to probe the limits of loyalty from existing customers (for example, how much can you raise prices before your customers look for alternatives.)
If
recruiting from your own customer database makes sense for the
objective of your study, then you’re well on your way down the
recruiting road. Keep in mind that just because you have a loyal
customer base doesn’t mean they want to participate in a market research
study. Recruiting still requires sensitivity and knowing how to sort
through your database so you end up with a group of participants that
meets the demographic and psychographic parameters of your study.
Another pro-tip when recruiting from a customer database is you’ll
still need to offer some sort of incentive to encourage participation.
Participants may respond to a discount for your product or service, but
you can’t go wrong offering paid online surveys legit. Cash is king.
If your study includes recruiting from your customer database, you’re
off to a good start with recruiting, but still a long ways off from the
finish line. A screening guide when sorting through potential candidates
will help weed out the casual customer from the loyal customer, in
addition to ensuring you recruit a representative cross-section of your
customer base.
Recruiting from an existing customer database? Contact us Today to learn how we can help!