Greenbook Research Industry Trends Report 2020
Greenbook Research Industry Trends Report 2020
Greenbook Research Industry Trends Report 2020
Fortune 500 companies trust Feedback Loop to bring the voice of the
consumer into critical market decisions.
feedbackloop.com hello@feedbackloop.com
CONTENTS
3 Foreword COMMENTARY
4 Executive Summary 17 Tracking Your Brand’s Health is at the Heart
of Your Success – Debbie Senior, Toluna
6 Methodology and Sample
21 Use of Traditional Methodologies: The Classics Endure…
36 A Day in the Life of a Researcher 35 Do not Lose the Plot: The Loudest Voice at the Table
– Rob Wengel, GutCheck
80 Business Outlook 55 3 Key Tech Priorities for 2021 – Scott Litman, Lucy
CONTACTS:
LEONARD F. MURPHY GREENBOOK
Chief Editor & Principal Consultant New York AMA Communication Services Inc.
(770) 985-4904 lmurphy@greenbook.org 234 5th Avenue
New York, NY 10001
LUKAS POSPICHAL
Managing Director www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
(212) 849-2753 lpospichal@greenbook.org
Go to www.greenbook.org/mr/grit to read the GRIT Report
online or to access all GRIT data and charts via an interactive
dashboard which you can use for your own analysis.
1
Uncover Insights Quickly and Easily
from Thousands of Verbatim Comments
$VFULEH·V&;,QVSHFWRUZLWK;6FRUH™LVDQLQQRYDWLYHWH[WDQDO\WLFVVROXWLRQZKLFK
DQDO\]HVWKRXVDQGVRIXQVWUXFWXUHGFRPPHQWVLQPLQXWHVJOHDQLQJLQVLJKWVIURPGDWD
TXLFNO\FRVWHIIHFWLYHO\DQGZLWKIHZHUUHVRXUFHV
7RSLFDQGVHQWLPHQWDQDO\VLVDUHSRZHUHGE\$VFULEH·VIRXUWKJHQHUDWLRQWH[WDQDO\WLFV
VROXWLRQXVLQJWKHPRVWDGYDQFHG1/3DQG$,WHFKQRORJLHVDYDLODEOH
;6FRUHPHDVXUHVFXVWRPHUVDWLVIDFWLRQGLUHFWO\IURPYHUEDWLPFRPPHQWVDQGLGHQWLILHV
WKHNH\VDWLVIDFWLRQGULYHUVLQWKH;6FRUH,QVLJKWV5HSRUW
;6FRUH0HDVXUH ;6FRUH,QVLJKWV5HSRUW
Welcome to the 28th edition of the GreenBook The result is a report that is more focused, more
Research Industry Trends Report, the Insights actionable, and more important than ever before.
Practice edition, using data collected in Q4 of 2020. Even compared to previous editions, this one
This is the first report that captures the is truly a “must read” for insights and analytics
totality of the changes impacting the insights and professionals. Regardless of your role or seniority
analytics industry and profession because of the level, the 2020 GRIT Insights Practice Report is
COVID-19 pandemic. For years, we have reported going to equip you with information you won’t find
on a fairly slow evolution, but that is decidedly anywhere else.
not the case in 2020. We used to be an industry And there is more: for a different kind of
approaching a tipping point of being redefined perspective, do not miss the popular GRIT Future
through technology. In 2020, we not only tipped, but List with profiles of 18 emerging leaders who are
did so with incredible speed. Reflecting this “new making an impact in our industry today.
normal”, our findings will help both buyers and GRIT is a community effort and our authors,
suppliers to navigate 2021 successfully and capitalize commentary providers, sample partners, advertisers,
on the potential opportunities inherent in times of and most especially research partners make
rapid disruption. it all possible. Special thanks go out to AYTM,
This report tackles the nuts and bolts of the Gen2 Advisors, Infotools, Insights Association,
insights industry, exploring a variety of topics, KnowledgeHound, Potentiate and Displayr. We
some new and some that our readers have already couldn’t do what we do without their generous Go to
come to depend on GRIT to cover. These include contributions of time, energy, and expertise. www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
adoption of emerging methods, use of traditional to access all GRIT data and charts
Note on naming conventions: Throughout this report we refer to previous GRIT editions using the publication year and whether it was
the first or second wave that year. For example, 19W1 refers to the first GRIT wave in 2019 (with data collection usually in Q1 or Q2),
while 17W2 refers to the second GRIT wave in 2017 (with data collection usually in Q3 or Q4).
3
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
by
hic
rap
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
og
Inf
2019 2020
digital methods now in the 87%
82%
lead vs. in-person.
