When clients contact us to manage market research recruiting firms,
we can be tasked with recruiting for focus groups, in-depth interviews,
surveys, or longitudinal studies. Since each market study is unique,
the researcher may decide on a singular qualitative methodology, or a
combination. By and far, the most popular qualitative format remains the
focus group.
Focus groups are effective at capturing the participants’ emotions,
opinions, experiences, expressions, views, beliefs, motivations and
responses, which is why they are an invaluable tool for market research.
Insite research
can be used at various stages of a product or service idea. They are as
effective in the earliest stages of development as they are in the
final stages. Start-up companies looking for product-market fit will
learn a lot by testing their ideas/concepts/or early-stage products with
a group of potential customers in a focus group than they would by
bypassing this stage altogether. Even legacy companies with reputations
of cranking out well-received products have likely first tested their
ideas/concepts in focus groups to make sure they’re on the right track.
There are lots of qualitative methodologies, but focus groups remain
popular choices among researchers because they promote spontaneous
interaction among participants. The depth and range of data generated
through the social interactions of focus groups are deeper than what can
be discovered through in-depth interviews alone. Focus groups aren’t
just about putting a group of people together though! A lot of
consideration must be given to who should be invited to participate and
how to assemble each group so they are balanced.
Any researcher who has assembled focus groups, or any moderator who has
led focus groups will tell you that screening for the right
participants is crucial for successful outcomes! The optimal size of a
focus group is between 6-10 participants. Focus groups aren’t
necessarily a representative sample, but that doesn’t mean you aren’t
sorting along demographic and psychographic lines. Most researchers will
include multiple focus groups within a study. A singular focus group
won’t provide enough information to draw meaningful conclusions. To get
the most out of focus groups, you’ll want to structure your groups
similarly so you can compare data across groups. For instance, you may
want two sessions with females only, two sessions with males only, and
two mixed sessions. The budget will determine how many focus groups you
can afford, and the mix of the group will be even more important if
fewer focus groups are to be conducted.
When screening potential participants, the recruiter is looking for
candidates who communicate clearly, are knowledgeable or familiar with
the topic of the study, and are available. Screening guides are great
tools for helping weed out qualified and unqualified candidates.
Focus groups are popular, but like all qualitative methodologies, they
have their limitations. The possibility of bias, domineering
participants, and “group think” can easily invalidate focus group data.
The other pitfall is when researchers try to extrapolate data from focus
groups to the population at large. Experienced market research recruiting firms
know how to design studies to maximize the benefits of qualitative and
quantitative research. It may cost more to hire a market research
agency, but you’ll often end up with more reliable results.
Whether you’re conducting research “in house” or outsourcing to a firm, we’re here to help with all aspects of recruiting.
Looking to Fill a Study? Contact us Today!
Original Reference: https://bityl.co/EXu9