Expanding into new markets can unlock major growth, but it shouldn’t rely on guesswork. A product that succeeds at home might struggle elsewhere due to differences in consumer demand, competitive intensity, or spending power. Market potential varies significantly by region, and what looks promising on the surface could fall flat without proper analysis.

That’s why calculating market potential is a critical first step. It’s not just about estimating size—it’s about understanding relevance, accessibility, and the true drivers of demand. This includes identifying total addressable market (TAM), narrowing to serviceable market segments, and assessing the share you could realistically capture.

With no historical benchmarks to guide assumptions, projecting sales in unfamiliar markets becomes complex. Costs, behaviors, and local conditions introduce uncertainty. To move forward with confidence, brands need a model rooted in data, local insight, and strategic evaluation—not assumptions.

Done well, market potential analysis helps brands prioritize regions, plan realistic entry strategies, and allocate resources where the return is most likely to materialize.

What’s the market really worth?

Before entering a new region, brands need a clear view of the local commercial landscape. This starts with a market sizing analysis that looks at current and projected market size, demand trends, growth rate, profitability, cost structures, distribution networks, and the critical factors for success.

A surface-level scan of this data might be enough to identify a shortlist of viable territories. But when the decision to invest is on the line, a more rigorous assessment is essential. This is where a deeper market understanding analysis becomes critical, helping you evaluate viability with data rather than gut feel.

Many brands then apply a total addressable market (TAM) framework to quantify opportunity. TAM reflects the full revenue potential if your product or service were adopted across the entire market. From there, the focus narrows to your serviceable available market (SAM)—the portion of TAM your offer is relevant to—and then your serviceable obtainable market (SOM), or the share your brand could realistically capture based on its current strengths and the local competitive landscape.

Using this structured approach gives clarity not just on market size, but on how well the opportunity fits your brand’s capabilities and strategic direction.

How do you estimate SOM in new markets?

Reaching a realistic serviceable obtainable market (SOM) figure is rarely straightforward—especially in markets where your brand is untested. Even in regions where you’re already established, calculating SOM involves educated assumptions. When entering unfamiliar territory, the margin of error increases significantly.

Still, businesses with experience in market expansion can often draw from historical benchmarks and refine their assumptions through local research. Consumer behavior, purchasing power, and category maturity all play a role in shaping what’s realistically achievable.

In some cases, reliable data may be available from industry associations or government agencies. But in less developed categories—or markets where the product class is still nascent—data may be sparse or inconsistent.

And even when baseline demand is visible, estimating market share introduces further uncertainty. You may have a handle on acquisition costs, infrastructure, or marketing spend in familiar regions, but those assumptions may not translate well. Entering a new market often means rebuilding your cost models from scratch.

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Why local insight matters more than spreadsheets

Market potential isn’t just a numbers game. To make informed decisions, you need insight from those with firsthand experience in your target market. There are two ways to gather this: benchmark against others who’ve entered similar markets, and speak directly with local partners.

Start by researching sales figures or expansion strategies from businesses comparable to yours. Even if they aren’t direct competitors, their market entry stories can uncover barriers, demand gaps, and the most effective go-to-market approaches.

You can also learn a lot by speaking with those businesses. Ask what surprised them. What mistakes were made? What should they have known earlier? Their experiences can reshape your assumptions, especially when it comes to peak sales periods, cultural business practices, and regulatory timelines.

But nothing replaces the value of local expertise. Lawyers, accountants, logistics partners, and media buyers all have knowledge that can help you estimate demand, sidestep risk, and uncover hidden costs. If you plan to enter through a distributor, licensee, or franchise model, their commercial instincts will help you judge the scale of the opportunity.

Ultimately, rigorous market research is what brings it all together. Combining hard data on spend and category growth with local behavior and expectations gives you a sharper, more realistic view of what success might look like.

Look beyond categories – focus on behavior

When projecting market potential, it’s easy to get caught up in product categories and competitor comparisons. But a more powerful lens is behavior. How do people use your product? What needs does it fulfill? What mindset drives purchase?

Instead of just asking whether a new market has similar brands, ask whether it has similar consumers. Identify the core behaviors and motivators behind your success in current markets. Are your best customers driven by convenience, health, status, or sustainability? Do they share habits, routines, or values that transcend geography?

Then look for those same patterns in your target market. If you can map behaviors rather than demographics, you’ll spot pockets of demand others may overlook.

This approach demands deeper consumer insight, ideally paired with strong market signals—things like local infrastructure, rising disposable income, or early brand awareness. But if the fundamentals are in place, behavioral analysis can provide the clearest path to relevance.

Know your real costs before you commit

Estimating sales and market share is only half the equation. The other half is cost. Market potential isn’t just about how much you can sell—it’s how much you can keep.

Brands often underestimate the hidden costs of international expansion. Even seasoned leaders get caught off guard. Beyond standard operating expenses, a new market adds a layer of complexity you won’t face at home. Costs to plan for include:

  • Shipping and logistics: Freight rates are volatile, and capacity constraints can limit exports. It’s often cheaper to ship to major exporters than the reverse.
  • Legal and compliance: From registering your business to ensuring proper labeling, contracts, and insurance, local legal frameworks can introduce unexpected hurdles.
  • Foreign taxes: Different jurisdictions mean different tax laws. Your headquarters’ domicile and market entry model will shape what you owe.
  • Translation: Everything from packaging to manuals, contracts to marketing materials, may need professional localization.
  • HR and staffing: Even lean entries require boots on the ground—local staff to manage partners, oversee setup, or represent the brand.
  • Travel: Visits to partners, warehouses, or new hires will add up quickly.

Each of these costs can eat into margins and delay profitability. A true market potential assessment must account for them.

Map your competitive terrain

Rarely will you find a market with no competition. To make a realistic assessment of your opportunity, you need to understand who’s already there and how strong they are.

Start by identifying competitors who serve your ideal customer—even if their product isn’t identical. Then dig deeper:

  • Product scope: What’s in their range? How easily can they pivot?
  • Positioning: What messages are they using? Through which channels?
  • Cost base: Are they operating lean or with scale advantages you’ll struggle to match?
  • Market share and fragmentation: How crowded is the space? Is it ripe for consolidation or dominated by a few big players?
  • Structural weaknesses: Do they rely heavily on licensing or outsourcing? Could that be a vulnerability you exploit?

Competitor analysis helps pressure-test your assumptions and sharpen your go-to-market approach. It also reveals whether your edge lies in pricing, innovation, branding—or whether more groundwork is needed before launch.

Turn insights into action with a smarter market entry strategy

Expanding into a new market is never simple, especially without prior experience. But with the right mix of data, local knowledge, and consumer insight, brands can make more confident, informed decisions.

At Kadence, we help businesses go beyond guesswork. Our approach blends primary and secondary research with on-the-ground expertise in key regions, delivering a well-rounded view of your market potential and the smartest path to enter.

The key steps we guide clients through:

  • Understand demographic and economic drivers that define your total addressable market.
  • Explore behavioral and cultural dynamics that influence market demand and product relevance.
  • Estimate TAM, SAM, and SOM based on real-world activity and available demand.
  • Run consumer research to validate interest, preferences, and purchase intent.
  • Analyze competitors to understand potential share and barriers to entry.
  • Assess true costs and risks to calculate profit potential—not just topline revenue.

Don’t rely on assumptions. Let data and insight shape your strategy.
Explore our market entry services, read our expert guide to market entry, or get in touch with our team to discuss your project.