72% 71% 71% 74% 74%
However, in-person is not 68% 69%
66%
out of the game despite 62%
market challenges so 2021 54%
will be a year of finding
new equilibrium between
these two models.
4
EMERGING METHOD ADOPTION
Buyer &
Supplier,
n = 785
64%
61%
57%
54%
47%
45%
Many emerging methods
41% 40% have now reached
39% widescale adoption and
37% 36% are “go to” tools in the
insights pro toolbox, led
by mobile-centric data
26% 26% collection and a variety
25% 25% of analytical solutions.
22%
20%
19%
18%
Mo T S M B M M C E B R P F A P C C B V
bil ext a ocia obil ig D obil icro ausa ye tr eha esea redi acia ppli assi row hatb iome irtua
e fi n l e a e - s l a v i r c t l an e d v d
e d so ots tri l
rst alyt med qua ta an eth urve ana ckin oral ch g ion aly ne ata urc c r E nv
su ics ia lita a no y l y g e co a m m a s uro i e sp iron
rve an ly
aly tive tics
gr
ap
s sis
no ific rke s
i sc me ng on me
ys hy m a ts ie nc a s se nts
ti c
s ics tion e
ur
em /V
mo en R
de t
ls
+13.9 +9.1
decreasing revenue and staffing.
However, Technology Providers
are booming, and to a lesser
degree Data & Analytics providers
too. However, everyone continues
- 32.6
– 13% to invest in technology as a means
- 43.6 Data & Other
of creating new speed, cost,
and business impact.
Full & Field Strategic Analytics Technology Provider
Services Consultancy Provider Provider Type
5
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Methodology
and Sample
GRIT respondents are recruited via GDPR-compliant, Some regional differences across countries exist
opt-in email lists and a variety of social media as well; we call out relevant differences in our
channels by GreenBook and partner organizations. analysis when that appears to be a significant factor
These lists are comprised of both research suppliers in results. Overall, we see the composition of the
and buyers. Respondents from the United States sample remaining relatively stable compared to
comprise most of the survey participants. previous waves.
The analysis is based on 1,071 completed For a detailed breakdown of the sample
interviews after rigorous data cleaning. For some composition, including regional representation,
questions, base sizes may be lower due to skip demographics, and firmographics, please see the
patterns, rotations, routing, and other factors. To Methodology and Sample section in the Appendix.
shorten the survey without sacrificing depth of Because of our unique sampling approach,
exploration of topics, we created multiple “block we use a rigorous cleaning process once data
rotation” schemes so many questions were only collection is completed. We remove surveys that
displayed to a randomized subset of respondents; we are only partially completed and delete ones that
have noted these smaller base sizes when applicable. are clearly poor quality or not from someone who is
For this edition, 72% of legitimately in the insight industry.
respondents identified GRIT 20W2 Sample by Segment, Table 1 As usual for GRIT, the mix of respondents
themselves as suppliers varies slightly wave on wave, but within narrow
(n=769) and 26% identified Buyer 26% 274
bands. For this edition, 72% of respondents identified
themselves as buyers (n=274)
Supplier 72% 769 themselves as suppliers (n=769) and 26% identified
themselves as buyers (n=274). We also captured some
Other services 3% 28
respondents who identified themselves as “providing
Total sample n = 1,071 other services” (e.g., non-research insights services).
Due to its small size and lack of substantive findings,
this group has not been called out separately, but is
represented in industry totals.
PARTICIPANTS BY REGION: BUYER VS. SUPPLIER
100%
80%
65% 62%
60%
40%
22% 19%
20%
8% 11%
2% 5%
1% 1% 1% 1% 0% 0% 1% 1%
0%
North America Europe Asia-Pacific Africa Middle East South America Central America Undefined
6
Recruiting Expertise and Advanced Technology
for Global Qual and Quant Research Success
Online Surveys
7
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Adoption of
Emerging Methods
Prior to 2020, we saw a relatively slow but consistent growth in
adoption of emerging methods. In 2020, however, there has been a
marked acceleration in adoption of some methods, primarily related to
analytics and digital data collection.
