Products

SurveyMonkey is built to handle every use case and need. Explore our product to learn how SurveyMonkey can work for you.

Get data-driven insights from a global leader in online surveys.

Explore core features and advanced tools in one powerful platform.

Build and customise online forms to collect info and payments.

Integrate with 100+ apps and plug-ins to get more done.

Purpose-built solutions for all of your market research needs.

Create better surveys and spot insights quickly with built-in AI.

Templates

Measure customer satisfaction and loyalty for your business.

Learn what makes customers happy and turn them into advocates.

Get actionable insights to improve the user experience.

Collect contact information from prospects, invitees, and more.

Easily collect and track RSVPs for your next event.

Find out what attendees want so that you can improve your next event.

Uncover insights to boost engagement and drive better results.

Get feedback from your attendees so you can run better meetings.

Use peer feedback to help improve employee performance.

Create better courses and improve teaching methods.

Learn how students rate the course material and its presentation.

Find out what your customers think about your new product ideas.

Resources

Best practices for using surveys and survey data

Our blog about surveys, tips for business, and more.

Tutorials and how to guides for using SurveyMonkey.

How top brands drive growth with SurveyMonkey.

Contact SalesLog in
Contact SalesLog in

Market research

Market research is a data-first strategy that produces insight into consumers, sentiments and wider markets. Learn how to conduct effective market research step by step.

Woman with arms crossed surrounded by graphs and charts

Market research is a data-first strategy that produces insight into consumers, sentiments and wider markets. Learn how to conduct effective market research step by step.

Market research is the process of collecting information and insights on a company's market, its competitors and its customers. Organisations typically conduct market research to inform product development and go-to-market strategy and ultimately drive business growth.

It helps answer questions such as:

  • How large is the market opportunity for my product/service? 
  • How does my brand stack up against the competition? 
  • Which demographics are most likely to buy my product or service? 
  • Which advertising campaign will resonate best with my target market?

This information provides a clear pathway towards satisfying customer demands, enhancing profits and launching products.

Market research provides the necessary data-backed evidence to help your business make decisions with confidence. Instead of building a company based on gut decisions alone, market research gives you direct insight into what your audience wants to see.

Here’s why market research is so important:

  1. It helps you understand your competitors. You can investigate your competitors’ success metrics, strategy gaps and trends with market research. Using this information, your company can craft high-impact campaigns to stand out from your competitors, improve interactions and win potential customers.
  2. Create better products and services. Market research enables a business to collect data on its customer base, including insights into what they value about its products and services. Using data collected from customer satisfaction surveys, you can iterate upon feedback to further enhance your products, services and customer satisfaction.
  3. Understand customer preferences and trends. This helps businesses create more effective marketing campaigns and innovate in the right direction.
  4. Refine your marketing strategies. Designing a marketing strategy and product takes time and money. Market research can help you validate your ideas, confirming that you can proceed or ringing the alarm bell.
  5. It builds credibility. Whether you’re trying to create persuasive marketing collateral, become a thought leader in your industry or impress your C-Suite, market research arms you with the facts to back up your arguments and claims.
Man reviewing charts on a laptop

There are several different types of market research. We’ll walk you through the most common ones, the pros and cons and how they’re used.

We’ll discuss the differences between:

  • Primary research vs. secondary research
  • Quantitative research vs. qualitative research
  • DIY market research vs. full-service market research

Fundamentally, market research can be broken down into two major categories: primary research and secondary research.

