Each year, an average of 30,000 new products enter the marketplace (that’s enough to fill the average grocery store!), and 70% will fail to sustain or grow sales in the first two years. 

How does a brand ensure that a new product stands out in the sea of competition? How does it increase the odds of success? 

The key is to avoid a one-size-fits-all approach and instead get the correct product in front of the right customers at the proper time.

To achieve this level of specificity, brands must use proper market segmentation. This practice allows a company to focus its product development and marketing efforts narrowly.

What is market segmentation?

At its most basic, market segmenting is breaking a broad swath of potential customers into smaller customer groups with similar characteristics. A company can then design products and marketing campaigns tailored to the needs and interests of a particular target market.

Few companies have the resources to sell to a mass market. Most must focus their efforts to meet more limited budget constraints. 

Market segmentation identifies the many different reasons people purchase products to help companies make smaller investments with more significant returns.

The more that a brand can narrow the audience for a new product, the more likely it can successfully sell to them. Rather than trying to persuade a generic customer base to buy a product they may or may not want, you can place the product in front of people who need it.

Benefits of market segmentation

Market segmentation provides valuable customer insights that can be used to create many positive business outcomes. 

●     Product development: By identifying narrow market segments and researching their specific needs, brands can create products that satisfy those exact pain points. These specialized offers will have little to no competition.

●     Business growth: The more a company understands various market segments, the more it can expand by moving into new geographic areas, offering complementary products to existing customers, or creating new products to appeal to a previously uninterested audience.

●     Optimized marketing: Using the insights from segmentation research, marketing teams can create highly targeted messages on the most relevant platforms. Even 

better, they can make calculated decisions about media spend to reduce costs.

●     Better distribution strategies: Knowing where and when your customers shop can help you change or tweak your distribution strategies to streamline and save money while improving customer satisfaction.

●     Customer retention: Done well, market segmentation can create brand loyalty. When you’re able to anticipate and address a customer’s needs at every turn, they are far more likely to become repeat buyers and brand advocates. 

A company that takes the time and energy to cultivate a deep understanding of its customers is almost guaranteed to have a competitive advantage. It’s far more likely to expand its market share and profits.

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Types of market segmentation

There are four main types of market segmentation, each of which offers a different method for identifying clear attributes unique to a particular group of customers.

Geographic segmentation

It can be helpful to group customers by a specific area—from a country down to a neighbourhood. 

This approach is particularly effective for products and services that address localized concerns. This may include items affected by the weather (lawn care, clothing) or regional preferences (cuisine, sports, or other recreational activities).

To use geographic segmentation, break down potential customers by identifying characteristics such as state, county, zip code, climate, primary language, or population density. 

Demographic segmentation

It’s helpful to group customers by quantifiable factors like age, income level, family size, religion, race, nationality, language, educational level, marital status, occupation, home ownership, political party affiliation, or income.

Demographic information is generally easy and affordable to access, which makes this type of segmentation one of the simplest to use. 

A product may use demographic segmentation to position itself as the best solution for a specific type of person (for example, married men, 30 to 40 years old, who have a full-time job earning $100,000 or more and own a home).

Demographic segmentation may not be detailed enough to create distinct product differentiation. That’s why it’s often combined with another type of segmentation to narrow the customer group further.

Psychographic segmentation

One of the most detailed forms of market segmentation divides customers based on qualitative traits. These details can’t be easily measured like demographics and include things like values, habits, attitudes or opinions, personality, lifestyle or social status, and hobbies or activities.

Gathering psychographic information requires more effort and can be achieved using surveys, focus groups, interviews, and social media monitoring.

Once you’ve identified shared psychographics for a particular market segment, turn it into a statement. For example, “we help busy moms who want to serve their young children a home-cooked meal in 30 minutes or less.” Then, ask your target audience whether the statement resonates with them.

Very often, marketers like to combine psychographic segmentation with demographic segmentation to create very distinct customer groups.

Behavioural segmentation

Finally, another popular method of market segmentation is based on customer behaviour during the buying journey. 

Behavioural segmentation considers actions like when shoppers become customers (acquisition), how customers use the product or service (user journey), how frequently they use it (engagement), how long they continue to use it (retention), and how often they make new purchases (loyalty).

This method can be complicated to execute but is likely to generate beneficial insights. It’s often the best way to identify opportunities for new products or markets and for improving existing offerings.

How to validate a segment

To be worthwhile, a segment must be clearly defined and unique. To test whether your potential market segment makes the grade, ask yourself these questions:

  1. What does this segment value most about a product like ours?
  2. What is the number one reason this segment chooses to buy a product like ours?
  3. What is the buying journey for this segment (what content, platform, features are crucial)?

The answers to these questions must be based on data from actual research, not just your intuition or anecdotal experiences. 

If you can easily and with great detail answer each of these questions, then your segment has great potential to be actionable and profitable.

If you don’t have clear answers, however, then you likely need to do more research or further refine the segment.

How to segment the market for a new product

The market segmentation process isn’t complicated. There are two major components—creating segments and executing a go-to-market plan—and a few significant considerations at each stage:

Customer Segments

  1. Set an objective for what you hope to achieve through market segmentation (create a new product, better serve existing clients, find more profitable customers, etc.).
  2. Identify which segmentation type or combination of types you’ll use, and assess the viability of your proposed market (Is it too large? Is it large enough?)
  3. Conduct research by collecting hard data and anecdotal evidence related to your preferred segment. Avoid rushing this stage because it is the most crucial component of quality segmentation. 
  4. Compile your research and use it to determine which new products or marketing approaches you’ll use to target this segment. 
  5. Validate the offer or messaging with a representative sample of the segment using surveys, focus groups, and polls.

Go-To-Market Plan

  1. Develop a launch plan using marketing and sales strategies relevant to the target segment. 
  2. Test the effectiveness of your strategy by implementing conversion tracking early.
  3. Continue to execute the plan and monitor the results over time, adjusting as necessary.

To ensure the best results, companies may want to invest in marketing software. Many products will automatically segment customers into relevant groups, analyze the segments using interactive charts, and provide third-party data to improve results.

Market segmentation best practices

As you execute a market segmentation plan, watch out for these common mistakes that can negatively affect your results:

●     Unaligned segments: The markets you target must harmonize with your company’s strategy and structure, rather than trying to conform your brand and offer to suit the segment.

●     Segments that are too broad: Failing to make the segment narrow enough will allow the competition to gain an advantage by targeting a more clearly defined and like-minded portion of your segment.

●     Segments that are too narrow: Focusing on too small of a segment will significantly limit the return on investment of your time and money.

●     Too many segments: It’s tempting to pursue all of the potentially profitable segments you identify, but this can dilute resources and negatively affect revenues.

●     Targeting people, not money: A perfectly aligned and well-sized segment is useless if its members don’t possess sufficient buying power. Focus on market segments that will create a positive ROI, even if they aren’t the largest or most glamorous.

●     Never updating segments: People change, and those changes can come quickly in today’s global, tech-savvy world. Frequently revisit your segments and adjust as needed to remain relevant and competitive.

Market segmentation is a highly effective strategy, and it isn’t complicated. It can be time-consuming, however, and may be challenging if it’s a new approach for you and your marketing team. Expect mistakes as you execute this new approach.

Stick with it, though, because segmentation is an incredibly valuable process that shows customers that you genuinely understand them. Providing tailored products and messages that resonate with your customers’ specific needs will help your brand grow exponentially.

When launching a new product to market, it’s imperative to be prepared with relevant information. You need a deep understanding of your market, how your products will benefit that market, the potential challenges you might run into, and much more.

This is why it’s so important to write an in-depth, professional, and relevant market research report. Not only to gather and display all the right information but also so that you can share that information clearly and easily with people within and outside your organization. This is important for a wide range of different reasons.

In this article, we’ll look at why market research reports for product launches are so important and show you how to do it as effectively as possible.

Why market research reports are important

Conducting a detailed and relevant market research report before you launch your new product is a good idea for all kinds of reasons. Here are some of the main ones:

  • Get buy-in from senior decision-makers. When launching any product, you’ll always want the full support of the top decision-makers at your organization. This can be a tricky thing to acquire, especially if your team is relatively unproven. A detailed and informative market research report can be the deciding factor in winning their support, convincing them that your product is well-placed to succeed, and making it much easier to achieve your goals.
  • Learn more about your customers and target audience. One of the main reasons to conduct market research is to understand your prospective customers in more detail. The work you do to compile a report will give you a clear and detailed understanding of what your customers want, what they already like, where they conduct their own research, and much more. This will arm you with the insights and knowledge you need to launch your product confidently and successfully.

Discover ideas for new products and how to improve existing ones. When you research your target market, you’ll likely stumble upon inspiration for new products in addition to the one you’re planning to launch. The feedback you get from your research will also be laced with ideas for improving and tweaking existing products

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How to write a market research report effectively

In the rest of this guide, we’ll show you what you need to do to ensure your market research report is as detailed, relevant, and valuable as it possibly can be. Let’s start with the type of information you need to include.