Pricing is a critical component of the marketing mix. Think about what drives shoppers to purchase a product or service. Is it brand value, product quality, level of customer service provided, design, or price? 

According to research, 60 percent of online shoppers globally consider pricing as the first criterion affecting their buying decision. In tough economic times, this percentage can rise by as much as 20 percent. 

Price is an important part of the marketing mix. When all things are equal, the price of a product or service is often a significant differentiator. Since the 1950s, the focus on the 4 Ps —product, price, place, and promotion —has been at the core of marketing. As the marketing mix has evolved beyond the 4Ps to include packaging, positioning, and people, pricing remains an important differentiator as it is transparent and easily comparable. It has been established that a one percent improvement in pricing raises profits by six percent. 

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With e-commerce, price analytics takes on another meaning. Price analytics for e-commerce helps brands track their competitors’ pricing changes and analyze how their own prices perform daily. This is why e-Commerce brands use competitive price analysis software to execute their pricing strategy.

Today, online shoppers have various tools, like Honey, that scour the internet to find the best prices. Many studies show that as much as 90 percent of online shoppers spend substantial time finding the best deals. 

What are the most used pricing models?

The cost-plus price model. 

When using the cost-plus model, companies determine the unit product costs for each product and then set a target profit margin. The profit margin is added on top of the cost of the products, often as a percentage. These costs are different for retail and e-commerce brands. While e-commerce businesses do not incur brick-and-mortar costs, such as store rent and utilities, they often include other costs, such as domain registration, website hosting, rent (if there is office space), online platform fees if that applies, software, bank processing fees, shipping and fulfillment costs, marketing, returns, and refunds, among others. 

Knowing the exact unit costs is critical, and so is arriving at a reasonable profit margin that makes the sale profitable while also considering what the customer is willing to pay. Pricing too low will undervalue the product or service, and pricing it too high will make it less competitive. 

For instance, luxury brands like Rolex can afford a massive profit margin because they know their target audience cares more about the brand image than the price. However, the same approach doesn’t work for fast fashion brands because the target audience is looking for affordable clothing and accessories; therefore, the product’s price needs to be competitive. 

When using the cost-plus pricing strategy, brands must thoroughly research their competitors’ pricing. 

Market-based pricing.

With many tools available to consumers, primarily online, they can easily compare prices of competing goods and services at a click of a button. Therefore, brands need to clearly understand how their competitors price their products and consider the market value and demand for them. However, brands entering a pricing war can risk losing out if they mark their products and services too low.

Using market-oriented and competitive pricing, brands can utilize the data to increase prices while maintaining competitiveness. 

By keeping an eye on the market and using competitor pricing software, eCommerce brands often raise prices just below the competitors’ so they stay competitive and increase profit margins. 

Dynamic pricing. 

Dynamic pricing, also known as surge pricing, is a time-based pricing model. It is a flexible approach to pricing based on market and customer demand. When using dynamic pricing, the prices of goods and services fluctuate based on their demand. For instance, if there is a big concert in town and lots of tourists are expected to attend, the prices of Uber rides, hotels, and airlines for that city will surge upwards. 

Hotels and airlines utilize online algorithms to price hotel rooms and airline tickets based on market demand to maximize profits and maintain a competitive edge. 

Bundle pricing.

Bundle pricing is a simple pricing strategy where brands sell a range of products together at a lower price than individual products or services. 

For instance, a cookware brand may sell its pot and pans in a bundle for less, or an electronics brand may sell a camera, with accessories, at a lower price.

Bundling products of a similar type allows retailers to increase the average order value. Many consumers find their purchase to be more valuable as they are likely to need other products or accessories that go with their purchase. It’s a good deal for all parties involved. 

Freemium pricing.

Freemium pricing is offered to acquire new customers. It offers your product or service for free for some time so that potential new customers can try your product for a limited time. Profit margins for freemium pricing are calculated based on converting free trial users or sign-ups.  

Freemium pricing is valuable because it gives you access to a new customer’s email, phone, or address so you can use marketing to nurture the customer over time so they purchase from you in the future.

For prospects who sign up for a free trial, they get to experience the product, lowering perceived risk and removing “buyer’s remorse”.

Freemium pricing is often seen with free trials of online software, where prospective users sign-up for a free trial use period. 

High-low pricing strategy.

Brands utilizing a high-low pricing strategy initially price their product at a high price but lower it when it loses its novelty value or relevance. 

An excellent example is Lululemon studio, a workout mirror launched as Mirror and later rebranded as Lululemon Studio. It recently dropped its price by 50 percent as more similar products entered the market. To learn more about the story behind Lululemon Studio, download our report here: 

Skimming pricing model.

Brands use the skimming pricing model when they initially offer a higher price for their product and gradually lower it as it loses market demand and becomes less popular. This pricing model differs from the high-low model because this strategy progressively reduces the price over a period of time.

Penetration pricing.

Brands often use the penetration pricing model when entering a new market or introducing a new product line with lower-than-market prices. These brands set their prices lower than the competing brands to lure customers. 

Price discrimination. 

Many eCommerce brands employ the price discrimination model, selling the same item at different prices to different buyers. This is a tailored approach based on the customers, not the product. 

Price discrimination can be used in the following ways:

  1. Consumers are in the driving seat; for instance, they might be offered free shipping or a lower price if they purchase a certain number of items or shop for a minimum amount. 
  2. Consumers bid for products, so they pay more than they may be willing to pay otherwise due to auctions on platforms like eBay. 
  3. Products are priced based on customer segments. This is done by utilizing customer order history and data to generate prices for specific customer segments. 

Psychological pricing.

Psychological pricing utilizes human psychology to boost sales. When brands price items at 3.99 instead of 3.00 or 99.99 instead of 100.00, they use consumer psychology to increase sales.

This has intrigued researchers for years: How can rational consumers perceive a price ending in nine to be significantly lower than a price less than one percent higher?  

Research has shown consumers do not respond to minor price changes; however, recent research suggests that the last digit of a price can have a massive impact on a firm’s revenue. This is because we process data from left to right and perceive an item priced at 2.99, closer to 2.00 than 3.00, according to numerical cognition. 

Geographical Pricing.

In this pricing model, brands set prices based on the geographical location or market. 

How to price a product or service for international markets

Pricing can become even more complex when brands enter new international markets and various market forces and price structures come into play. 

So what determines a successful export pricing strategy? It includes assessing your company’s foreign market objectives, costs, demand and competition, transportation, taxes and duties, sales commissions, insurance, and financing. 

How do you adjust prices in markets where the currency exchange rates are much lower? In 1986, The Economist, a British weekly newspaper, invented the Big Mac Index, which measures the purchasing power parity between nations using the price of McDonald’s Big Mac as a benchmark to determine whether currencies are at their “proper” level. 

The Big Mac Index is based on the purchasing-power-parity theory, which suggests that exchange rates over time should move in the direction of equality across national borders in the price charged for an identical basket of goods, in this case, the Big Mac. 

The Big Mac Index was created as a lighthearted tool to measure the differences in consumer purchasing power between nations.

The idea was to make the exchange-rate theory easier to understand. But it has now become a global standard for brands entering new markets and academic studies.  

According to PPP theory, a change in the exchange rate between countries should be reflected in the price of a basket of goods.

The Big Mac Index is based on the premise that a basket of goods in one country can rarely be exactly duplicated in another country. For example, an Indonesian basket of groceries and a basket in England likely contain very different products. On the other hand, the Big Mac provides a fair comparison as apart from a few local ingredients, it’s the same product. 