Primary researchSecondary research
DefinitionPrimary market research occurs when you collect original data that answers a specific research question.Secondary market research occurs when you analyse existing data that others have published to answer your question.
Use casePrimary research is useful when a business is unlikely to find public data about the research question it has. This is especially the case when a business is investigating its own products and services.Businesses find secondary research useful when they aim to conduct high-level research on a topic that has already undergone investigation. Wider research questions typically already have published answers.
ExampleA company wants to know how visually appealing their new product is. They send out a marketing survey to capture this information.A business wants to ascertain the typical audience demographic that engages with content in the personal finance industry.
They look for data on the topic that has already been published by personal finance institutions.
Advantages• Directly answers your research question.
• You can control the methodology and approach.
• You can ask follow-up questions to expand upon your investigation.
• Instantly access data.
• Often free to access.
• Can provide instant context before you conduct your own research.
Disadvantages• Time-consuming to conduct.
• Limited access to samples may lead to bias.
• Human error may have an impact on your results.
• Data may be out of date.
• Your business doesn’t control the research, meaning there could be bias or error.
• You might not have direct access to the data.

Quantitative research and qualitative research are two sides of the same coin. The first might uncover a figure, such as the total percentage of satisfied employees in your organisation, whereas the latter may uncover the ‘why’ behind that figure.

Quantitative researchQualitative research
DefinitionQuantitative research is market research that uses numerical data, often relying on statistical analysis to provide numerical results.Qualitative research is market research that focuses on understanding the motivations, feelings, ideas and opinions behind information.
Use caseQuantitative research is helpful for identifying patterns or numerical evidence.Qualitative research is useful when you want to understand the reasons behind a statistic, expanding research to comments, ideas and anecdotes.
ExampleA business wants to understand its employee loyalty rates. It uses an eNPS survey to calculate the total percentage of loyal employees in the company.A business wants to understand their low eNPS score. The company uses surveys to ask employees questions about their levels of satisfaction, problems in the workplace and suggestions to enhance the employee experience
Advantages• Provides objective data for analysis and comparison.
• Businesses can explore data sets on a granular level.
• Provides a clear picture of the relationship between statistics.
• Uncovers the rich information behind the numerical data.
• Provides context to quantitative data.
• Can help understand the cause of some statistics.
Disadvantages• Some things are hard to quantify.
• Numbers can be misrepresented.
• Misleading questions can lead to misleading results.
• It is subjective, making it hard to analyse.
• Differing interpretations of sentiment can make qualitative data hard to work with.
• Storing and conducting analysis on qualitative data is challenging.

Researchers can conduct quantitative and qualitative research individually or in combination to gain broader and deeper insights.

Another important factor that sets forms of research apart is who conducts it. 

DIY market researchFull-service market research
DefinitionDIY market research is where a business conducts research by itself, making use of its own resources to conduct research.Full-service market research is where a business contracts an external professional research group to conduct the research and present it to them.
Use caseDIY market research is useful for businesses that have a limited budget.Full-service market research is useful when businesses need a high-quality standard of research, often involving the analysis of complex data.
ExampleA business leverages its email list to send out a survey via email to gather insight into its customers. A business conducts a detailed phone survey across the United Kingdom, gathering tens of thousands of call records and using them to test responses to a new product design.
Advantages• Low-cost.
• Complete control over the questions you send out.
• Get results faster.
• High quality standard.
• Offers a high degree of accuracy, unbiased data collection and comprehensive detail. 
• Access to advanced research suites, tools and wide populations to survey.
Disadvantages• Can be time-consuming.
• Limited access to sources.
• Lack of internal expertise can have an impact on the results.
• Can be expensive.
• You have less insight into the actual research process.
• Can take months to complete a project.

Market research requires foresight and some advanced planning. Mapping the research will equip you to successfully launch an initiative, gather insights and convert data into actionable steps for your organisation.

Here are the steps you should follow when conducting market research:

Starting a market research project from scratch can feel intimidating. To focus your research, you should establish the business question and research goals you’re looking to achieve. 

The business question is a short summary of the problem you’re solving and the context of how it fits into your business. Business questions are high-level goals or challenges linked directly to business objectives that can help you make informed decisions. 

A business question might involve:

  • Knowledge gaps: Things you don’t know about your industry, competitors or buyer persona.
  • Business phenomena: Trends you’re seeing in the business (e.g. dips in sales or increases in churn) that need explaining.
  • Predictions: You might just be looking to be one step ahead of your competitors.