What you need to include:

Buyer personas

This is a crucial part of getting to know your customers and the different groups they fall into. You should start by researching your target market members as much as possible through a range of channels — interviews, social media research, email surveys, and more. Then, divide them into demographics and create a detailed persona to represent each one.

This is an incredibly valuable step because it allows you to break down your market and make broad predictions about each group’s preferences, pain points, habits, and desires. If done right, this helps you target your future marketing much more accurately and effectively.

Understand your competitors

Getting to know your competitors is a key element of market research. It allows you to understand what you will be up against when launching your product and what segments of your market might be easier or more difficult to sway from their loyalty to your competitors.

Your research report should contain detailed information about each of your competitors and what they offer. What do their products lack that yours can provide? Why do your customers go to them? How dominant are they in your market? What kind of loyalty do they command? What are some of the keys to their success? All this will help you understand what you’re up against and strengthen your chances of success.

Who did you talk to?

Much of your market research will involve talking to various people and groups of people in situations like focus groups, interviews, and surveys. It’s important to document this side of your research carefully and include it in your market research report. Be sure to break down the people you spoke to into demographics and be as specific as possible — try to align this with your buyer personas.

This will help you understand what different demographics want, identify any areas you may have missed, and see any opportunities for segmentation or expansion, as well as providing clear visibility into your research process and allowing you to justify your findings and decisions to other company members carefully.

Clearly show what will happen next — how will you use your findings? 

When you present your market research report to decision-makers in your organization, their primary concern will be what you want to do with it. Research is only valuable if it has a practical application, which should be a key element of your report.

It’s best to be specific — create plans and roadmaps for campaigns, build strategies, and include timelines and carefully researched cost estimates. If you can present a clear and viable plan for your product launch, it will be much easier to gain the support and buy-in of the higher-ups in your company. Be ready to defend and justify these plans.

Primary vs Secondary Market Research

There are two main types of research you’ll need to do when preparing your market research report: primary and secondary. Here is the difference:

  • Primary research. This refers to the first-hand information you have gathered during your research — straight from the primary source. Examples include interviews with individuals, focus groups, surveys, and information from sales teams. It helps add a human touch to your research, incorporating real people’s distinct voices and opinions.
  • Secondary research. This is data that your company didn’t personally collect but is available in the form of things like public records, trend reports, and market statistics. While it lacks the specific human element of primary research, it’s a great way to gain valuable overall insights about your target market without having to conduct huge research projects yourself.

Convincing company decision-makers with your market research report

One of the most essential functions of a market research report is to convince your company’s key stakeholders that you are prepared for a product launch and have everything in place to begin the process successfully.

When creating your report, you should always have this goal in mind. Here are some ways to do that:

  • Always clearly tie your research for business outcomes. For every conclusion your report reaches, explain what this means for the business and what concrete actions you will take as a result.
  • Use as many stats and as much hard data as possible. Clearly express this data in the form of graphs and other visual aids. Show where your data came from, how you collected it, and how your findings will impact your product launch.
  • Consider using Porter’s 5 Forces Model. This business model is aimed at understanding and explaining the fundamental market forces at work in any given industry. It can be illuminating to tie your research into this model.

A well-researched and detailed market research report is an essential part of a successful product launch strategy. It allows you to clearly understand your market, formulate concrete plans and strategies, and gain the support of your organization’s decision-makers.

Without one, you’ll be plunged into the dark, facing the monumentally challenging task of launching a product without the support of extensive research and data.
To find out more about how Kadence can help you prepare a market research report and launch your product with confidence, contact us.

Food packaging is a vital and growing industry. The global food packaging market size was $304.98 billion in 2019 and is projected to reach $463.65 billion by 2027 — this is an area that no Consumer Packaged Goods business can afford to overlook.

There are many reasons why your choice of packaging is so important. Increasingly demanding customers, regulatory concerns, and the need to stand out in crowded and competitive marketplaces are just some examples.

This article will look at why it’s so important to get food packaging right, explore some of the challenges facing companies, and show you how to package your food as effectively as possible.

Why it’s so important to get food packaging right

The growing consumption of packaged food

People are eating more packaged food — the U.S. packaged food market is predicted to grow at a CAGR of 4.1% from 2021 to 2028. There are many reasons for this continued growth — e-commerce, the rise of packaged vegan alternatives, and increasingly hectic lifestyles that keep millions of consumers on the go and forced to rely on store-bought, convenient food.

All this means that packaging is increasingly important. Packaging manufacturers need to keep abreast with trends and ensure their packaging does enough to stand out.

Increasing environmental concerns and pressures

Consumers are more concerned about the environment, and their impact on it, than ever before. This has led people to be more mindful about their packaged food and to gravitate towards packaging that is more eco-friendly, recyclable, and which can prove this to them.

Companies that fail to take this into account, and persist with packaging which is obviously bad for the environment, will struggle to hold onto their more eco-aware customers as their competitors embrace greener packaging.

New technologies like Augmented Reality

Emerging technologies like augmented reality bring a whole host of compelling use cases for food packaging. Companies who can weave this technology into their packaging stand to get a major head start over their competition, wowing their customers with never-before-seen tricks and features and standing out in an entirely new way.

Protection

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, people are more concerned than ever about hygiene and food safety. The right packaging is necessary to guarantee fresh, high-quality food for customers. Companies that fail to do this stand to face big reputational hits and high-profile incidents. In addition, the right packaging also helps to extend the shelf life of products, widening the window of time in which they can be bought.

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Marketing challenges and things to keep in mind

Meeting these challenges around food packaging can be tough. Companies today are faced with a wide range of challenges and things to consider when packaging their food. Here are some examples.

Standing out

As the food packaging market continues to grow, you’ll need to focus harder on grabbing your customers’ attention and competing with other brands and their packaging on the supermarket shelves. It’s no longer enough to go with basic, unimaginative packaging — even recognised and established brands now have to work hard to seize and maintain the spotlight.

Including all relevant information

Today’s consumers want to be informed. They are more environmentally conscious, health-conscious, and demanding than ever before. This means they are hungry for detailed information about where your product comes from, how it was made, exactly what it contains, and more.

Costs

As packaging becomes more advanced, sustainable, and detailed, it also often becomes more expensive. As you evolve your food packaging, you also need to consider the impact on your bottom line. Figuring out how to create the best packaging possible without taking an unacceptable financial hit can be a major challenge.

Preserving food

Ensuring your packaging keeps food as fresh as possible to prolong its shelf life has always been a big challenge for manufacturers. Developments in packaging technology have made this easier and more effective than ever before, but you have to balance this with using sustainable materials, saving costs, and promoting your brand.

How to do market research for food packaging effectively

The only way to ensure you succeed with food packaging is to conduct extensive market research in all the right areas. This helps you establish what your customers want, how feasible it would be to deliver, what your competitors are doing, and much more. Here are some guidelines for conducting effective market research for food packaging.

Get familiar with emerging technology

New technologies can provide impressive benefits for packaging. For example, Kadence partnered with Asahi to test augmented technology in packaging market research. We showed a group of customers an augmented reality model of Asahi’s packaging design, allowing them to get a real, lifelike feel for the beer from their own homes. As a result, they were able to provide more detailed and useful feedback compared to customers who only saw a 2D image.

Be rigorous with costs

Packaging costs can quickly mount up and seriously eat into your budget. It’s essential to be clear on how much your packaging will cost and ensure this is affordable. Advanced packaging can be expensive, and sometimes the extra cost isn’t worth the additional benefits.

Get to know your customers and what they want

As with all market research, the most critical step is understanding your customers and getting familiar with their pain points and what they want. Talk to them extensively through surveys, focus groups, online interactions, and use secondary research on existing market trends.

For example, if you find that your customers are particularly concerned about the environment, it’s a sign to focus more on eco-friendly packaging and to promote this in your marketing. If your customers are concerned with nutrition, be sure to highlight the health benefits of your product in your packaging.

Identify opportunities for upselling

Market research can be an excellent way to discover opportunities for upselling existing products and even find ideas for entirely new products. Your packaging, if done right, can be used to promote other products in your range and be a marketing channel in its own right.

However, the only way to achieve this is to conduct proper research, ensuring you understand all possible opportunities and identify demand in the right areas.

Today’s customers have high demands for brands. People want eco-friendly packaging, detailed information about nutrition and health, and the latest in smart packaging.

Some of your market research should focus on identifying these trends and learning more about what your specific customer base is passionate about and considers essential. This way, you’ll be able to create packaging that satisfies their demands and signals that you’re the kind of company they want to support.

Develop a strong brand voice and personality

Your packaging is the first thing your customers see about your brand. It should boldly state who you are and what sets you apart from everyone else, and clearly embody your brand’s personality.

Developing a voice for your brand takes time, but market research is a central component of that process. Your research will shed light on who your customers are, what niche you occupy, and what makes your brand and products unique. This way, you’ll be able to establish a strong and distinctive brand voice and let it shine through in your packaging.