8
Adoption of Emerging Methods, Table 1
Under
Rank Emerging Method In Use Interest
Consideration
1 Mobile-first surveys 64% 13% 76%
2 Text analytics 61% 18% 80%
3 Social media analytics 57% 17% 73%
4 Mobile qualitative 54% 17% 71%
5 Big Data analytics 47% 19% 65%
6 Mobile ethnography 45% 18% 63%
7 Micro-surveys 41% 19% 59%
8 Causal analysis 40% 11% 51%
9 Eye tracking 39% 13% 52%
10 Behavioral economics models 37% 19% 56%
11 Research gamification 36% 22% 58%
12 Prediction markets 26% 15% 41%
13 Facial analysis 26% 14% 40%
14 Applied neuroscience 25% 15% 39%
15 Passive data measurement 25% 20% 45%
16 Crowdsourcing 22% 17% 38%
17 Chatbots 20% 17% 37%
18 Biometric response 19% 13% 32% Nearly all methods that GRIT
19 Virtual Environments/VR 18% 19% 37% tracks as “emerging” grew
in 2020, evidence of the
Buyer & Supplier, n = 785
industry’s significant adoption
of new technologies and
approaches to adapt to the
Before diving deeper, it’s useful to address an project these numbers to the industry as a whole, we disruptions of the pandemic
obvious question: “For those seven methodologies, would expect it to overstate usage and interest, but
40% looks strong, but what is it 40% of?” The simple we don’t support those kind of projections.
answer: it’s 40% of the buyers and suppliers in
the GRIT sample. This leads to the next obvious Seven methods reached or maintained a high level
question: “How should we interpret these results?” of overall usage, but nearly all methods that GRIT
The simplest answer: as general trends, not as tracks as “emerging” grew in 2020, evidence of the
specific market penetration metrics. The magnitudes industry’s significant adoption of new technologies
of responses across methodologies are meaningful, and approaches to adapt to the disruptions of the
and the changes from wave to wave are meaningful. pandemic. The ‘In Use’ data from 2014 to 20W2
For example, we are confident that mobile-first is the clearly indicate atypical jumps across virtually all
most popular of these methodologies and that its methods this year. For three of these, usage jumped
usage accelerated this year. We would not say that 10 points or more: the aforementioned text analytics
an audit of any random set of insights professionals (61%, +11%) and causal analysis (40%, +10%), plus
would prove that 64% use mobile-first surveys. research gamification (36%, +11%). (Table 2 also
Because of its unique recruiting process, the GRIT documents some of the changes to the GRIT survey,
survey sample includes a wide range of buyers and including items that are no longer asked and the
suppliers, but probably leans toward those who are three methods introduced in 2019, passive data
likely early adopters of technology. If we tried to measurement, causal analysis, and chatbots.)
9
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
This rapid across-the-board acceleration in adoption in the future driving integration of applied
left out two key areas: applied neuroscience and neuroscience approaches into the platforms that
Virtual Environments/VR. rose to the occasion as new enablers of research
Applied neuroscience declined by 4%, losing in 2020.
nearly half of its gains from 19W2 but still exceeding Virtual Environments/VR also failed to
usage in every other year. This decline could reflect accelerate; it is still a niche approach hobbled
the challenges of availability, scale, speed, and primarily by low consumer adoption of the enabling
cost of these methods as the industry increasingly tech. However, it will be interesting to see if the
demands more nimble and cost-effective solutions. phenomena of lockdowns, travel restrictions and
Or, the decline could be significantly driven by social distancing drive greater consumer adoption
losses for particular methods that require in-person of these devices as more immersive and engaging
interaction, a near-impossibility by the end of 2020. entertainment alternatives. If so, research adoption
We would expect to see a new roundof innovation will surely follow as the industry continues to adapt
to new consumer behaviors and buyer need.
Adoption of Emerging Methods, Table 2
12
5 Year
Use of Method 2014 15W2 16W2 17W2 18W2 19W2 20W2 Month
Change
Change
Mobile-first surveys – – – 50% 54% 56% 64% 8% –
Text analytics 40% 38% 46% 46% 51% 50% 61% 11% 23%
Social media analytics 46% 43% 52% 43% 49% 50% 57% 7% 14%
Mobile qualitative 37% 34% 42% 44% 43% 47% 54% 7% 20%
Big data analytics 32% 34% 38% 38% 45% 44% 47% 3% 13%
Mobile ethnography 30% 31% 33% 35% 38% 41% 45% 4% 14%
Micro-surveys 25% 25% 35% 34% 33% 35% 41% 6% 16%
Eye tracking 34% 28% 35% 34% 38% 35% 39% 4% 11%
Behavioral economics models 25% 21% 29% 29% 32% 30% 37% 7% 16%
Causal analysis – – – – – 30% 40% 10% –
Applied neuroscience 13% 15% 16% 21% 20% 29% 25% -4% 10%
Research gamification 23% 20% 25% 25% 26% 25% 36% 11% 16%
Passive data measurement – – – – – 20% 25% 5% –
Facial analysis 18% 18% 24% 20% 24% 20% 26% 6% 8%
Prediction markets 19% 17% 24% 19% 21% 19% 26% 7% 9%
Crowdsourcing 17% 12% 16% 15% 18% 19% 22% 3% 10%
Virtual environments/VR 17% 10% 14% 11% 17% 17% 18% 1% 8%
Chatbots – – – – – 14% 20% 6% –
Biometric response 13% 10% 12% 12% 16% 12% 19% 7% 9%
Mobile surveys 64% 68% 75% – – – – – –
Online communities 56% 50% 59% 60% 59% – – – –
Webcam-based interviews 34% 33% 43% 47% 51% – – – –
Internet of things 12% 9% 14% 12% 15% – – – –
Sensor/usage/telemetry data – 7% 11% 11% 13% – – – –
Wearables-based research 7% 8% 10% 9% 9% – – – –
n= 465 1,022 1,580 1,533 1,260 1,117 785
10
At the other end of the spectrum, research eye tracking (26%), mobile qualitative (23%), mobile
gamification made big strides. After years as a ethnography (22%), Big Data analytics (21%), and
“buzzy” topic with only niche usage, perhaps mobile-first surveys (20%). Three methods are in trial
2020 was a tipping point for new thinking about by 10% or more: social media analytics (12%), text
the applicability of gamification approaches, analytics (11%), and research gamification (10%). Two
just as it was for many other “consumer-centric” methods are under consideration but have not been
methods. Like our hypothesis regarding VR’s tried yet by 20% or more: research gamification (22%)
future, gamification can create more engaging and passive data measurement (20%).