The research goal is an outline of the specific facts or metrics that you hope to learn with your research. In other words, your research goals are what helps you answer your business question and you can map research goals to that question. 

Writing strong, relevant research goals is important because they will translate to specific survey questions later on.

To outline how to set effective research objectives, here are some hypothetical business questions and research goals.

Business questionResearch goal
Consumer behaviour: We’re considering investing in a couple of video streaming services companies and we need to understand the existing landscape and perceptions so that we invest wisely.• Learn which tech brands and apps are most popular among millennials.
• Gather proof points around the quantity/satisfaction of apps used.
• Understand millennials’ usage of and attitudes towards streaming services.
Ad testing: We’re close to going to market with our new dog food and our designers have come up with several great designs for print ads. How do we choose which design to go with?• Compare consumer appeal and preference for each ad design.
• Identify which design consumers would be willing to pay more for.
• Assess any differences by consumer demographics.
Brand tracking: We’re an established brand in the sparkling water category, but a lot of new brands have launched in the last year. What does that mean for us?

• Measure brand awareness for all major brands in the category.
• Assess each brand’s perception and associations.
• Understand brand adoption for our brand and the new entrants.

Once you’ve established a business question and research goal, you should document them in a research brief

A well-written research brief will tell anyone who’s interested exactly what you’re studying (and what you will not be) to make sure everyone is on the same page. 

When you’re conducting market research, your ultimate goal is to understand the behaviours and perceptions of the target population you’re interested in. 

Identifying your target audience before conducting market research ensures that you gather relevant, accurate data, tailor your approach, optimise resources and develop effective strategies.

Here are some characteristics that you could use to define your target audience: 

  • Demographics: Location, age, gender, education, household income, race, marital status, parental status.
  • Employment and firmographics: Employment status, job function, job level, industry, company size.
  • Shopping habits: Shops purchased from recently, online shopping frequency, restaurants visited recently, likelihood to make a purchase in the next 12 months.
  • Behavioural attributes: Mobile device/app usage, pet ownership, exercise frequency, dietary restrictions, hobbies.

Knowing who you need to target with your market research and how you plan to do it will have implications in terms of how you resource your project. 

Try to answer the following questions before getting started: 

  • Who am I conducting market research on? 
  • How many people do I need to gather data from? 
  • Do I already have access to those people? 
  • Will I be able to get responses from the people I have access to fast enough? 
  • How will I send my chosen research method to these people? 

With market research, sometimes you will want to target a broad audience and at other times a narrower group of people.

Smiling man sitting on sofa looking at phone, next to chat bubbles

The method you use to reach the people you need to gather data from depends on who you want to contact. You have two options: get in touch with your existing contacts or target a specific group of people.

​When you get in touch with existing contacts, you'll be speaking to your employees, website visitors or social media audience. These are the people you already have access to. 

In most cases, you can contact them:

You'll need to get in touch with a specific group of people when you have a target market in mind that you may not have direct access to.

For example, let's suppose you have a product that’s specifically for small dogs. Pet owners are a subset of the adult population; dog owners are a subset of pet owners; and small-dog owners are a subset of all dog owners.

Venn diagram showing that small-dog owners are a subset of dog owners, who are a subset of pet owners, who are a subset of UK adults

There are two ways to target a narrow population: choosing from pre-profiled audiences or using screening questions.

With SurveyMonkey Audience, you can target pre-profiled audiences across 335 million people with advanced targeting options. You can select your audience based on:

  • Demographics: Age, gender, household income, etc.
  • Firmographics: Industry, job title, job level, etc.
  • Behavioural attributes: Devices used, apps downloaded, etc.
  • Shopping habits: primary grocery shoppers, shops purchased from, etc.

Check out the targeting options we have available for your next market research project. 

You can use your own screening questions when the available targeting options don’t give you the exact target audience you’re looking for.