Market research is a long and incredibly important process for all kinds of reasons, and food packaging is just one area of this. 
At Kadence, we help consumer goods companies with market research and packaging solutions, enabling them to succeed and use their resources as effectively as possible. To find out more about how we can help you do the same, contact us.

How is your product received by consumers or business decision-makers? What are the pros and cons of a change in an existing product feature or new varieties of your current big-sellers? Why is a product failing to perform? You want to tweak a formulation, messaging or packaging to cut costs or reach new audiences – but will that scupper or supercharge your sales? The answers to all these questions can be found in product testing research.

What is product testing?

With product testing, we’re not looking to establish general consumer attitudes or behaviours. Nor is this about standing up a new concept or looking for gaps in the market. The primary job of product testing is to tell us how people respond to an actual product – including how they use it and what they think its qualities are – allowing brands to decide whether and how to market it.

When should I do product testing research?

Let’s look at the natural marketing life-cycle to explain how product testing research can support the emergence, and successful exploitation, of a product – and place it in the context of a wider field of market research:

  • Ideation – dreaming up an idea worth pursuing. Research helps identify unmet consumer needs, value-chain opportunities, potential applications of innovation and new markets.
  • Screening – a rigorous approach to deciding which ideas are worth pursuing, again drawing on research and feasibility work, and assessing potential audiences.
  • Concept testing – seeing how the manifestation of ideas might work in the market, leading to additional screening out of less viable concepts.
  • Prototyping – designing products to prove mass production feasibility, form factors and feature sets.
  • Early product testingevaluating consumer attitudes to the product itself, either in controlled settings, in the field or in everyday contexts; typically unbranded or with highly simplified packaging.
  • Late product testingwhich might include feedback from earlier tests to refine messaging, packaging and final form factor.
  • Testing iterations of a product to forecast the impact (on sales and usage) of changes to features, formulations, targeting and marketing – often in response to changes in sales patterns or negative customer feedback.

In other words, product testing is distinct from concept testing. It’s all about refining the delivery of something that is (or soon will be) a finished product. This might include changes to feature sets, the marketing pitch, pricing, ideal target audience and other details. It’s not so much whether the product works – it’s how the product will work best.

Use cases for product testing research

In summary, then, you can apply product testing to:

  • Find out how a close-to-final version of a new product might perform.
  • Tweak that product to optimise its performance on launch.
  • See how a new product is performing post-launch.
  • Test the effect of changes to product design or presentation.
  • Evaluate or explore how a product is marketed.
  • See how well consumers in a new market will accept an existing product.
  • Undertake ‘penalty analysis’ to see which qualities, when changed, alter consumer options about a product.

Product testing in action – a case study

One way to think about the value of product testing is as a way to optimise the introduction or evolution of a particular product. A good example is work we’ve done with a beverage brand to launch a new range of iced teas. The client wasn’t launching a brand-new product – they had worked up some new flavours and wanted to know which they could launch successfully, how these might affect brand perception and what consumers made of them.

There were eight formulations to be tested. We added in an established variant to act as a benchmark, giving us a way to test the relative strength of the products. We measured various metrics with consumers to provide comparable scores as a key insights.

The product isn’t necessarily going to change in this case. It’s a chance for the client to check which variants might work best, to optimise the roll-out and then make minor refinements if the research delivers consistent feedback on particular elements. How research subjects describe the teas might also help shape marketing and packaging for instance.

In other cases, clients might test out product names and straplines on consumers while they’re testing the product to create a range of possibilities, not just on the branding and marketing, but also on likely target audiences and even pricing. Does the product live up to a premium positioning? Or will it chime with more down-to-earth messaging?

The role of product testing guidelines

We work with many clients that have well-established product testing guidelines – a set of standards that enable them to better evaluate products over time and give them clearer benchmarks for making decisions. For large corporates in particular, the product testing research project is an exercise in generating fairly standardised numbers – data that fits a well-established, almost algorithmic approach to evaluating potential product performance.

When this isn’t the case – or if the guidelines are relatively basic – it’s a good idea to establish some clear ground rules at the start of a project to ensure it delivers insights that will shape client decisions. You might need to agree:

  • How the product should be stored, prepared, presented and used.
  • The audience it should be tested with, and how to recruit them.
  • Where to conduct tests with participants (see below).
  • What metrics to record.
  • How to record their experiences – and other feedback.
  • The research methodologies that will work best.
  • Whether to use a control product for comparative purposes.

Introducing a framework helps everyone understand what success looks like for a product: for it to go forward, what will the research need to show? Is it being on par with an existing or rival product on overall performance? Does it need to be statistically stronger on key metrics?

In some ways, it’s akin to a science experiment: you outline the aim (proving it’s better than the existing product) based on your prediction (the product design); we provide a sound, rigorous methodology to test that assumption (the research); and the result gives conclusive result to tell you how to proceed.

How does product testing work? Where and how to test

Different objectives of product testing will suit different methodologies. A lot depends on what brands already know about the product and the way it’s perceived; on what they want to learn from the tests (see below); and the type of product under review.

There are broadly three environments to conduct product tests. Let’s look at the use-cases and the pros and cons.

1. Central Location Testing (CLT)

This is where participants are invited to a facility to undertake the test. This is ideal for evaluating products in controlled conditions, especially when testing a variety of use cases. It’s also suited to products that won’t be used as much in the home – especially in food outlets, for instance.

A good example would be a new foamless cappuccino we tested. To get comparable results, the same machine was used in different central testing centres, with the client providing an expert barista to produce the same product every time.

CLT is ideal for evaluating products under controlled conditions – testing different fragrances, say, is hard if the conditions allow for cross-contamination of scents. But it’s also very useful where confidentiality is important. We set up a CLT in a hotel, for example, so that a new tech product could be tested by invited consumers without the design leaking. Non-disclosure agreements might be a feature of any product test, but for this kind of commercially or technologically sensitive research, the controlled setting can be helpful too.

The other advantage of CLT is liability management. Some products – foodstuff and cosmetics, in particular – might cause adverse reactions with test subjects, and it’s easier to screen and monitor them on-site.

You can find out more about central location testing in our guide.

2. Street Intercept Testing (SIT)

This is literally grabbing participants in an ambient setting for a few minutes to get them to try something and test their reactions. This works well for relatively simple research – the questionnaire will need to be relatively quick in a supermarket or street setting – and for targeting particular participants. Testing a new cheese at the deli counter in a supermarket would be one application.

It’s also ideal for capturing insights within specific use locations – when a central facility would be a little abstract. We worked with a sports beverage brand to test a special protein-rich drink. The use-case is post-exercise, so intercepts with the target market in a gym setting yielded much more insights than a central location could have.

3. In-Home Testing (IHT)

For many products, the consumer’s home (or, in some cases, their workplace) will be the usual usage location. Getting the products into the home for a period of use, then running online, telephone or face-to-face follow-up questionnaires is a great way to see how they work ‘as intended’.

In-home testing tends to be ideal for more sustained testing. The taste of a new iced tea or reformulated cheese can be tested fairly immediately. But a toothpaste, cleaning product, in-home device or even lightbulb, will only reveal itself properly over a few days’ use. Out of the control conditions, we can learn more about how good instructions for use are; we can see how consumers might use the product in their daily lives or in combination with other products; and we can monitor evolving opinions about the product as they get used to it.

Obviously in-home testing has been popular during Covid-19 lockdowns – not least because many products are now being consumed or used in the home that might otherwise have been ambient products; but also because centralised or street intercept tests have been harder to run for biosecurity reasons.

Note also that IHT allows for different research methodologies. As well as post-use surveys, we can get consumers to keep diaries of use, highlighting a wider variety of situations and providing more qualitative inputs.

Woman scanning food in her fridge with her phone

How to do product testing

Where to start

For many companies, product testing isn’t the start of their journey with us. This kind of research is often part of a much bigger engagement process around a brand or product line; or it might be commissioned by a brand we already do different kinds of work with. So the starting point is rarely a cold introduction to a product.

But even with some engagement beforehand, the first step in product testing is to look at the product and the client’s requirements, and then design an approach that will answer their key questions.

For some, those questions will be extremely precise. For example, one detergent brand asked us to test out a new toilet cleaning product. They knew exactly what segment they wanted to target – ABC1 consumers in their 30s and 40s who were already familiar with the brand – and even the methodology they wanted (in-home testing).

That’s largely a logistical challenge – getting the product and a control cleaner into their homes, in plain packaging, so they can be tested side-by-side; then running an online survey to generate some quantitative data and some qualitative feedback comparing the product to a known comparator.

Another example might be a commercial-kitchen mayonnaise we tested. The client was keen to assess not just how the product performed against other formulations of mayo, but also what professional chefs thought of it in different applications. Will it be at least on par with the existing product? What recipes or dishes did it suit? And how did it compare commercially?

One thing to bear in mind is that you should be testing for things you might change as a result of the insights we generate. Knowing what can change (from packaging and marketing, to cosmetic attributes or even key design features) as a result of the research findings – and what you definitely can’t alter – will ensure the tests are focused and useful.

