Writing Your Focus Group Screening Guide
1. Screening guides help sort qualified and unqualified respondents, and given the number of ‘professional respondents’, market research recruitment agencies often double-screen, just to make sure all participants are genuinely qualified to take part in the study.
Screener Criteria for B2B, Consumers, and Experts
Screening
guides include questions about demographic and psychographic criteria,
as well as product or industry experience and knowledge. Let’s explore
some typical screening criteria for B2B, consumer, and expert studies:
B2B Screening Criteria
B2B-focused
screening guides will often include questions about company
classification and size; location or region; job title; job
responsibility; decision-making authority; and, product-category
experience. Of course, this isn’t an exhaustive list, but most B2B
screening guides include these categories, and more.
Consumer Screening Criteria
Consumer-focused
screening guides often include more demographic-related questions. The
moderator will know which demographic characteristics need to be
included in a study, and may include questions that ask about age;
gender; income; education level; employment; marital status; ethnicity
or cultural background; location or region; prior qualitative study
participation; product-category experience; purchasing influence;
specialized knowledge or experience; and, work experience in advertising
or marketing industries.
Expert Screening Criteria
Expert-focused
screening guides may include medical/healthcare professionals,
executives, policy makers, and specialists, to name a few. Since expert
studies tend to have smaller numbers to recruit from, it’s unlikely the
screening guide will include demographic questions.
Focus Group recruitment agency
tends to focus on job title/position; job role/responsibility;
expertise; time in the industry; product category experience; and,
decision-making powers. Again, this isn’t an exhaustive list, but most
expert screeners will include most of these types of questions.
Throughout the screening process, recruiters stay in contact with the
moderator to alert him/her of any challenges or issues coming up in the
screening guide. Sometimes the screening guide is so specific that it’s
hard to find any qualified respondents. On the flip side are screeners
that are written too loosely, and let too many unqualified people into a
study. There is a fine balance for each screening guide, and no two are
alike!
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Original Source: https://bityl.co/C6G9