The Big Mac Index isn’t the only method brands use to price their products and services in international markets. The GDP-adjusted index has challenged the Big Mac Index, suggesting the average burger prices should be cheaper in a country like India versus the U.S., based on lower labor costs. 

While the PPP theory addresses where exchange rates are headed in the future, it doesn’t factor in the current exchange rates. 

Many economists believe the relationship between prices and GDP per person is a better guide to assess the current fair value of a currency. 

Despite not being a perfect tool, the Big Mac Index is widely used by brands entering new markets. There are also similar PPP models such as the Starbucks Index and the Apple iPhone index.

Pricing products during times of high inflation.

Inflation is back; for many brands, this means sustainably adjusting their pricing. This is a frequently discussed topic in boardrooms globally as organizations work toward strategies to cope with an inflationary market.

Strong demand in a post-pandemic world, supply chain disruptions due to extended lockdowns in China, Russian supplier sanctions, labor shortages, and rising fuel prices have resulted in cost volatility worldwide. Brands need to adjust their pricing to offset fluctuations and inflation without risking future revenue growth. 

Inflation is the rate of price increases that impacts the cost of living in a country over a given period. 

When the money supply grows too big compared to the size of an economy, the unit value of the currency reduces; in other words, its purchasing power falls, and prices go up. 

With inflation and a recession on the horizon, consumers are tightening their purse strings. High prices of fuel to food are impacting consumer spending. For brands, it often signals a need to get more creative, and eCommerce sellers are in a more favorable position to weather the economic downturn using competitive pricing software and data-rich touchpoints to inform better decision-making.

How to create a sustainable pricing strategy and stay competitive. 

Fix your current pricing strategy.

Focus on the easy wins and communicate your positioning to the consumers, like reducing less profitable SKUs and adjusting service pricing based on market trends, like shipping costs that have gone up over the past two years. 

Build a strategic pricing plan.

Build a structured pricing strategy based on a deep understanding of products and customers for improved retention and volume growth. 

Communicate effectively.

Communicate effectively internally to sales teams and externally to the consumers and public. Deliver customer-centric thinking, clearly communicate attributes and price points, and emphasize product uses and value. 

Provide transparency on price increases.

If it is necessary to increase the cost of your product based on an increase in logistics costs such as fuel and shipping, breaking out that cost separate from the product cost can help consumers separate any necessary price increases and why they are necessary.

Understand new consumer behaviors and revisit brand positioning.

Brands need to deeply understand the dramatic shifts in consumer behavior over the last few years to manage high inflation. The pricing strategy should consider changes in post-pandemic behaviors and preferences. 

Best pricing strategies for high inflation rates

There are several pricing strategies to increase the price of your products ad services during an inflationary economy. Companies often use a combination of pricing strategies to combat high inflation. 

Cost-plus pricing model

During a period of high inflation, it helps when companies allow the product price to increase in line with the cost of the product. However, this pricing model can make a brand less competitive when used alone. 

Competitive pricing model

During inflation, your competitors also make price adjustments, so it is essential to utilize the competitive pricing model to stay ahead. 

The key-value item pricing model

During times of high inflation, brands can lure customers into their physical or online stores with discounted prices for best-selling products. Once in the door, they profit from their other purchases, so dividing products into key-value items and profit-margin items is best. 

Dynamic Pricing model

Dynamic pricing is an excellent strategy for companies selling multiple products during high inflation. This type of pricing uses competitive pricing software, AI, and algorithms to automate the price adjustment process. 

How can brands maintain quality without impacting price, even though their costs have increased?

Shrinkflation

A brand’s response to rising costs of goods and inflation depends on the product or service. There are many products for which consumers are more sensitive to changes in price rather than quantity. This is where downsizing or shrinkflation comes into play. 

Shrinkflation is the practice of reducing the product size in an attempt to maintain its sticker price. This is an excellent strategy, especially in the food and beverage industry, to boost profit margins or maintain profits during inflation. This is not a new practice and is not limited to inflationary times. However, when costs are rising, brands utilize it to their advantage as it allows them to maintain quality while also reducing prices. 

For instance, Simply Lemonade (and other juice brands) in the U.S. have gone from 64oz to 59oz to 52oz over the years while the price has remained the same or increased.

Earlier this year, the size of a Cadbury Dairy Milk chocolate bar was reduced by 10 percent and is available at the same price. The parent company, Mondolez, uses this tactic to combat the rising costs of producing chocolate bars to provide consumers with the same taste and quality without increasing prices. 

Skimpflation

Yet another practice brands use to combat inflationary environments is skimpflation. As the name suggests, skimpflation refers to skimping on service or quality to cut costs. For instance, airlines may stop serving meals, or hotels may reduce the number of times they offer housekeeping services. Airport lounges or hotels may skimp on the hot meals or free breakfasts and offer pre-packaged cereal and bars instead. Brands may also choose to swap out more expensive ingredients with cheaper substitutes. However, there is always the risk of losing consumers if they find the difference noticeable. 

Brands globally are facing enormous challenges due to socio-political issues and supply-chain problems. They must become creative to offset rising materials, gas, and labor costs to maintain profitability. The use of sound pricing strategies, retaining positioning, and communicating the brand’s position with internal and external stakeholders are critical measures in product pricing. 

How market research helps brands determine the optimal pricing. 

Market research has developed several approaches to price optimization that are widely used to evaluate optimal pricing for different products and innovations. They include direct methods, such as estimation of willingness to pay, indirect methods, such as Gabor-Granger and Van Westendorp techniques, and product/ price mix methodologies, such as several discrete choice methods. 

Gabor-Granger Vs. Van Westendorp pricing techniques

The Gabor-Granger method is used to measure the elasticity of demand. It determines how much a potential customer is willing to pay for a product or service. For instance, a brand may show a camera to its customers and ask them how much they are willing to pay for it. But this may be too simplistic for certain cases because when consumers think of pricing, there is a range. Also, not every customer who is offered the camera at the price point determined via this method will be willing to purchase it at that price. 

The Van Westendorp

The Van Westendorp is one of the most commonly used pricing techniques that help customers understand such price ranges. It may ask multiple questions, like at what price is it s low that they would doubt product quality, at what price they would consider the camera to be a bargain, at what price is it too expensive, and so forth. This p[rovides more insights into the price range and a better understanding of the consumer’s mindset. 

Both methods have their place depending on the situation. When a brand has little or no idea about the price range from the customer’s standpoint, it is better to use the Van Westendorp pricing method. Once the range is known, the  Gabor-Granger pricing technique can be used to measure demand elasticity to discover price points at which a brand can maximize revenue.

Purchase intent testing

Consumers may want a product or service, but this doesn’t necessarily mean they are willing to open their wallets and purchase the product. 

Purchase intent testing is a type of concept testing approach related to pricing, which helps determine if people will purchase your product or service at your desired price.

Many brands test the product without the price first to estimate consumer interest and later add the price to determine purchase intent. 

For instance, the pioneering Electric Vehicle brand Tesla conducted purchase intent testing for a car model before it even designed it.

It is paramount to get the product pricing right. Pricing products is an art and skill that makes brands calculate how much human behavior impacts how people perceive price and value. A pricing strategy is used to determine and establish the best price for a product or service to maximize profitability and shareholder value while assessing consumer demand and perception.

Kadence International helps brands worldwide understand the importance and impact of price on demand. If you would like to increase demand or profit by developing a deeper understanding of how price impacts growth, please contact our team for more information.