Methodology reflections

We find that CLT is generally better for ‘sequential monadic’ testing. ‘Monadic’ means the consumer is evaluating a single product, and this is obviously possible in any environment. Even ‘paired comparison’ testing – head-to-head – can be done in-home. But sequencing the comparisons scientifically (standalone, then in head-to-head, for example) often generates more reliable data.

In terms of participant recruitment, clearly targeting the audience accurately – whether in the field, via lists of consumers, or panels – is key. They are often motivated because they receive free products. But in some cases, especially with the more in-depth or time-consuming studies, the chance to earn money is also a motivator.

Hard and soft questions

Product testing can answer a lot of questions. For seasoned clients, they’re often very precise ones – they’re seeking standardised data on usage and performance that will help them contextualise the product within a portfolio.

A good example of a ‘hard’ question might be pricing. Using techniques such as the Gabor–Granger method (to understand price elasticity) or the Van Westendorp Price Sensitivity Meter (which creates an optimal price point for a given audience), research can reveal a lot about the economics of a product.

Hard questions like that are often central, even when we’re working with smaller companies that are looking to take a product from prototype to production and need to calculate the risk/rewards involved.

Smaller companies, however, are more likely to be asking ‘soft’ questions, too, where quantitative surveys are augmented with qualitative insights. They might be trying to learn more about consumer attitudes to the category as well as the product; or develop a deeper understanding either to tweak the product being researched – or inform future innovations.

A good market research agency can really help with this part of the process. For example, in some companies there might not be rigid product testing guidelines in place. But by explaining what they need to know to market the product, what they might be able to change about it and what they’re not sure about, we can help companies come up with fieldwork that will deliver clear metrics and provide answers to their key questions.

What’s the outcome?

A well-planned, well-run product testing project is rarely just looking for a blunt ‘go/no-go’ answer to a product roll-out or adjustment. Although many big brands have a well-established formula for conducting product tests – designed to plug data into their tried-and-tested algorithms – even these clients will often use the test as an opportunity to learn more about the product in different dimensions.

Sometimes that’s just a by-product of a sufficiently expert and thoughtful product test. As market research professionals, we learn a lot more about products during tests than the raw data suggests. Often it’s the degree of flexibility the market research team brings to the product test that makes it most valuable.

That’s true whether the primary objective is standardised data on product attributes – or semi-quantitative work with a healthy dose of qualitative inputs to shape decisions. By making sure the parameters for the product’s adaptation are clear and the questions about it well framed, we can ensure the right blend of methodology and insights meet the client needs.

A good example of that would be taste tests for a new formulation at a chocolate brand. ‘Super tasters’ working at the client will arrive at some finely calibrated formulation, created to be aligned to brand values and differentiate the product. But it’s ordinary consumers whose verdict will shape its ultimate success.

Looking to embark on product testing research?

With experience in product testing research, we can combine the inputs and recommend robust methodologies to make sure the product hits the sweet spot in the market. Find out more about our product testing capabilities or get in touch to discuss with our team.

Launching a new fast-moving-consumer-goods (FMCG) product is a process wrought with challenges and notoriously difficult to pull off successfully. In fact, it’s such a treacherous domain that approximately 80-85% of all FMCG launches fail! So how do you successfully launch a new FMCG product in the market?

Companies need to do all they can to maximize their chances of success when it comes to launching their product. This means getting all the different stages of the process right, investing the right amount of time and resources into planning, and making use of all the tools and knowledge at their disposal.

In this article, we’ll show you how to launch a new FMCG product in the market successfully. To do this right, you need to start at the very beginning by considering what makes any FMCG product successful.

What makes an FMCG product successful?

There are a number of factors that successful FMCG products have in common. Let’s take a look at 3 things that separate good products from failures.

They’re distinct

Successful FMCG products have to offer something that sets them apart from all the other similar products on the shelves. However, this can be a tricky balancing act — you don’t want your product to be so different that it moves away from what the customer wants. 

If, for example, you’re selling a brand of instant coffee, you know your customers want some variety of coffee that they can pour into a mug and get a fresh beverage in seconds. But at the same time, you want your product to stand out and offer something more than all the other instant coffee brands. 

Brands that can strike this balance right and create a distinctive FMCG product that continues to delight the customer will be on the road to success.

They’re what people want right now

The FMCG space is defined by being in a constant state of change and flux. Innovation is happening all the time, and people’s tastes are constantly changing.

Successful FMCG products are able to tap into trends and popular demand, giving customers what they want right now as opposed to what they wanted five years ago. For example, as people become more health-conscious their taste in snacks has changed. The companies who picked up on this change in demands and adapted their product offering to include healthy, low-calorie, high-protein snacks were the ones most able to adapt and succeed in a changing market.

They persist

In a market where goods go in and out of fashion quickly, brands that can stand the test of time are at a huge advantage. Household names like Coca-Cola, L’Oréal, and Nestle are household names because they’re masters at staying relevant and in-demand in markets that are prone to constant change.

Doing this successfully requires an intimate knowledge of your market and customers and a knack for constantly delivering even as tastes and trends evolve.

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Why do FMCG product launches fail so often?

There are lots of reasons why launching an FMCG product is so hard and why so many fail. Here are some of the main reasons FMCG launches tend to come up short.

It’s a competitive space

There’s no getting around it — there are lots of FMCG products out there. When you enter this market, you’ll be competing with many other brands, brands that have often been in the game for many years.

If you don’t get it right from the very beginning, you’ll never be able to effectively compete and your target customers will go straight to the brands they have been using for as long as they can remember.

Failure to use data and market research properly

Today’s businesses are blessed with more data than ever before in history. Much, much more. And this can be augmented by wider market research to understand the market, the key trends at play and reactions to your concept or product. If used correctly, this data and insight allows you to better understand your customers,  and launch a product that takes the market by storm.

Unfortunately, many FMCG brands fail to tap into that rich reservoir of data, missing out on the advantages it offers and instead launching a product that isn’t closely aligned with what customers want.

Development costs and lack of funding

Another characteristic of FMCG launches is that they’re expensive. Developing a successful FMCG product can cost a huge amount of money, and this typically requires a lot of reliable funding and investment.

If you fail to secure enough funding for your project, you’re setting up the entire launch for failure.

Failure to understand timescales and stick to them

Launching an FMCG product involves a huge number of moving parts and deadlines. If you aren’t careful, it’s easy to mess this up and end up falling behind the dates you promised.

One clear example is shipping times. If your product fails to reach your customer within the time they expect, you’re creating a recipe for canceled orders, damaged reputation, lost money, and a failed launch.

Failure to understand the importance of constant innovation

The FMCG space is defined by constant, ongoing innovation. Companies are investing vast sums of money into making sure their next product is enough to stand out from the fierce competition and keep customers delighted. To survive and succeed as an FMCG brand, you need to be constantly learning, adapting, and innovating. It never ends, and it’s the only way to avoid failure.

Consumer looking at FMCG products

How to launch a new FMCG product in the market successfully

Understand the market and your customers at the outset through market research

Understanding your customers and the market is absolutely critical when thinking about how to launch a new FMCG product in the market. You need to know as much as possible about your customers’ pain points, desires, their demographics, what they’re already buying, and more. 

Understanding the broader market you’re operating in is important too. This can help you identify trends to capitalize on and size the opportunity for your FMCG launch. 

This research should take place long before the product launch, in the initial stages of planning to help inform the ideation process.

Testing, testing 

Research is also important later in the process when it comes to testing your ideas with consumers. Quantitative concept testing can help you whittle down your ideas and select the ones with the best chance of success to take forwards. Qualitative concept testing can help you to further refine those ideas in line with consumer wants and needs. There are also other elements of research to consider further down the line once you reach the prototype stage, such as pack testing, central location testing or test tastes to optimise your product ahead of launch. 

You can read more about what research you need to consider at each stage of the new product development process in our guide

Get your marketing right

Effective marketing is a crucial element of every FMCG product launch. Use insights from the NPD process to guide your messaging – on the pack, at the point of sale and in your marketing and comms – to cut through with consumers and steal share of market.

Always be learning 

Testing should be an ongoing process — make sure you continue to test, measure and learn, even after the product launch. Collecting data, and making tweaks in response to the feedback you receive can help inform product relaunches or line extensions to keep you at the forefront of your category. 

Launching an FMCG product is no mean feat. It’s famously hard to pull off, and statistically most brands who attempt it fail. But that doesn’t mean it’s impossible, and with the right approach and expertise, you can significantly improve your chances of success.

To find out how Kadence can help you boost your chances of success with an FMCG product launch, get in touch.

Concept testing and test marketing are two very important concepts when it comes to developing new products for the market.

It’s common to confuse the two ideas – indeed there are indeed several significant similarities between the two. Both concept testing and test marketing play a similar role: ostensibly, to make sure a product is ready to launch and to iron out any issues that might have gone undetected during the design and planning phase.