You can use both methods together. For example, you could use targeting options to specify dog owners and then use a screening question to weed out large-dog owners. 

It’s likely that there will be one or two methods that align with your project goals, or you can focus on several research methods at once.

The main advantage of using market research surveys is that they are one of the fastest ways to gather data. Businesses can send out an email to their customers containing a link to complete the survey, thus rapidly reaching a large pool of responses.

However, businesses should be aware of the potential for survey bias when creating a survey. Make sure you follow best practice when writing survey questions to avoid leading your audience to certain answers.

Sending out a set of closed-ended questions helps enable statistical analysis of the responses. Adding open-ended questions allows surveys to cover all the bases you need when launching market research.

Get started with market research surveys on SurveyMonkey for fast, customisable and expertly crafted surveys. 

Focus groups bring together a small and carefully selected group of individuals who share similar characteristics.

Focus groups are best for gathering in-depth opinions, reviews, comments and ideas related to your business. You could dig deeper into customer motivations or identify important information to help you achieve your research goal.

However, focus groups are often not statistically representative and may not capture your target market’s diversity.

Market research interviews are one-to-one conversations with customers to gather in-depth qualitative information related to your research. They differ from focus groups in terms of your level of control over the specific points that the interview follows. As the interviewer, you can ask follow-up questions to deepen your understanding.

Interviews are best when you need to gather hyper-specific qualitative data. Especially if someone is unlikely to share their feelings in a group, an interview is a great research method to use.

Their main downside is that they can be incredibly time-consuming.

Using public data for market research is another effective way to rapidly gather data. 

Public data is a cost-effective and accessible source of data for your market research. When taken from government sources or notable companies, the data is normally well structured, free from bias and accurate. However, you don’t have any influence on its structure.

Another market research method that you can use is competitor analysis. You can gather detailed information about a competitor’s services, active marketing campaigns, current pricing models, brand image and target audience.

It allows you to gather insights into similar companies within your industry and could help you find ways to differentiate your own.

However, data can be very limited. Competitor analysis tools can be inaccurate and gathering the data is time-consuming

Woman working on tablet next to screenshot of charts and graphs within SurveyMonkey

After you've gathered the data, it's time to analyse it.

Before you start diving into your results, ensure that you’re working with a complete, clean dataset:

  • Wait for all the results to come in before you start your analysis. Be mindful of your audience's time zone. 
  • Remove responses that are low quality or spam.
  • Conduct one final check to ensure that your sample represents your target population. 

When you get your market research results, it’s likely that you’ll be looking at aggregated answers for the entire sample you collected. Looking at how individual segments of your population respond to your market research is one way to uncover insights that could be critical to your analysis.

Here are a few segments of your sample that you could look into: 

  • Demographic segments: Gender, age groups, etc.
  • Geographic segments: Countries, regions, states, etc.
  • Behavioural segments: Frequent category purchasers, discount buyers, etc.

Once you know which segments could be interesting to dive into, there are two ways to approach segmenting your results for deeper insights:

  • Filter your results: Filtering your data allows you to understand how a specific segment of a broader population responded to your research surveys.
  •  Make comparisons: The benefits of looking at individual segments within your results multiply when you compare them to other segments or to your data as a whole. 
Bar graph showing difference in sparkling water brand awareness by gender

Collecting data over time can be immensely useful to a business. There are a few things to consider when analysing data trends over time:

  • Understand statistical significance: It’s natural to see differences in results across waves in a tracker and draw immediate conclusions, but it’s critical to understand whether those differences are statistically significant before making strategic decisions.
  • Consistency: Keep the targeting criteria, balancing and other sample specifications the same each time.
  • Time-Splits: If you’re working with an always-on survey, you’ll need to make sure you split up your time periods consistently, i.e. months, quarters, years. 
Line chart showing brand awareness levels of certain brands of sparkling water

Finding a clear, logical story within your data is the single best way to make an impression and catch the attention of your stakeholders.