2022 may be in the rearview mirror, but we wanted to look back at our most visited posts and articles for the year. Researchers are naturally curious people, so here are the pages you sort out the most in the past year.

The benefits of market segmentation

When you know, you grow! Segmentations can guide everything from marketing to product development to identifying new market opportunities. In this article, we outline the key benefits of market segmentation.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/the-benefits-of-market-segmentation/

What is market entry strategy?

Entering a new market can be a complex process. Having a robust strategy maximizes your chance of success. In this article, we explore what makes a sound market entry strategy and the differences between entering a new domestic market or an international one.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/what-is-market-entry-strategy/

What are the four market entry strategies?

When entering a new market there are many routes you can take. This article explores four of the main type of market entry strategies and the pros and cons of each.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/en-us/what-are-the-four-market-entry-strategies/

Biggest risks and benefits to market entry

Launching your product or brand into a new market can be littered with many potential pitfalls, but often the benefits outweigh any risk. In this article, we take a deep look at both the risks and benefits of entering a fresh new market, so you are armed with the information to help you succeed.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/biggest-risks-and-barriers-to-market-entry/

What is market size, and why is it important?

In this article, we not explore what market size is and why it is important but also look at the best ways to calculate market size and is there such a thing as too small when it comes to your brand or product’s serviceable obtainable market.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/what-is-market-size/

5 major challenges of market segmentation and how to mitigate them

Market segmentation can be riddled with challenges. In this article, we explore some of the main obstacles to market segmentation and equip you with the knowledge and tools to segment your market correctly.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/en-us/5-major-challenges-of-market-segmentation-and-how-to-mitigate-them/

What is quantitative research?

What is quantitative research? How is it different from qual? Why is it important? and what are the best collection methods? All these questions are answered in one of our more popular articles for 2022.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/en-us/what-is-quantitative-research/

What is top-down market sizing?

Top-down market sizing is one of the two main methods researchers can use to calculate the serviceable obtainable market. This article looks at what top-down market sizing involves, how you can use it in your business, and the strengths and weaknesses of this approach.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE:  https://kadence.com/what-is-top-down-market-sizing/

The top 5 challenges in international market research

Researching a new market in another country can be a challenge to get right. This article explores the top five challenges in international marketing research and our top tips for overcoming these.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE:  https://kadence.com/the-top-five-challenges-in-international-marketing-research/

What is concept testing in new product development?

Ideation is often seen as the easiest part of product development. But how do you know that your great idea is actually what the market wants? This article looks at concept testing and the different approaches to testing new products. 

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE: https://kadence.com/what-is-concept-testing-in-new-product-development/

Now that 2022 is a wrap, we can’t wait to share more insight and information to help you with your research goals. Sign up below to receive our monthly newsletter Connecting the Dots, to get the latest news from Kadence and our team.

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As 2022 ended, we saw the rise of the cautious consumer in an inflationary economy fraught with rising costs of living and uncertainty. Today’s consumers have adopted new behaviors worldwide, wanting hybrid experiences and engaging with sustainable and purpose-driven brands. 

Here we have compiled our best trend reports and guides that look at 2022 and beyond in one convenient place.

Speed Bumps on the road to change in 2022.

Automotive trends for 2022

automotive-trends-report

To help brands navigate the shifts, we developed an exhaustive report exploring five key trends influencing automotive purchases for 2022 and beyond, focusing on the post-pandemic recovery, the E.V. revolution, the impact of A.I. and connected vehicles, and generational perception changes in major global markets. 

DOWNLOAD the TREND report here

Digital Payments and E-Wallet Usage and Behavior in Indonesia.

This regional report reveals the perceptions and usage of common e-wallet providers across different Indonesian markets and regions, focusing on shifting consumer behavior and how brands respond to these shifts. 

READ the full report here 

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Food and Beverage trends to watch in 2022 and beyond.

food-and-beverage-trends

It can be challenging for food and beverage executives to stay abreast of these consumer trends in an industry influenced by ever-changing consumer behaviors and changing tastes.

This report has compiled four notable changes in consumer wants and needs globally.

DOWNLOAD the full report here.

The Asian Consumer: 4 Key Trends for the Next Normal.

While many emerging regional trends have been in the pipe long before the pandemic, almost all indicate an active and involved Asian consumer looking to the future for smart alternatives to aging market norms.

This report is designed for companies looking to grow their presence in Asia. It is based on the analysis of local experts across Kadence International’s eight Asian offices: China, India, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Japan.

 DOWNLOAD the trend report here

The Definitive Guide to Gen-Z.

genz-consumer-behavior-report

Now making up one-third of the world’s population, Generation Z or Zoomers are quickly entering the consuming class.

Being true digital natives, Generation Z presents a unique set of challenges for brands looking for loyalty.

This 50+ page guide delves deeper into the wants, needs, and demands this generation is looking for from brands and how leading brands in ten countries respond to them. 

 DOWNLOAD the complete guide here

About Face: Emerging global trends in the beauty and cosmetics industries.

beauty-trends-report

The beauty, personal care, and cosmetics industry is thriving.

Thanks to an increased “on camera” world, people of all ages want to look their best.

This report looks at the industry from around the world, highlighting trends from Asia, Europe, and the Americas.

 DOWNLOAD the complete trend report here

Feeling Good: Powering the Next Gen of Fitness and MedTech.

fitness-medtech-industry-trends-report

As people prioritize their health and wellness worldwide, technological advancements in these industries are helping consumers monitor their health much more quickly.

This report looks at the health, wellness, fitness, and MedTech industries from around the globe, showcasing some of the world’s leading brands in the space.

 DOWNLOAD the complete trend report here

The Future of Online Shopping.

online-shopping-consumer-trends-report

Digitization has reset the online shopping game, and the pandemic has accelerated technology adoption by both brands and consumers.

Today, the most successful retailers have adopted technology at warp speeds. With breakthrough technology complementing every step of the retail process, where are we headed?

This report examines online shopping, where it’s at, and what the future holds.

DOWNLOAD the complete trend report here

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If you want a crocheted sweater or a bespoke engraved cutting board but need help finding an artisan, you might turn to platforms like Etsy that connect buyers with artisans on their eCommerce platforms. 

The last decade has brought a massive consumer shift in mindset. Consumers today care about where their products come from, who produced them, and under what conditions they were made. They care about the impact of everything they purchase —on the workers and the environment. 

Many trends are responsible for the maturation of the artisan economy around the globe, such as the rise of e-commerce, a growing interest in the environment and sustainability, the demand for rare, unique, personalized items, and a desire to support the local economy and small businesses. 

Consumers care about sustainability, ethical consumption, and small-batch production and are looking for unique pieces with a story to add to their lives. 

There has been a massive demand for handmade products globally. Handmade or artisanal products are high quality and unique, making them desirable for people looking for one-of-a-kind products with a strong narrative. 

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The need for personalization and the recent movements supporting local businesses and artisans have also helped promote bespoke brands or handmade products.

Unlike mass-produced goods, handmade products have certain deviations, and no two products will be the same, adding to the uniqueness consumers seek in the products they purchase.

When consumers purchase a handmade product, they are also buying into the story and history behind it and building a deep connection with the artisan making the product while supporting craftsmanship and local businesses. Consumers are avoiding off-the-shelf pieces, and artisan goods are becoming a staple. 