However, concept testing and test marketing are different processes and are used for different reasons. In this article, we’ll take a look at each, exploring both their similarities and their differences. Let’s start with concept testing.

Concept testing

Concept testing is how we test a product idea before it enters the market. As the name suggests, it involves putting the concept in front of real customers and asking them to evaluate it in multiple areas. This helps us find out how real-life customers will react to the product.

Concept testing has a series of powerful benefits for marketers. It allows you to quickly notice and fix potential errors before the product launches for real, brings fresh insights to your project, and gives you data-driven feedback that you can use to get buy-in from other members of your organization.

There are a number of methods for doing concept testing, spanning quantitative and qualitative methodologies. Each has its own pros and cons and they have different applications.

(More information can be found in our comprehensive guide to concept testing).

Now we know the basics of concept testing, let’s take a look at test marketing and how it’s different.

Test Marketing

What is test marketing?

Test marketing plays a similar role to concept testing. Its goal, like concept testing, is to assess how well a product will perform in its market.

However, test marketing has a broader scope. Instead of focusing solely on the concept or product, test marketing aims to evaluate your entire marketing plan. It takes into account advertising, distribution, sales, and many other components of your overall strategy, but it does this without actually fully launching the product and taking on all the associated risks. 

In product test marketing, you basically run a mini launch for your product in a selected market and see how it performs. It’s like a crash run of a product launch.

Neither the launch nor the test market is big enough that you would suffer greatly if the product were to fail. The goal is to trial run your entire strategy to get an idea of how it would fare on a bigger scale. This allows you to pinpoint any errors and make any changes in a relatively low-risk way.

What are the advantages and disadvantages of test marketing?

The pros of test marketing

  • You get real insights into how the product would perform in a natural marketing environment. There are many things you simply can’t predict or anticipate and the only way to highlight these issues is with a real test in a real-life environment.
  • You can gain an idea of how well the product will sell. This allows you to extrapolate predictions to the wider market, build more realistic budgets, gain buy-in from other members of the company, and make any changes needed.
  • It helps you determine the most suitable and effective channels for marketing. A small-scale test, as long as it isn’t too small, can give you a solid idea of the marketing channels your target customers respond best to, helping you allocate your resources and effort more wisely when the product launches for real.
  • It helps you identify the best distribution channels and build a data-driven distribution strategy for when the product launches.
  • Any weaknesses or flaws in your strategy will be exposed without any disastrous consequences. This way, you can make any changes and ensure your entire plan is on firmer footing when you launch for real. Failing during a test is far more preferable to failing on a grand scale.
  • You’ll see how customers react to your product, marketing, and other aspects of your brand in real-life scenarios. This gives you real data to work with as opposed to theoretical predictions and second-hand knowledge based on trends.
  • You’ll get a heads-up if your product is going to fail. Sometimes, despite best efforts, some products simply aren’t meant to be. If your product fails dramatically in your test (due to lack of interest, for example) it may be a sign to cut your losses and move on, avoiding a catastrophe.

The cons of test marketing

Although test marketing can be useful, there are also some major drawbacks. Anyone planning to carry out test marketing should make sure they are aware of these potential cons before they begin.

  • It’s expensive. Doing test marketing right involves a large-scale project which measures multiple factors across your business. This means that if you want reliable results from your test marketing, you need to be prepared to invest a lot of money.
  • It’s time-consuming. Again, test marketing is a big project with many different layers. It takes time to set up your test, and you’ll need to run it for a while before you get reliable results. This can delay your product launch, cause frustration among the members of your project team and cost money.
  • Test marketing can reveal your game plan to competitors. In a test-marketing project, you are revealing not just your product but also multiple crucial aspects of your marketing strategy in the real world. It’s very easy for competitors to view this and simply copy it with their own product before you even get close to launching.
  • The results can be misleading. With test marketing, there is a lot you need to get just right to yield useful results. If your sample size is too small and narrow, you’ll end up with a one-dimensional view of your market which doesn’t reflect reality. The channels you use to market your product and collect data might exclude certain demographics, too.
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Test marketing vs concept testing: which is best for me?

Test marketing and concept testing share many things in common, but they aren’t interchangeable. In this section, we’ll break down the similarities and differences between the two and help you work out which one is best for your situation.

The similarities

  • Both test marketing and concept testing are designed to learn about your product before doing a full launch.
  • Both can be effective ways to reduce the risk of failure, gain valuable insights about your product, and make necessary changes before a full launch.
  • Both require you to plan carefully in advance and make sure everything is set up right to get the most accurate and reliable results.

The differences

Despite their similarities, concept testing and test marketing are two very different processes. Let’s take a look at the things that separate them:

  • Concept testing is much easier to carry out. You can complete a solid concept test in a relatively short amount of time, and gain valuable insights from this.
  • Concept testing is more affordable. Concept tests can be done for a fraction of the cost of test marketing.
  • Test marketing involves launching a product in the market, even if it’s at a small-scale. As a result, it’s not suitable for early stage testing, where concept testing can play an important role.  
  • Linked to this, concept testing can allow you to test ideas securely before launch. In contrast with test marketing your products are put into the market meaning that there is a risk of competitors getting hold of your ideas.
  • Test marketing is wider in scope as it takes a broader view of the entire marketing and sales process. It measures many different factors such as advertising effectiveness which can’t be evaluated in concept testing.

Which one should I use?

Whether you opt for concept testing or test marketing depends on your goals, the resources you have available, your product, where you are in the development process and your timeline, among other factors.

Concept testing is much easier and more cost effective to do than test marketing and can yield reliable results at speed. With concept testing, it’s not hard to get reliable feedback on your product and clear direction to inform actionable changes. This allows you to make meaningful improvements to your product and launch much more confidently.

Give yourself the best chance

Concept testing allows you to launch your product with the best possible chance of success. Instead of operating in the dark, guided only by guesswork and opinions, you can lean on real feedback from real customers.


At Kadence, we can help you with concept testing, ensuring your product goes to market with a strong chance of success. To find out how, request a proposal today or get in touch with your local Kadence team to discuss your options.

Concept testing is a crucial stage when developing new products. Before you launch a new product in the market, you must understand how your customers will respond and how the product will perform.

Concept testing helps you avoid costly errors and nasty surprises; it is much better to understand your market and make a more confident and successful product launch. In this article, we’ll show you how concept testing works and how to do it. Let’s start with a more in-depth definition.

What is concept testing?

A concept is a precursor to every great product. It’s a detailed outline of what you’re going to produce, who it’s for, the problems it will solve, how it will work, how much it will cost, and much more.

To ensure your concept is ready to go to market, it’s essential to test it properly with real customers. This process is called concept testing, and in the rest of this article, we’ll talk about why this is so important and how to do it methodically.

The benefits of concept testing

Concept testing is the process of testing your concept before launch, so you can confidently put it into the market with a pretty good understanding of how your customers will feel and how they will respond.

There are several different methods spanning both qualitative and quantitative approaches (which we’ll dive into shortly). Still, they all involve presenting concepts to consumers and getting feedback about different attributes. 

(Check out our detailed guide to concept testing for more information.)

There are multiple reasons to do concept testing, such as:

  • You get real feedback from users. Designers and product teams are often too close to the product to make clear-headed decisions, and they might overlook some crucial things. Concept testing allows you to access honest feedback from your target customers, which you can’t replicate with your internal team.
  • It helps you notice flaws. No concept has ever been perfect. Testing your product with real users enables you to detect problems that flew under the radar in the design phase, giving you many new pairs of eyes.
  • It allows you to refine your concept. Before testing, your product is a rough prototype with all the major pieces in place, but it probably needs some extra work. By shedding light on what consumers think, testing gives you some direction for refining and improving your product so that it’s more likely to gain traction when it hits the shelves.

The importance of concept testing

The above benefits are essential for many reasons. Here are some of the reasons why you should consider concept testing in new product development:

  • It’s easier to get backing for your product. Testing gives concrete data about how customers feel about your brand’s products. You can then use this data to make a compelling case to others in the organization about why you are making certain decisions. With this data, it’s no longer a matter of personal opinion, and it will be much easier to convince others.
  • It helps you find out what your customers like the most about the product. Concept testing is beneficial not just for that specific product and how to market it but also allows you to make better decisions in the future by focusing on the things that people like most and targeting popular pain points with different products.
  • Testing can help you segment your customer base. Who should you target with your product? If specific demographics love the product and others are less enthusiastic, this is extremely helpful when focusing your marketing and distribution efforts.
  • It helps you estimate how many sales you’ll make and the ROI you’ll generate with the product when it goes to market. This is helpful when setting budgets, making plans, and getting financial backing from others in your company.
  • It allows you to identify a reasonable price point. It’s common to ask users how much they would expect to pay for a product during testing. This helps inform your decisions about how much to price your product.
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How to test concepts: the qualitative and quantitative methodologies

Concepts can be tested quantitatively or qualitatively. Qualitative methods for concept testing include focus groups, online communities, and in-depth interviews that allow you to uncover rich qualitative feedback from current or prospective customers relating to your planned product. Ethnography or self-ethnography are other alternatives, particularly if the concept you’re testing is worked up and in prototype form that consumers can interact with at home.

