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Do you do traditional customer research? Do you find that the loudest person in the room tends to skew the results? What if you had a research network you could tap into at any point in time to get feedback?
Well, you can, and communities that are built online can help you do it.
I spoke with Dan Neely, CEO of Networked Insights and an advocate of customer-driven market research. I got a chance to ask him how customer-driven research works and how the best companies are taking themselves out of the center of research efforts and putting their best customers there. He also gives us some sage advice for this year.
Link to Original Audio Source
About Dan
Dan Neely serves as Networked Insights’ Chief Executive Officer. Dan brings to Networked Insights more than 10 years of management, operational and entrepreneurial experience with technology, manufacturing and services companies. He is an expert in customer intelligence and has hands on experience with the challenges companies face in gathering relevant, real-time insights about their customers.
Prior to starting Networked Insights, Dan co-founded Market Performance Partners, which guided companies in market ownership through customer intelligence. Previously, he served as Director of Strategy for Scient. Scient was the fastest growing services company in history, had a successful IPO, grew to more than 2,000 colleagues and launched more than 40 ebusinesses. Before Scient, Dan worked at Deloitte and was part of a team that launched esurance, the first online insurance company.
Dan holds a BBA from the University of Georgia.
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Comments
Paul, I like much of the concept of customer-driven research. However, I think the argument is missing a key element … the non-customer.
I’ve written a post called “What’s Your Market IQ?”
http://www.achievemarketleadership.com/?p=200
that discusses a different way to get at much of the information you and Dan discuss. The primary difference is to do a lot of what Dan is talking about, but do it with full-market panels which include customers and non-customers. In addition, these full-market panels enable more valuable results related to competitive comparisons, market trends and performance trends.
Posted by: Glenn Gow | 01.16.08
Glenn,
Great point. I have always considered customers to be those you have or want to have a relationship with. For example a key influencer of your customers may never purchase from you but you want a relationship with them. When you form a relationship they are a customer although not by the traditional definition. What we are seeing is that members of our customer insight networks are inviting their own trusted advisors , "non-customers", market watchers, influencers, etc to the conversation, which is creating a rich source of content and interaction data from relevant constituents.
Finally, the link you sent misses a key component for customer driven intelligence, The social behavior profile. By using the data that is wrapped in the social behavior and relationships, (sharing, posting, inviting, influencing, et.) and combining it with the content source, results in the richest set of customer insights and arguably a highly accurate longitudinal Market IQ.
Posted by: Dan Neely | 01.17.08
Not sure if this is directly related to this but we have done general surveys of lots of customers and we regularly talk to a much smaller core group of key customers. The sort of core group spends more time and effort so we get more in depth information.
The core group is people we have developed more of a long-term relationship with and are willing to spend time giving feedback.
Posted by: Neil Anuskiewicz | 01.18.08