According to a U.K. Crafts Council report, 73 percent of U.K. adults had bought a craft in 2019 —which amounts to almost 25 million handmade items. About 32 percent of today’s buyers are under 35 years of age, making the younger populations of Millennials and Gen Z the biggest craft shoppers today. There are 11,620 craft businesses in the U.K., with over 43,000 employees. 

Consumers often save crafts and techniques that face extinction and erasure by purchasing artisanal goods. And now, many big brands want to add a piece of the traditional method to their products. For instance, independent watchmaker Daizoh Makihara decided to use the traditional Japanese glass-cutting technique called Edo-kiriko for the dial of his first watch. He found eight companies that specialized in the method, but only one agreed to do it. This was Kyosuke Hayashi, the president of Mitsuwa Glass Kogei. 

In English, Edo-kiriko means “cut glass from Edo”: Edo is an old name for Tokyo, and kiriko is the name of the cutting technique. This partnership gave birth to the first edo-kiriko watch in the world in 2018. 

The weavers and artisans work hard to keep the rich Indian arts and crafts heritage alive. According to IBEF, the total handicraft exports from India reached $3.5 billion in FY20. With over 200 million artisans, India’s handicraft sector is the second largest employer after agriculture. 

While fast fashion is pressuring the environment with its heavy carbon emissions, water waste, and poor working conditions and treatment of workers, consumers are hungry for a better model that offers trendy essentials and accessories without harmful environmental and socio-economic impact.

eCommerce has enabled many skilled artisans and hobbyists to profit from their passion and talent. 

Consumer obsession and interest in handmade products have also seeped into reality T.V., and craft reality T.V. shows have become quite the rage. 

British reality show Handmade: Britain’s Best Woodworker is a furniture-making competition similar to a cooking contest that has captured the hearts of audiences worldwide. Every major network and various streaming platforms are in on the trend. Other similar shows include BBC’s All that Glitters, Netflix’s Blown Away, NBC’s Making It, HBO Max’s Craftopia, ITV’s Bling, and Channel 4’s The Great Pottery Throwdown.  

The pandemic spurred the demand for handmade goods. Online platforms have fuelled much of this growth: in December 2018, Etsy, a U.S.-based online platform for artisans to buy and sell handmade goods, reported that there were 220,000 active sellers in the U.K. with a further 9,000 makers on Folksy, a U.K.-based online platform to purchase handcrafted gifts and original artwork, sold directly by the artists and designers who have created them.

Top handmade product categories on Etsy 

According to a report, the top handmade product category on Etsy in 2020 was home and living, with a 25 percent seller share, followed by art and collectibles (21 percent), jewelry (15 percent), clothing (11 percent), accessories (8 percent), bath and beauty (6 percent), toys and games (4 percent), bags and purses (3 percent), weddings (2 percent), and books, movies and music (2 percent).

Etsy has three main sections in its online marketplace: Handmade, Vintage, and Supplies. Handmade represents 85 percent of sellers, Vintage represents 6 percent, and Supplies represent 12 percent of sellers.

Etsy, founded in 2005, now has more than 1.4 million sellers and 19.8 million buyers. Etsy focuses on handmade and vintage items and features over 5.4 million craft supply items.

Handmade gifts provide a personal touch and make the gift unique and personalized. This unique factor has driven platforms and brands that offer handmade products as popular choices during the Holidays. 

There has been an 80 percent jump in searches on the creator-driven platform Etsy for Holiday gifts in the past three months compared to last year. In 2020, CNBC reported that Etsy saw a 156 percent increase in search traffic during three months compared to the year prior for custom gifts.

Case Study: How Etsy carved a niche for the handmade sector using an e-commerce platform

The Overview

Based in Brooklyn, New York, Etsy is the largest online marketplace globally, connecting buyers to sellers of handmade and vintage goods and craft supplies. Etsy is built on a smart revenue model: it charges sellers a listing fee and a commission and upsells advertising services to push a seller’s products to boost reach. The company expanded through acquisitions, including Blackbird Tech for USD 32.5 million, Reverb in 2019 for USD 275 million, and the fashion resell marketplace Depop in 2021 for USD 1.63 billion.

The company has competitors like Amazon Handmade, Big Cartel, Folksy, iCraft, and eBay. 

The Approach

Etsy took the value creation approach and narrowed its product offering to handmade or artisan-made products. While it has created a community of buyers and sellers, it moved its focus to buyers as the core market when eBay vet Josh Silverman took over Etsy’s reins. A year after hitting an all-time low in 2017, Etsy’s stock rebounded and grew; today, it stands at USD 119.74 a share. Defining and focusing on its key audience helped the brand grow. 

Once the brand identified its core audience, the buyers, it hiked the fees it charged its sellers from 5 percent to 6.5 percent. Even though 20,000 of its sellers went on strike, the company did not budge, and the results showed in the most recent third-quarter earnings in 2022, reporting a revenue bump of 11\.7 percent over the same quarter of 2021, to USD 594.5 million. 

Etsy is also attracting more buyers to its platform via the mobile app. In 2021 alone, the brand reported a 45 percent increase in app downloads bringing 5.7 million new shoppers to download the app. The brand also leverages targeted, compelling email offers based on items favorited or shops browsed. The brand funded discounts and sent them to 18 million shoppers in 2021, and also provided discount technology allowing shoppers to discount goods from their shops. The brand also encourages buyers to follow more shops through sweepstakes and contests. 

The brand also offers multiple additional services to facilitate communication with sellers, on-platform transactions, and access to ratings and reviews. 

Etsy provides its sellers a collective to voice their concerns with congress members and local and federal governments. And lastly, the brand continuously invests in retail technologies like machine learning via acquisitions. The brand has designed convenient distribution channels, upgraded buying and selling software and merchant services, and improved its social media presence to boost brand awareness. This month, Etsy rolled out a new image search feature to allow shoppers to find an object faster than with a keyword search. Users on iOS can now tap the camera icon and search for images by uploading a picture. Etsy then scours its platform to find products visually similar to the ones the user is searching for. Etsy plans to expand image search to Android app users soon.

The Results

Etsy’s impact on the artisan economy is robust. The most recent quarterly earnings report disclosed revenues had risen to USD 198 million, a 31.64 percent increase year over year. Etsy currently holds a market cap of just under USD 5.5 billion – quite a climb from its USD 1.1 billion market cap back in March 2017. The brand attracted 6.3 million shoppers in the third quarter of 2022, ending with 88.3 million active buyers on the Etsy marketplace.

In most developing nations, the handicraft industry is fragmented, lacking legal Intellectual Property laws surrounding its products, and artisans not getting fair compensation for their craft. 

In most countries, handcrafts are highly valued because of the high skill level and talent required and are sold in luxury stores at premium prices. However, although India has a rich culture and many categories of handicrafts, they still need to be given their deserved value and place. Ramesh Menon founded Save the Loom, a nonprofit community group to revive, restore, and restructure the handloom industry in India.

Many other such organizations are helping artisans overcome the many challenges they face. However, online platforms and eCommerce websites like Etsy, Folksy, Amazon Handmade, and others have helped create a viable worldwide path forward for the handmade industry. 

While not every product fits the artisan-made model, the lessons from this growing trend apply to all categories. Consumers want to feel connected to the story behind the product, how a product is made, and the feel-good impact on the environment and people after purchase.

For more insights into the shifting trends in online shopping and consumer behavior around the globe, download our complete report, “The Future of Online Shopping.” 

Product managers and designers frequently get requests to design new products and add new features to existing products, making it difficult to determine which ideas to invest in for the best outcome. 