The primary quantitative method used for testing concepts is an online quantitative survey, an approach that allows you to test at scale. 

Different approaches for testing concepts 

There are four main approaches for concept testing a new product, each with its pros and cons. It’s best to consider your specific situation and then pick one which works best for concept testing your product.

Monadic testing

Monadic testing is where the audience is divided into groups, and each group is given one concept in isolation and asked to evaluate it via a series of questions.

For example, they might be asked to rate the design, evaluate the price, or give feedback on the packaging.

The pros of monadic testing are:

  • There is less room for order bias since the concepts are shown and evaluated in isolation.
  • It’s easier for users — they only have one product to focus on, and all the questions apply to that product.
  • It encourages more profound feedback as users dive deeply into one concept instead of skimming over several different ones.

On the other hand, the main drawback to monadic testing is that it requires a larger sample size to get enough reliable data. It can be costly to gather all the necessary participants and challenging to find enough people to assess niche concepts.

Sequential monadic testing

In sequential monadic testing, multiple concepts are evaluated one after the other. Each participant sees two or more concepts presented in random order. Participants answer questions about each one in turn.

The main benefit is that fewer people are needed, so this results in the following:

  • Being cheaper to gather enough people and set up the testing
  • Taking less time to collect a sufficient amount of data
  • It also works well with niche markets where there might not be many potential customers

The main downside is that it takes longer to carry out each test since participants evaluate multiple concepts instead of just one.

Comparative

In comparative testing, concepts are shown next to each other, and participants evaluate all of them at the same time. It’s an effective way to find out how one concept compares directly against another in the eyes of your customers.

The main advantage of comparative testing is that it’s suitable for measuring small differences and drilling down into the specific advantages and drawbacks of each product. The main downside is that its comparative nature means it’s not very effective when both products are flawed. 

Comparative testing is often used as a follow-up for monadic testing to gain deeper insights into a specific product.

Proto monadic 

Proto monadic concept testing is a blend of monadic and comparative testing. Customers evaluate a product via monadic testing and then are shown the same product compared to another.

It’s done to confirm the initial monadic results to gain a more sturdy overall conclusion about a product’s strengths and weaknesses.

What to measure

Once you have settled on a testing method, it’s time to consider what you want to measure. There’s a long list of possible factors to analyze with concept testing, and these might vary based on your chosen method.

Here are some common examples of things to measure:

  • Overall reaction to the product – this measures how customers feel about the product overall and can be measured with a Likert scale (a series of options from “strongly agree” to “strongly disagree”).
  • Reaction to different elements of the product – you can also use the Likert scale to rate specific aspects of the product, for example, the packaging, ease of use, battery life, and more.
  • Need for the product compared to the current market – how much demand does your participant think there is for the product? Is there an urgent need for it, or is the market already saturated with similar products?
  • Comparison with other products on the market – how does your product compare with what’s already out there in the market? Is it a significant improvement on what exists, worse, or just more of the same?
  • Likes and dislikes – what are the individual things people like and dislike about the product?
  • Purchase likelihood – this is where you ask your respondents to rate their likelihood of buying your product. You can use a Likert scale for this (“very unlikely” to “very likely”).
  • Pricing analysis – how much would your participants be willing to pay for the product?
  • Likelihood of use – how much of a need does your participant have for the product, and what kind of role would it play in their lives?

(Check out this article for examples of how to test new product concepts.)

Testing your concepts is crucial if you want to release the best products to your target market, market them effectively, delight your customers, and see your revenue soar.

How can we help?

It’s crucial to do concept testing properly, so your new products have the best chance of success when they eventually hit the market. To find out how Kadence can help you deliver this, request a proposal or contact the Kadence team here.

Have you heard the story about Steve Jobs dismissing consumer market research as a tool to shape new products? The driving force behind the Mac, the iPod and the iPhone famously said in a 1985 Playboy interview, “We were the group of people who were going to judge whether it was great or not. We weren’t going to go out and do market research.”

It is, of course, one of the most widely debunked stories in business. Apple does conduct consumer market research – and is, arguably, in its pre-eminent position precisely because it innovates using insights generated by analysing in incredible detail its consumers’ behaviours and the market appetite for its products. (There’s video of a young Jobs extolling the virtues of market research for these purposes – it’s 90 seconds well spent.)

The fact is, most new products are very similar to things people have seen before. For every genre-busting innovation there are tens of thousands of new iterations of existing ideas, tweaks to brands and updates to proven sellers. In most cases, some kind of market research will have shaped the new iteration and how it was conceptualised; helped stand up the business case for it; framed the marketing; and guided its introduction to consumers. So how does market research help businesses design and launch successful new products?

Using market research for product development at each stage of the innovation funnel

There are lots of different ways to describe the innovation process, broadly broken down into three phases: ideas, concepts and creation. It’s not a science with a standard formula, however, but there are some common steps.  For example, some experts recommend breaking the process into 5Cs:

  • Capture intelligence about market gaps and organisational potential.
  • Connect opportunities to capabilities.
  • Convert ideas and available resources into concepts for products.
  • Confirm these products are viable in the market.
  • Conclude by executing a market entry plan for them.

Another way of thinking about it is a series of questions that need to be asked at each stage of the product development process. Market research can help answer them all.

1: What’s the opportunity?

Desk research, analysis of existing customer data and some qualitative investigation can help frame likely areas for innovation. In many cases, an organisation will face an internal problem – overcapacity, falling margins, consumer appetites shifting away from existing products – that also frame the need for new products. The output here is an extrapolation of big trends to identify emerging needs, changing behaviours and whitespace for innovation.

2: What ideas might thrive there?

In some organisations, internal R&D will have a ready supply of potential innovations that might be applied to the opportunity. More likely, R&D and marketing teams will benefit from a brief developed from the ‘opportunity’ phase to direct R&D in more concrete areas. This process might include brainstorming inside the organisation or more formal ideation sessions with an external research agency. At this point surveys can be harnessed to give more shape to the ideation process. In the search for an iterative new product (rather than a genuine technological innovation) there might be 30 broad ideas that can be tested in quantitative surveys to thin down the field.

3: What concepts deliver on those ideas?

In the next stage, focus groups and market analysis can clarify which concepts ought to progress further by exploring the strengths and weaknesses of each idea. This is also where the innovation and R&D efforts of the business are properly moulded around consumer and market insights – and some iteration takes place to align the two. Note that research here isn’t just among consumers in the core market. Channel partners, consumers and suppliers in adjacent industries are all valuable sources of insight and inspiration. For example, when Kadence worked with an airline to develop new first and business class seats, we looked to bedding experts, audiophiles and high-end restaurant maîtres d’hôtel to shape the concepts.

4: How might those concepts perform in the market?

By this point, an organisation should have narrowed its ideas down to a small number of solid concepts. At this stage, a large-scale quantitative survey can be used to identify the concept with most potential to take forward, as well as the size of the potential customer base.

5: What’s the investment case for launch?

The insights gained from market and concept testing will allow numbers to be attached to the product at this point. What might revenues be? What’s the cost to produce the product or service? With research around pricing, what’s the margin likely to be? Does this justify retooling a factory or investment in marketing? This is the “go/no go” point for a new product.

6: What should the final product look like?

Using the research on market potential and consumer attitudes to the new idea, a business can shape decisions on final feature set, ancillary products or services (again, both quant and qual market research will illustrate the need or potential for these), packaging, marketing and pricing.

7: How do we get it out to market?

Research can also highlight optimum product launch strategies, including distribution, adverting and partnerships to make the most of both existing markets and potential follow-ons – whether that’s mass-market adoption for a product designed initially for a niche or early adopters; new demographic segments; or launch into different international markets.

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The known unknowns for new products

There are broadly two types of business keen to answer these questions. First there’s the radical innovators, the people who come up with brand new ideas and product concepts and want to understand whether they stand a chance in the market. This group are interested in ‘unknown unknowns’, the broader trends in consumer behaviour that might hint at acceptance of a brand new idea. We’ll come on to these Steve Jobs types later.

The second, much larger, group understands the innovation funnel in more detail and seeks data to optimise a pipeline of new products. They are interested in ‘known unknowns’ and using the answers to justify, shape and execute a launch.

For this group, the challenge is modelling the potential performance of a new product against a number of variables already visible in the market. These organisations often have a sophisticated process in place to test new ideas and are keen to benchmark any new product in order to validate investment. They will have an algorithm for product development. The more variables they can pin down using market research, the higher the confidence in making those investments.

‘Benchmarking’ in this case might be looking at the performance of products within the target market; or evaluating consumer attitudes to particular features or benefits. This makes it a largely quantitative methodology.

This kind of quantitative approach is often applied with good reason. Standardised questionnaires and clear, consistent methodologies can help ensure that the market research process is more reliable and easier to interpret. And for many larger organisations with a wide portfolio of potential innovations, a fixed investment budget and the need for reliable returns, this rigour can be highly valuable.

