Research Methodologies

December 19, 2020

8 Tips for Conducting Quality Quantitative Research

Ensure high-quality outputs and well-executed qual research by utilizing some of these strategic pointers.

8 Tips for Conducting Quality Quantitative Research
Dipesh Soneji

by Dipesh Soneji

Director of Quant at Ruby Cha Cha

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Quantitative research can be a complex and obstacle-ridden path to navigate. When dealing with large-scale numbers, minute decisions in the preparation stages can have a significant impact on the end results. If you put in low-quality inputs and efforts, you will get subpar results back.

 

Here are the 8 tips for conducting quality quantitative research

1. There is a time and place to keep things simple

  • Simple questions are often a pragmatic way to get the answer you are looking for.
  • Complex modeling and analysis have their place and can be extremely useful, but try to take a step back and think: Can this question be answered more efficiently?
  • Avoid ‘marketing-speak’ and keep things conversational, use terms and phrases that the person on the other end is going to understand.

 

2. Aim to get both emotional and rational responses from the respondents

  • Consumers make both emotional and rational decisions, so it is important to measure both.
  • Emotion and logic are intertwined, and it would be foolhardy to base your strategies on the assumption that they are mutually exclusive.
  • This could be as simple as showing some stimulus and asking an open-ended question: ‘how this idea made you feel?’ or by providing a list of emotions for the respondent to choose from.
  • You may not be able to cover the entire spectrum of emotions, but often sentiment is just as valuable.

 

3. Don’t lead the conversation toward the answers you want to hear

  • It is natural to want your research to confirm theories you already have; however, it is important to keep your personal opinions distant from the research methodology – we want to capture the genuine opinions which exist out there!
  • Keeping personal opinions distant leads to more reliable results and can greatly affect the success of any decisions made based on the research.

 

4. Try to test in black and white, avoid the grey areas

  • When testing multiple items next to each other, it is advisable to not get too bogged down in the details.
  • It is often the case that marketers will want to test concepts or statements with only very slight changes in wording that will have no real significant impact on audience response. For example, if you’d like to test a handful of positioning statements, keep the format consistent but ideas, concepts, or themes vastly different.

Related

A Renaissance of Qualitative Research

 

5. Decide on the signposts for success

  • It is important that you and your team all agree on what results are going to define success.
  • Before you give the go-ahead to launch fieldwork, take a moment to sit down in front of your questionnaire and think about what the results will look like. What result for each question would be considered a success? Should it meet or exceed benchmark or control scores? If so, what are the benchmarks or control scores?

 

6. Try to get both the why and the what

  • While any researcher will recommend keeping text-based open-ended questions (verbatim) to a minimum, for key questions you should be asking respondents why they answered the way they did.
  • If you do so, try to be creative in the way you ask the question (like we see in qual), simply asking “why?” doesn’t always spur inspiring or articulate responses. For example, you could ask “can you give me an example of when that was a problem for you?”

 

7. Be aware of the opportunity for replication

  • Be sure to construct your research methodology so that you can easily replicate in future for easy comparison across each point in time.
  • Do your best to future proof the questions and create clear and concise documents that detail the research, so someone else in your company can come in at any point and pick up where you left off.
  • Try to consider ways you can easily replicate the results so that time isn’t wasted re-charting the figures as each new wave of research comes in.

 

8. Understand the importance of timing

  • Think ahead to the next 12 months, and try and identify the best time to conduct some quantitative research.
  • Try to consider external factors like seasonal or holiday periods, and key dates internally like EOFY, campaign launches, or reporting deadlines. Doing this will ensure you aren’t scrambling last minute, which often results in poorly executed research.

 

As you may have noticed, several of the above tips for conducting quality quantitative research focus on the small things you can do at the front end of the research to ensure quality and consistent results at the back end.

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data qualityquantitative research

Disclaimer

The views, opinions, data, and methodologies expressed above are those of the contributor(s) and do not necessarily reflect or represent the official policies, positions, or beliefs of Greenbook.

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