This is where concept testing comes into play. 

Concept testing ideas and even features for existing products before moving into implementation and design is the best way to approach a customer-centric product development process.

What is concept testing?

Concept testing is a market research method to get user feedback before bringing a new product or feature to the market. It often allows users to provide their input on potential solutions. When end users are involved in the initial product development and design phase, it takes the guesswork out of what consumers want and allows them to shape the idea before it is launched in the marketplace.

It involves putting the idea in front of real consumers and asking them to assess the product’s value in multiple areas. 

Whether the goal is to bring a new concept or product into the market, update an existing product, or change pricing or messaging, input from real customers translates into informed decision-making. This allows brands to save time, money, and resources while preventing financial losses due to failed products and also helps protect the brand and customer relationships.

In today’s highly competitive business environment, brands need to employ a customer-centric approach, and all decision-making should start and end with the consumers’ interests and preferences in mind.

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The value of concept testing

According to studies, more than 25 percent of total revenue and profits come from launching new products, which is true across industries and product categories. 

With concept testing, brands can validate an idea or vision before investing valuable resources into building something that may not resonate with its users. It also helps brands identify potential challenges in executing the idea. Concept testing precedes usability testing, which must be conducted once the refined design prototype or wireframe becomes available. Product testing is crucial and happens after the final product is ready for launch to get first-hand information on how consumers will respond to the final product. 

Launching a product or service is a massive undertaking, even for larger organizations. Research shows only 55 percent of all product launches occur on schedule, and 45 percent are delayed by at least one month. 

Therefore, brands must ensure the product resonates with the end user before launching it. Concept testing helps confirm that your assumptions around a solution or idea are correct. 

Concept testing comes after the ideation phase and is a way of testing ideas that have been developed to an extent but need further refinement and provides a more detailed understanding of the needs of your potential customers. 

Concept testing may also be used to design a complete User Experience (UX). According to studies, every USD 1 invested in User Experience (UX) design results in a USD 100 return. Providing consumers with a seamless UX is crucial for brands to stay competitive in today’s volatile market conditions. 

Concept testing should be considered an unobstructed learning process where brands open the concept up to end users to discover their perceptions —without any predefined parameters.

Benefits of concept testing

Concept testing minimizes risk and is easy to set up.

Concept testing allows brands to test and understand how real consumers will feel about the product before investing time, money, effort, and resources into it, which minimizes the risk of product failure. 

Concept testing can help you optimize the concept before the launch.

Concept testing can provide more information regarding the potential roadblocks to implementation, consumer perceptions, price perceptions, competition, and how the new concept fits into the brand. 

It also allows brands to test multiple solutions or concepts to arrive at the best one and helps provide some information on potential market demand.

Research helps forge strong brands.

Concept testing is a great way to show consumers and investors that your brand believes in constant innovation, has a customer-centric approach, and is transparent. This helps boost loyalty and enhance brand value and equity.

Concept testing prevents costly mistakes.

Even some of the biggest brands, like Google and Coca-Cola, are not immune to making mistakes due to false assumptions about what consumers want (or do not want).

In 2012, Google first announced Google Glass —an eyeglasses-shaped head-mounted display with smartphone functionality. It was based on the premise that “technology should work for you —to be there when you need it and get out of your way when you don’t.” The brand wrongly assumed what consumers wanted from technology. In 2015, the company discontinued the product due to low market demand. 

Coca-Cola is another great example illustrating the importance of concept testing. When Coca-Cola’s flagship cola drink started losing market share to Pepsi, it changed its drink formula for the first time in 99 years. It introduced New Coke, which failed miserably. The brand reintroduced its older recipe and rebranded it as Coca-Cola Classic.

Similarly, in 1990, US-based beer Coors introduced Coors Rocky Mountain Sparkling Water to tap into the fast-growing bottled water segment but fell flat as the Coors name confused consumers. 

Concept testing boosts confidence in product launch and team buy-in.

If you have a concept but need to assure the senior team that it will work, concept testing is the best way because you can show evidence that real consumers will use it.  

The importance of well-designed questions

Over 80 percent of all new products fail, and concept testing allows brands to determine if a new product or feature is a good market fit by asking real users the right questions. 

Therefore, you must ask the right questions that will give you valuable insights into the needs and requirements of real users. Determining the metrics, you will measure in your concept testing is crucial. 

You will set your goals depending on the concept and methodology you choose, and your survey questions should aim to reach these goals. For instance, if you are testing a new type of single-serve, wireless blender, the goal is to determine if your potential customers need a product that makes smoothies on the go. The questions will revolve around understanding the consumer better and if they need a solution like this, along with any other features they might want to see in this blender, for instance, a sippy cup cover or straw to go with it. 

This is where research design comes into play, and the research questions depend upon the business need. For instance, if a brand is taking its concept to a new market segment, they need to conduct a needs analysis using qualitative and quantitative research methods. The questions will be designed to find out if the concept will work in the new market. 

Let’s say the brand is testing a new concept before its initial introduction. In that case, they need to conduct Concept Fulfillment utilizing qualitative research to determine if there is a need for the new product concept.

Some common goals brands set for concept testing are as follows.

  • Get a metric on how likely existing customers and new market segments will be to purchase the product. 
  • How the product will do based on current competition in the market, and what features will make it stand out. 
  • Learning which features would get existing customers to purchase from the brand.

These goals provide brands with invaluable, high-quality data and insights into consumer behaviors, attitudes, and preferences. 

Concept testing methodologies

Brands test concepts in many ways and all the methods involve getting feedback from potential users on the idea’s validity. It can be done via a face-to-face or remote interview. Depending on the concept and the study’s goals, it can be done asynchronously or unmoderated. 

There are four standard methods for concept testing. They are based on the number of ideas you want to evaluate.

Comparative testing

This method is used when you have more than one potential concept to test. Brands use the comparative method to see how multiple concepts measure against each other.

When using this method in a survey, respondents are asked to rate each concept against a set of criteria. Questions must be specific features that can also be ranked to determine which features are most preferred by respondents.

Monadic testing

Unlike comparative testing, monadic testing shows research participants one product or idea. 

This concept testing takes your entire target audience and breaks it into subsets, showing only one concept to each. These user-friendly tests provide a deep dive into the consumer’s mind. They also reduce bias and provide accurate results.

Sequential monadic testing

A sequential monadic survey shows your entire target audience or a subset of the audience, either all of your concepts or some of them—with at least two concepts being shown randomly.

Proto-monadic testing

Proto-monadic testing combines sequential monadic and comparison testing. It asks participants to analyze concepts and compare features to help them choose the best concept.

Steps in Concept testing survey design

When you’re ready to test your concepts, there are four steps to follow:

Choose the most suitable methodology for your business needs.

Select the best methodology depending on the scope, time, and number of features or concepts being tested.

Set a goal.

Work backward, set a goal based on the objective and the information you want to gather from your customers, and design survey questions accordingly.

Choose survey components appropriately.

Make sure you use the most appropriate components for your surveys. From Likert scales to images and demographic questions, brands should carefully make these choices to design a survey with questions that will produce valuable data.

Identify the most promising concept.

Review the collected data to get a clear picture of the concept favored by the target market. Dive deeper into the most desirable features to determine which concept has the highest potential for market success. 

If the data reveals something unexpected or is something you did not imagine before, feel free to change course. This is why you conducted concept testing in the first place —to ensure the concept works in the marketplace. The ultimate goal of this study is to do what’s profitable for the brand. 