But beyond simply looking at the “go / no go” result, it’s important to dig into the reasons why products didn’t pass this hurdle. This can provide valuable insights to inform future development.

Competitor analysis can also reveal opportunities for developing successful product iterations. Research might include:

  • Rivals’ marketing strategies – what’s their targeting and messaging; what are they missing?
  • Customer satisfaction with competitor products– where are there discontents that might be satisfied by your product?
  • Other gaps in the market – such as different price points or localised versions for international consumers.
  • Other competitor strengths and weaknesses – consider brand halo effects or financial status.
  • Early-adopter behaviours – in similar markets or using new technologies that might be adapted to your own target markets.

A word of warning – New Coke and the importance of taking the right approach to market research for new product development

But it’s not always done right. There’s no shortage of case studies of new product launches that didn’t go well. And often that’s not because an organisation didn’t do any market research. It’s because they didn’t use it deftly enough.

New Coke is a great example. Coca Cola is an innovative business and wields one of the greatest brands in history. In the 1980s, management decided to rebuild its dominant position with a new formula. Clearly this was a huge decision, and as a market research powerhouse, it took no risks. It spent $4m on development and conducted over 200,000 taste tests across the US to research how consumers would score the new flavour against rival Pepsi. And based on those tests, New Coke was going to be a hit.

But management made a series of errors. In a classic case of confirmation bias, they tended to put more weight behind positive views expressed in focus groups, ignoring those who warned a change would turn them off the brand. They discounted emotional feedback on their brand. And they over-focused on differentiation with Pepsi, which had long marketed itself as the sweeter product.

One big mistake was conducting sip tests instead of researching how consumers would feel drinking a whole can of the sweeter formulation. But narrowing down their research focus – ignoring the context for consumption – they ended up launching a product that turned consumers off the brand altogether.

The error, then, was not failure to conduct market research. It was failure to treat research objectively and apply appropriate methodologies. Management sought justification for their decision – not confidence that it was the right one.

The impact of market research on new product development – giving you the confidence to guide a product launch

The key word here is ‘confidence’. Even iterating an existing product entails risks. Using market research for product development helps reveal and manage that risk – and allows decision-makers to test rigorously against hypotheses for new products, rather than head off down potentially blind alleys.

Note that qualitative research plays a crucial role in helping product developers fine-tune their approach and create innovations more suited to particular audiences. And as the New Coke example shows, qual research can capture the emotional components of product change much better than quantitative analysis might. Every new product launch is a balance between gains and losses for the consumer and understanding that balance is vital.

When it comes to qualitative research, organisations shouldn’t just ask themselves whether to conduct it, but how to conduct it. Whilst central location testing for instance, allows you to ensure the product is experienced in a consistent way during the testing process  pandemic lockdowns have obviously accelerated this shift towards at-home testing. New technologies are helping. Augmented reality (AR), for example, is an ideal way to help consumers visualise new products even at the concept stage. Using their mobile phones, they can ‘see’ products in their own home or a work setting, providing valuable depth to qualitative studies at even earlier stages. This is something we’ve piloted with Asahi to test their London Pride packaging and are seeing a number of benefits, such as respondents using AR organically noticing and commenting on small visual details that aren’t picked up by other respondents assessing a 2D concept.

Using market research to guide blue-sky thinking

So we can test against quantitative benchmarks to validate new product development. And we have qualitative studies to test emotional reaction to new products and shape their evolution in ways that will make them more successful. There’s also a third way of using market research for product development: coming up with new ideas in the first place.

This is often called ‘ideation’ and it’s an area where market research has played a key role since the birth of the industry – regardless of what Steve Jobs said. He was right that consumers are typically quite poor at predicting what might define or satisfy meet their own future needs. But understanding how R&D and human appetites come together is core to the market research offering.

Take a dairy business, as an example, that’s facing a slow decline in consumption. One solution would be to increase the appeal of organic products. How might they craft a brief to their own product development team?

Working with Kadence, the company use a structured approach to frame where this innovation might gain some traction in the market. Using proven research techniques, they also explored possible options for further innovation. These can be tweaked and repositioned using further research.

This approach can be further optimised if like us, the research agency has an in-house creative team that can quickly visualise concepts based on consumer feedback. We worked with a global beverage brands wanting to relaunch its range to make this happen. Based on focus groups, we were able to redesign the packaging in a matter of hours in a way that capitalised on insights from the research.  

One other process to consider: the ideation sprint. Rather than gradually piecing together some R&D, market analysis and internal feedback before gradually building out a new product for consumer testing, this involves getting all the stakeholders into a project group together to develop new ideas within a short timeframe.

Kadence has conducted these sprints with food manufacturers – where that combination of chefs, technicians, marketing experts, salespeople and researchers working in concentrated bursts over a couple of days can see a menu of ideas created,  tested with consumers and refined incredibly quickly. And because these sprints are cross-departmental, buy-in for the new product internally is much greater.

Concluding thoughts

Product development is risky even when you’re not launching a category-busting innovation or changing the world. New flavours, revived branding, tweaked feature-sets or version updates can upset existing product performance or result in costly investment in ideas that might not fly.

Far from stifling product development, market research can deliver reassurance and confidence at every stage, helping inform the choice of new products to pursue, their key attributes, how they might be marketed and what contribution they make to a business operationally and financially.

This is an area where Kadence has extensive expertise. Find out more about our product development research services or get in touch with us to discuss a brief.

Marketing textbooks are littered with examples of products or services which flopped when they hit the market. 

Take Juicero, in which investors pumped a staggering $120 million – all for a wi-fi connected juice maker which nobody had indicated they wanted or needed. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it was scrapped within two years

Or ESPN’s mobile phone service, which was pitched at the wrong price – some $400 – whilst also offering the target audience a lack of choice around handset. The service was swiftly shut down, with ESPN instead opting to provide content to Verizon. 

And remember New Coke? Launched in 1985, it’s still remembered today as a major marketing misstep.The product was abandoned after only a few weeks, with Cola-Cola reverting back to its old formula. 

It’s clear that some of the world’s most innovative companies have failed to accurately foresee the impact of new launches when they hit the target market. Even Google, for instance, arguably launched its wearable Google Glass concept too soon. Its sky-high price did not help, and it failed to connect with consumers.

Fortunately there is a way to avoid this type of failure. By conducting  product concept testing before a product launch, businesses are able to develop their ideas in a safe and controlled space with the target audience ahead of launch.

The concept in question can be many different things. It might be a totally new set of product ideas that no one has ever seen before. It might be a redesign or rebrand.

Testing methods can be online, for instance via quantitative surveys or via online communities focused on gathering qualitative insight; or face-to-face, in a focus group or series of in-depth interviews. 

Whatever the method, conducting concept testing can pinpoint the value – or otherwise – of specific features and benefits, as well as indicating whether a product concept will be a major hit or a more niche offering which may not justify the cost and resources needed to make a reality.

Concept testing does require an investment in market research, but any costs at this stage will be minimal in comparison to launching a product which goes on to fail.

After all, testing is the process of uncovering what your potential consumers like or dislike about your concept, helping you identify which ideas will fly and guiding their future development to ensure success. What’s more, concept testing can enable marketers to understand what to communicate at launch, whilst also helping to identify the customer segments with the most potential

Here are the five key reasons why concept testing is so important:

1. Concept testing can help you filter ideas so you know which to develop further

Concept testing can help you move beyond blue-sky thinking and determine which of your ideas will be a hit. Rather than relying on subjective opinion, it gives you data that can bring the whole team on board by providing a consensus about which projects to develop and which to shelve.

In this way, great concept testing unites teams behind the ideas that have real potential. There’s no need to worry about office politics or lengthy and frustrating ‘design by committee’. With concept testing you can hear directly from the consumer what’s likely to cut it – and what won’t.

By using a range of qualitative and quantitative techniques, you can understand the consumer view of different concepts, and explore whether the products or services you’re looking to develop will resonate. Employing a range of testing tools enables you to identify the product concepts with the highest appeal, as well as understand how these can be refined. This allows you to move to the next stage of development with confidence.

It’s no overstatement to say that the use of a well-designed, concept testing survey or a skilfully moderated online community can pave the way to success. But any survey template or discussion guide needs to be designed in such a way that ensures that the overall package, as well as individual features or attributes are each assessed and fed back on. 

This is something that needs to happen in the early stages of decision-making, too. It cannot be left too late as the point of concept testing is to help you iterate your ideas and to tweak them ahead of launch so that they are primed for success.

2. Concept testing can help you steer clear of bad decision-making.

Testing concepts in detail before launch may sound like it will delay your go-to-market strategy, but in the long run it can save your organisation significant time, prevent financial losses, and protect your relationship with customers. Failed products or services are enormously costly but fortunately concept testing exists not only to help you avoid the bad ideas, but also to uncover those with untapped potential.