Here are seven things to bear in mind as you craft your data story:

By now, you’ll have become familiar with your research. But not everyone who you’ll present it to will be.

Storytelling frameworks can help you come up with an outline for your presentation. One framework that you can follow is SCQA: Situation, Complication, Question and Answer. 

  • Situation: Where the business is today, what the knowns are and any other relevant context. 
  • Complication: The business problem that needs solving – why you set out to do market research. 
  • Question: What specific questions need answering with your research and what is your approach to answering them? 
  • Answer: The main insights coming out of your market research that answer your business questions and how they point to action to solve your complication.
Pyramid showing the SCQA framework: Situation, Complication, Question and Answer.

When presenting your research, use business context to explain why the research was needed. If you're following the SCQA example, this is the 'complication' part of the story.

Demonstrate why your research matters, why stakeholders should care and how the findings can help the business.

Choose your most impactful statistic and use it to capture your audience's attention.

If the data that supports your story isn’t a captivating statistic, try reframing it. Instead of “10% of UK nationals would feel safe as a passenger in a self-driving car”, try “90% of UK nationals would not feel safe.”

The objective numbers will tell you what happened, but when you collect consumers' voices and opinions using market research, you can uncover the “why”. 

Step back and see whether your presentation answers both the “what” and “how”, as well as the “why”.

You’ve done a lot of digging into your data and while a lot of the findings may be interesting, they might not all be relevant to your story. Only include the results that contribute to or add colour to your story and recommendations. Everything else can be distributed in an appendix.

SurveyMonkey research suggests that 42% of people found data visualised with charts, graphs or infographics more enjoyable than data in a sentence or presented in a table. 

Here are the most common chart types and when to use them:

Choosing the appropriate chart type for your survey data analysis

At the end of the day, the goal of market research is to explain human perceptions and behaviours. The more you can bring real examples into your story, the more tangible the results will be to your audience. 

One way to do this is to pepper in quotes from your open-ended responses. You can also mix qualitative information (e.g. interviews, customer support cases, etc.) with your quantitative results. This strategy will bring your data to life and make your points that much more compelling.

The following two strategies work well when aiming to inspire stakeholders into action:

  1. Go on a research roadshow: Conduct a series of meetings with all major stakeholders to present your findings and recommendations.
  2. Create a follow-up plan: Hold your stakeholders accountable with follow-up meetings and detailed project plans. 

To win your stakeholders, you have to make your recommendations realistic and aligned with the overall business strategy. 

  • Focused: Start by referring back to your research brief. Ensure that your recommendations stem from the initial business question and are backed by your insights.
  • Specific: Ensure that your recommendations clearly outline specific actions to take. 
  • Attainable: Communicate that your plan is feasible by outlining what it would take to accomplish your recommendations, including budget or headcount.
  • Measurable: Link your recommendations to quantifiable business outcomes or forecast the business impact of implementing your recommendations.

Say goodbye to making guesses and move towards a fully data-backed system that gets your business where you want it to be.

SurveyMonkey offers extensive support and fully managed market research solutions. Whether you’re sending market research surveys or accessing SurveyMonkey Audience, our global survey panel, we have a solution for you. 

Deux employées marketing, l'une examinant un article sur la stratégie de marque et l'autre tenant des documents sur lesquels sont imprimés des graphiques

Brand marketing managers can use this toolkit to understand their target audience, grow their brand and prove ROI.

Un homme et une femme consultant un article sur leur ordinateur portable et prenant des notes sur des post-it

How to combine the power of Salesforce customer data with the feedback capabilities of SurveyMonkey to improve CX.

Homme souriant portant des lunettes et travaillant sur un ordinateur portable

Closed-ended questions get specific, concise and targeted responses that allow us to conduct statistical analysis. Here’s everything you need to know.

Femme lisant des informations sur son ordinateur portable

Create data-informed marketing strategies that align with your target audience. Learn how to leverage your market research with thorough data analysis.