Real-world examples of Concept testing

It’s one thing to determine if people want a product or service and yet another to say they are willing to open their wallets and buy the product. 

This is where purchase intent testing comes into play. This helps determine if people will purchase your product or service at your desired price.

Many brands test the product without the price first to gauge consumer interest and later add price to determine purchase intent. 

US-based Electric Vehicle brand Tesla conducted purchase intent testing for a car model before it even designed it.

In 2016, the pioneering EV automobile brand tested purchase intent for the Tesla Model 3 before it was even designed. Interested buyers were asked to put down USD 1,000 for the Tesla Model 3, and about 400,000 people ended up putting down money to book the car. The participants also provided feedback on the car, and Tesla made modifications and features based on real customer input. This also gave Tesla the confidence and the capital needed to develop the car. 

Another undefeated brand due to its concept testing research is Denmark-based Lego, a plastic building-block toy company. For years, Lego was predominantly bought for boys, so the brand conducted extensive market research to discover that boys and girls played with Legos differently. Boys preferred stand-alone structures, while girls enjoyed recreating backgrounds, scenes, and environments. 

In 2012, based on these findings, the brand launched the Lego Friends product range with cafes, salons, supermarkets, and so forth to tap into the new consumer segment successfully. 

Concept testing is a great way to evaluate and identify winning product concepts. It promotes innovative thinking and developing products, features, and pricing that resonates with end users. It allows brands to stay ahead of the competition by developing and designing concepts based on market demand and creating products only after testing the idea and getting invaluable feedback from real consumers. 

Kadence International helps leading brands make game-changing decisions. If you are looking for a research partner to help better understand your customers, we would love to help. Fill out our Request for a Proposal here.

You must start market research with a plan. The research design is the strategy that answers your research questions. It sets the tone for how you gather and analyze data. 

What is Research Design?

Research design is the framework or conceptual structure within which research is carried out. It includes the research elements, methodologies, and processes the researcher uses to conduct a study. It allows researchers to set themselves up for success.

There are three main types of designs for research:

  • Data collection
  • Measurement
  • Analysis

The research design used is based on the organization’s problem, and researchers select the tools and techniques during the design stage of the study.

A market research study aims to uncover the unknown or confirm assumptions and provide accurate and unbiased insights so they can be used for decision-making.

Here are the main characteristics of sound research design:

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1. Objectivity

The research findings should be objective so more than one person agrees with the results. 

2. Reliability

If a similar research study is carried out repeatedly in a similar setting, it should yield similar results. The research results depend on how reliable the research design is. The way research questions are framed is crucial to the process.

3. Validity

Any measuring device is valid if it only measures what is expected to be measured.

4. Generalization

The information collected from a given sample should be representative and applied to a larger group from which the sample is drawn. 

Research Design Elements

Research design creates an impact when it is unbiased and increases trust in the accuracy of the data collected. The essential elements of research design are:

  1. An objective purpose statement
  2. List of techniques to be implemented for collecting and analyzing data
  3. The methods applied for analyzing data
  4. The type of research methodology utilized 
  5. Possible objections to research
  6. Settings for the research study
  7. Timeline
  8. Measurement of analysis

Research Design Types

The design of a research analysis can be broadly classified into quantitative and qualitative.

Qualitative research

Based on psychology, sociology, and anthropology principles, qualitative research is a market research method that obtains information and data using open-ended and conversational communication. It reveals what people think and the why behind their beliefs and behaviors. 

Frequently used qualitative research methods:

  • One-to-one Interviews
  • Focus Groups
  • Ethnographic Research
  • Case Studies
  • Record-Keeping

Quantitative research

It is for cases where statistical conclusions to collect actionable insights are essential. Numbers provide a better perspective for making critical business decisions. Quantitative research methods are necessary for the growth of any organization. Insights drawn from complex numerical data and analysis prove to be highly effective when making decisions about the business’s future.

There are many instances where brands need quantifiable data to make decisions. Quantitative research is a methodical exploration of phenomena by gathering quantifiable data from existing and potential customers using sampling methods, like sending out online surveys, online polls, and questionnaires.

You can further break down the types of research design into the following categories:

Descriptive research

When conducting this type of research, a researcher describes a situation or case. The researcher collects, analyzes, and presents collected data to provide insights into the why and how of the study.

Experimental research

This type of research is conducted using two sets of variables. The first set serves as a constant, which you use to measure the differences between the second set. It establishes a relationship between the cause and effect of a situation.

For instance, researchers may want to observe the influence of an independent variable, such as a price, on a dependent variable, such as brand loyalty. 

  • Pre-experimental research design
  • True experimental research design
  • Quasi-experimental research design

Correlational research

Unlike experimental research, correlational research is non-experimental and looks for variables that interact with each other. When one variable changes, you can infer how the other variable will change. There are three types of correlational research:

  • Positive correlation,
  • Negative correlation,
  • No correlation

Diagnostic Research

In this research, the researcher evaluates the underlying cause of a defined problem or subject. This type of design usually has three important parts:

  • The inception of issue
  • Diagnosis of issue
  • Solution for the issue

Explanatory research

This type of research investigates and explores something that has not been studied before or is yet to be explained well enough.

Explanatory research is responsible for finding the events’ what, why, and how by establishing cause-effect relationships.

There are four types of explanatory research: 

  • Literature research
  • In-depth interviews
  • Focus groups,
  • Case studies

Research studies should be designed with the end in mind. The research design must be planned and methodical like any other project to get the desired, accurate, and unbiased results. 

Kadence International helps leading brands make game-changing decisions. If you are looking for a research partner to help better understand your customers, we would love to help. Simply fill out our Request for a Proposal here.

The situation surrounding EVs is changing rapidly.
This time, our local team member Pom from Kadence Thailand interviewed three EV owners in Thailand to reveal the local consumer thoughts. Let’s catch up by watching the recordings below!

Watch the session in Thai

Watch the session in Japanese

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Back in the day, Qualitative research was all about understanding the person behind the responses by watching his actions, behavior, mood, tonality, and other giveaways while talking about specific products and services. We still do it (some of it) but with less dependency on human competence and more reliance on the tools believed to be fast, precise, and less intruding.

In Qual research, most of these tools are used for analyzing data, app testing, and emotion decoding through Artificial Intelligence (A.I.), which can address multiple research studies like UI/UX testing, NPD, product/concept test, etc. While these tools help capture the required details without bias, they still have some limitations.

Typical Qual research is done to understand:

  • Human behavior and interaction with various categories (brands/ services/products)
  • Trends and impact 
  • Product and concept evaluation
  • Segmentation (Pen portraits)
  • U&A 
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Researchers apply various approaches to meet the objectives depending on the overall scope of the research project. However, basic principles like the need to be an open-ended, free-flowing discussion to gain in-depth knowledge and reasons for a particular behavior or response and generate actionable insights stay the same. 

These days, technology is helping make research much more accessible and cost-effective for brands, but it is yet to be seen if it serves the intended purpose.

Before the pandemic, online interactions were not a preferred research methodology for most brands as they offered a different experience than face-to-face interaction and were considered an ‘optional methodology.’ 

However, the pandemic changed that as there was no option other than doing online research and gradually posting using an online methodology for various research activities. Brands found it to be both cost and time effective. With this began the race for offering/ innovating several tech/ tools to enable Qual research to deliver insights irrespective of situational limitations. There are hundreds of ‘tech research agencies/boutiques’ currently offering various tech solutions like UI/UX, Neuro, A.I.-enabled analysis (from transcriptions/ recording), and emotion decoding tools, and a considerable amount of R&D is already happening in this area.