Concept testing can help you to find the strongest option to take forward among a number of choices or find ways to improve underperforming concepts. Either way, it’s a great way to ensure, quickly and easily, that whatever you’re planning has a solid chance of success. In this way, concept testing can help you avoid an embarrassing failure and take your product development processes from good to great, thanks to that all-important feedback from those who matter – your customers.

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3. Concept testing can help you understand what elements matter to consumers.

Even if you immediately gauge that your product ideas are likely to fly, there are still many additional things to consider through testing methods – such as your positioning, the kind of packaging or branding that would be considered attractive and –  arguably the most important factor in the production of any product or service – the most appropriate price.

In this way, a concept test is a way to optimise your innovation, drastically reduce the risk of project failure and limit excessive costs. Concept testing is crucial for product developers to determine the innovation’s chance of success. It can shed light on blind spots, inefficiencies, misinterpretations or problems that can lead to failure. Using testing methods like surveys as well as qualitative research, via a focus group, in depth interview or online community, can all help to tease out your target audience’s wants or needs.

4. Concept testing enables you to fix problems prior to launch.

The sooner concept testing is undertaken, the more flexibility there is for optimising your initial idea to develop a product that customers truly want and need. 


Through concept testing you can understand what elements don’t fly with customers so you can ditch underperforming elements to save costs or iteratively improve concepts so that they better meet consumer needs. With an online community, for instance, it’s possible to develop concepts based on consumer feedback, and then upload them for further feedback, in this way allowing you to refine ideas swiftly.

5. Ultimately, concept testing ensures that you develop products that consumers will buy.

Concept testing puts the consumer voice at the heart of product development, thereby ensuring that new products will resonate with customers, dramatically increasing business performance. 

The results of a concept test can help you to identify the pain – or the delight – relating to new ideas. Concept testing can  enable you to establish how your product would fit into the lives of your target audience; how often they might use it and, crucially, which product concept they would be willing to pay for.

Good concept testing means getting under the skin of your customer and letting their feelings and needs guide you towards the solutions with the most potential. By putting consumers central to product development, you can develop products and services that outperform the competition.

In order to achieve this, it’s important to partner with skilled market researchers that can design studies that get you the insights you need. From a qualitative perspective, this means professionals that can help people open up, answer fully, and elaborate on their responses to concepts. In an online community for instance, the researcher must carefully guide and curate the discussion in order to gain in-depth feedback. 


Ultimately, concept testing gives you a better idea of consumers’ reactions to your ideas. It clarifies the need your solution is addressing, consumers’ perceptions of the product, how it fares against other similar solutions, and what can be done to maximise adoption and market impact. 

So it should come as no surprise to learn that this type of market research can have a huge impact on your business, enabling you to understand where to focus efforts in product development by uncovering the view of the target market. 

Product development need never be risk, nor the creation of successful products be a wild stab in the dark. If you’d like our support with a concept testing project, please get in touch or request a proposal. 

Before they reach the target market, products or services always start off as unproven ideas. But in order to avoid costly failures, businesses need to understand whether or not they’ll be a hit with consumers.

Concept testing is the process of using qualitative or quantitative research in order to test your ideas ahead of launch. It enables you to ascertain which features are likely to be popular with the target audience, and which may need changing. 

Key methodologies and testing methods can include in-depth interviews, online communities and the use of a testing survey to gather feedback on your potential product.

Paving the way to success

Testing product ideas with your target audience enables you to optimise your approach before introducing products to the market, helping you to get features right from the earliest stage and to dramatically boost your chances of success, by asking potential customers what they think. It can also prevent costly failures so an investment in effective concept testing is a worthwhile investment.

After all, seemingly minor product features can have a fundamental effect. In this way, market research enables you to find out what potential customers care about in order to determine which attributes should be incorporated into the final design, ahead of the official product launch.

Product and concept development

Behind almost every successful product is a careful research and development phase – and we’ve worked with some of the biggest brands to take their big ideas, and turn them into products consumers love.

But how do you test a product concept effectively?

Here are five examples of how to test concepts for any potential product.

1. Run an online survey to test overall concept appeal and to narrow down your options

A concept test survey can be a powerful tool. A testing survey can reach large audiences of carefully targeted consumers, providing rich data to be analysed. It is possible to test a number of concepts, in order to understand their appeal and to help you decide which concepts to take forward for further testing.

Product developers know that the use of effective survey questions is a proven way of generating relevant information on which to base future decisions. Questionnaires are typically used for obtaining valuable data. For example, to ascertain how many potential customers there are, whether they would find such a product or service useful, and the sort of price they would be willing to pay. 

The key is to ask the right people the right questions, and to ask enough people to get meaningful results. Often a likert scale is used; a type of scale used to rate various features or attributes, in the eyes of end users. Do bear in mind, too, that you need to approach a significant sample of people who match the profile of your target audience when sending out questionnaires.

Effective concept testing can also give you relevant information and clear pointers as to which demographic groups, geographies or market segments will get as excited about your idea as you are.

2. Employ conjoint analysis to understand which features really matter to consumers

As well as asking potential customers which concept they prefer, you can use techniques like conjoint analysis to gauge which product features are most important. This is a technique which involves presenting people with a series of attributes and asking them to rank them in order of appeal.

Conjoint analysis is regarded as an effective way of gaining detailed insights. Essentially, it’s a way of measuring the value that customers place on a product’s specific features. It typically works via a survey, in which participants are shown a combination of attributes and asked to compare or rank them. It can help to measure and understand customer preferences for particular features, to generate actionable insights to guide the development of the product.

Whilst the process involves offering respondents a range of choices. It’s important, however, not to overload respondents so that they remain fully engaged with the process.


This approach can help you identify the features that matter to consumers. Use this to categorise features into ‘need-to-have’ versus ‘nice-to-have’. Consider which features and functionality your product really needs in order to be compelling to the target market to prioritise your investment.

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3. Use qualitative methodologies to hone your ideas along with the target audience

Group discussions are a tried and tested way of getting rich qualitative input. We can bring groups of potential customers together – face-to-face in a focus group or in an online community – and conduct a carefully guided discussion, often with prototypes or other stimuli to spark conversation. This allows us to drill down into the product features that consumers really want or need. Qualitative research can also reveal unmet needs, inspiring further development and ensuring your product or service has an edge over the competition.  

 
In some cases, qualitative feedback can be gained by conducting one-on-one in-depth interviews. This is particularly useful if you have a detailed or complicated concept that’s targeted at a niche B2B audience.

It’s important to use open-ended questions to gather insights: Ask respondents what they like and dislike and give them the space to explain their views. This provides the opportunity to get objective feedback from your target audience without restrictions or bias, and to obtain detailed and actionable feedback. 


Questions can include, for instance, ‘How appealing are following the features?’ or ‘Which of the following attributes are most important to you?’ or ‘How well do these statements describe the product?’ 


Choosing the right questions, moderating the discussion, probing at the right intervals and keeping respondents engaged is key to successful product concept testing. With so many products failing, testing your concept early is also vital. By testing product concepts thoroughly and early, you’ll know which concepts are likely to drive revenue before you have invested too much time and effort in development.

4. Embrace an agile and iterative testing approach

Another way to test product concepts is to develop an agile and iterative testing approach. Online methodologies like online communities lend themselves well to this, as it’s possible to test concepts, gain feedback, adapt the concepts based upon this and then retest them with consumers.

An online community is an online research platform where consumers are brought together to take part in a series of tasks. The discussion is curated by our team of researchers in order to gain in-depth feedback which will enable effective concept iteration.

The online community platforms we use have built-in features for concept testing. For example it’s possible to mark up images to highlight which aspects you like or dislike, adding detailed commentary. The results of this exercise can be analysed and the concept iterated accordingly, with the new and improved idea put back into the community for further feedback and testing. The result? By harnessing feedback loops to refine and retest, you’re able to develop the strongest concept possible. 

Even after your product has launched, there’s real value in continuing to gain feedback. Once your product is in consumers’ hands, there’s more to learn about the role it plays in people’s lives, and any unforeseen pain points that  could require further changes to address. Be ready to test your product concept to ensure it gets better and better. By honing and refining your product features you can continue to stay ahead of the competition. So always refine and iterate. Successful product innovation is never finished. The beauty of product concept testing is that you have the luxury of being able to respond to feedback until you hit on the optimum prototype. 

5. Harness new technology to bring ideas to life for consumers 

To get the most out of respondents during a piece of concept testing research, it’s important that you bring concepts to life by creating stimuli that enables the target market to picture your proposed products or services. With our own design team in house we can take your initial ideas and turn them into beautiful mock ups that ensure the core idea is clear.

To take this a step further, we are currently exploring how we can use augmented reality (AR) to really bring concepts to life, thereby eliciting higher quality insights. Through AR we can create 3D digital prototypes that consumer can place in real environments using their phone. Not only do immersive methods like this deliver richer insights, but they also allow you to test ideas in context.

Get under the skin of your potential customers in this way and let their feelings and needs guide you towards the solutions with the most potential. The results will speak for themselves.

To find out more, please visit our concept testing services page or request a proposal from our team.