These tools are certainly helpful in today’s era when not just research but the overall ecosystem is evolving, and tech has become the backbone of any new venture. There are so many start-ups today, and India has emerged as one of the growing ecosystems for start-ups; currently ranked third globally with over 77,000 start-ups, this number is growing yearly. 

Most start-ups are tech-based and have apps for better user experience, easy access to data, and increasing adoption rate of new services and products.

Most of these start-ups utilize research to get feedback on UI/UX and check what can be improved to provide a better experience and increased engagement. A few years back, researchers typically carried out these research activities at a CLT set-up with a couple of cameras. Still, now this can be done on mobile phones using another platform (app) for decoding user interaction with the app to be evaluated.

Tech has helped explore new avenues and reshape old methodologies like G.D.s, Ethnos, and diary placements. Now, online methods are used widely, and it is still to be seen whether this phenomenon will stay.

While online methods have certain limitations, like missing the human connection —one of the basics of any Qual research, there are certain aspects wherein technology is not as helpful or hasn’t yet been developed to cater to those needs in terms of tech evolution / A.I.

But there are certain spheres wherein technology has worked brilliantly for multiple reasons.

India is extremely tech-friendly.

Most of the brains in the tech world are from India, and we indeed take pride in saying that. People in India are curious and open to using new technology in every sphere of their life —be it a smartwatch, smart T.V., payment apps, food ordering apps, health trackers, cab booking apps, or high-end technology like smart homes or A.I. technology. With a growing number of start-ups, a young workforce, and evolving technology, end users prefer new tools and products for better, unbiased, and faster results. However, cost efficiency is still a grey area that will also be addressed as time goes by.

Learn more about how to develop a market entry strategy for India here.

It helps understand the customer.

Marketers want to know their customers better to increase sales and saliency through precise and tailored communications. 

Brands track data to get a complete understanding of their potential customer and offer relevant products/services. This helps close the “say-do” gap, and layering this with specific Qual interactions helps in a deeper understanding of this behavior.

It is cost-effective.

Though using technology for online interactions, mobile or digital diaries, and online communities is more economical than face-to-face interactions, other dimensions like UI/UX tools and analysis tools are still expensive, and only a few agencies offer integrated solutions. This area will undoubtedly see many innovative solutions that address issues cost-effectively in the coming years.  

It removes bias and is more credible and faster.

Using apps/ tools/ tech for capturing and analyzing data adds credibility and saves time. Respondents can upload pictures/ videos in real-time and share their stories with a broader group or in a one-to-one setting. Less human intervention removes bias, and data output can be visualized in multiple ways per the client’s requirement.   

Though there is nothing wrong with moving ahead with time, there are pros and cons of using technology for Qual research. It remains to see what else tech can add to understand human beings better, as Qual research is not just about evaluation but also about understanding the subject more deeply. Face-to-face interactions help form a temporary bond and comfort level wherein respondents share much information about themselves, their family, occupation, finances, and buying behavior, which is a shortfall when it comes to online interactions or using any tool/tech.    

Tech can be an enabler but not a tool to understand human emotions through superficial levels. We can decode a few things like facial emotions and System I/II responses, but a deep and detailed understanding of a particular human being would always require human intervention. It is yet to be seen how much more we can do with ever-evolving technology and how it can impact the market research ecosystem. But one thing is certain: traditional Qual is here to stay as no amount of technology can completely replace human-to-human interaction and understanding, at least not in the near future.

Digitization has reset the online shopping game board, and the pandemic has accelerated technology adoption by both brands and consumers. Today, the most successful retailers have adopted technology at warp speeds. With breakthrough technology complementing every step of the retail process, where are we headed? 

Download our complete report, “The Future of Online Shopping,” to find out.

Here’s a summary of the most significant trends shaping the future of online shopping worldwide. 

Trend 1: The Future is ‘Phygital’ — Reinventing the retail experience. 

At the intersection of physical and digital is a connected retail environment where consumers are placed at the center. In this consumer-centric, channel-agnostic, connected environment, consumers can buy online and pick up from stores.

They can try clothes and accessories virtually, in-store or online, browse large touchscreens for product information, dispense products from vending machines, and even scan an aisle in a grocery store to view an overlay of information about products. 

The future of retail is omnichannel, an approach providing customers with a unified shopping experience. This approach connects experiences across multiple touchpoints, including brick-and-mortar, web, and mobile apps. 
Discover how Singapore’s NTUC grocery chain increased retention and repeat business using an omnichannel approach.

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Online Financing Options – “Buy-Now-Pay-Later.”

Retail brands are removing barriers to make the shopping experience as frictionless as possible, including easy financing terms. 

Apps Making Online Shopping Seamless.

Mobile apps offer retailers an engaged audience they can easily connect with to sweeten their shopping experience, building loyalty and driving in-store sales. 

Download the complete report to discover how Shopee, the leading eCommerce online shopping platform in the Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Vietnam, and Sephora, a multi-brand beauty retail store, leading the way in making the shopping experience seamless. 

Trend 2: DTC brands are booming worldwide.

Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) has disrupted the eCommerce industry. As more brands manufacture, design, market, sell and ship their products directly to customers, they are more agile than traditional brick-and-mortar retailers. 

Download the complete report to learn how Nike tapped into the DTC space along with other legacy brands.

Social media advertising significantly contributes to DTC sales; however, rising ad prices damper many of these brands. 

Download our report to discover how DTC brands target users in a cookieless world. 

Also, learn how a home-grown Vietnamese DTC start-up raised USD 2.3 million in the middle of V.C. winter in the country. 

Shein, another DTC brand based in China, adopted and perfected its business model and developed a massive, vibrant, international community around Shein with a customer-centric approach. 

Download our report for the complete case study and discover how Shein has tapped into a massive international market of online fast fashion shoppers in the U.S., Europe, the Middle East, and other big consumer markets. 

Trend 3: Influencers are the new sales associates.

In a crowded digital space, where media consumption is highly democratized, brands seek attention by creating entertaining content that moves the audience. 

Consumers are now in charge — and rather than listening to brands, they listen to peer-to-peer advice on products and services. Consumers are increasingly filtering content, ads, and posts that reek of brand promotions in favor of posts and promotions from people they trust, a.k.a. Influencers. 

So who are the top Instagram influencers right now? 

Download our report to find out who owns the top spot for earnings per paid promotion, and learn how Kim Kardashian sold 150,000 bottles of perfume within minutes on a live stream in China. 

Trend 4: Personalizing the online shopping experience. 

Customers have spoken. They don’t just want personalization; they expect it from brands. 

Research shows that when brands provide personalized experiences, 80 percent of customers are more likely to purchase. When brands personalize a customer’s experience, they anticipate what they want and deliver it to them, increasing engagement, improving conversions, boosting customer loyalty, enhancing the experience, and gaining a competitive advantage. 

Download our report to find out how U.S.-based grocery chain Kroger is delighting shoppers with next-level personalization strategies in our brand case study. 

The future belongs to retail brands that master the omnichannel experience.

Consumers are tightening their purse strings due to inflation and the fear of an impending recession.

High prices of fuel and food are impacting consumer spending. It’s time for brands to get more creative, and eCommerce sellers are in a favorable position to weather the economic downturn using competitive pricing software and data-rich touchpoints. 

Download our free report to find out how top retail brands are globally navigating the new online retail playing field during these uncertain times.