and rewarding user experiences during a time of If a method is in trial or under consideration Gamification can create more
emotional turmoil and distraction, but with a lower by a higher percentage than who use it, it might engaging and rewarding user
tech ante than VR. The challenges of the pandemic be approaching a surge in adoption. These experiences during a time of
emotional turmoil and
have spurred more empathetic creativity on behalf methods include research gamification, applied
distraction, but with a
of researchers, and gamification was poised as a neuroscience, prediction markets, chatbots, passive
lower tech ante than VR
viable solution to help address that imperative. data measurement, biometric response, Virtual
We look forward to monitoring this in the future Environments/VR, and crowdsourcing. Of course,
to assess whether this approach has a sustainable any of these may also have a stronger barrier to
growth path. adoption than others that prevent them from
Next, let us look at 2020 in more detail. going from consideration to use. If we look at only
In terms of regular usage, mobile-first surveys those methods that showed acceleration since last
clearly lead all these methods (35%), mobile qualitative year (increases of, say, 5 points or more), the list of
(24%) and text analytics (23%) are distant second and potential accelerators is pared down to research
third. Six methods are used occasionally by 20% or gamification, prediction markets, chatbots, passive
more: text analytics (27%), social media analytics (27%), data measurement, and biometric response.
80%
13% 18%
17%
17%
60% 8%
11% 19% 18%
8% 12% 19%
11% 19% 22% 13%
20% 8% 8%
40%
23% 27% 6% 9% 6%
7% 15% 14% 15% 20%
27% 10%
21% 17%
22% 17% 19%
19% 5% 13%
20% 18% 21% 6% 8%
26% 8% 5%
35% 19% 6% 4%
15% 7%
24% 23% 13% 13%
18% 18% 16% 9% 12% 11% 13%
15% 12% 8%
11% 7% 7% 6% 6% 5% 4% 4%
0% 3% 3% 3%
Mobile-first
surveys
Mobile
qualitative
Text analytics
Social media
analytics
Big Data
analytics
Mobile
ethnography
Causal
analysis
Behavioral
economics
models
Micro-surveys
Research
gamification
Eye tracking
Applied
neuroscience
Facial analysis
Prediction markets
Chatbots
Passive data
measurement
Biometric response
Virtual
Environments/VR
Crowdsourcing
All in all, 2020 must be considered a good year for indeed breed invention and many of the innovators
adherents and providers of emerging methods. of the past few years saw their hard work pay off by
Although there are clear winners that “went being able to address the systemic challenges this
mainstream” this year, and certainly some who year produced.
grew more than others, it appears that necessity did
11
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
The big differences are social media analytics suppliers and/or they are conducting the analyses
and Big Data analysis. In both cases, there are internally. However, trends among GRIT suppliers
more buyers using the techniques than there are suggest that more of them may be able to provide
suppliers providing these services. This gap has a viable analytics alternative: use of text analytics
existed for several years and does not show any has increased from 49% in 19W2 to 61%, social media
signs of narrowing. The data continues to suggest analytics from 43% to 53%, causal analysis from 30%
that many buyers are buying their social media to 39%, and Big Data analytics from 39% to 45%.
and Big Data analysis from non-market research
12
Supplier Professional Focus
The term “suppliers” includes a wide range of Providers, Full Service Providers, Field Service
organizations, with different areas of focus. To Providers, Data/Analytics Providers, and Strategic
enable a more detailed analysis of suppliers, they Consultancies. Table 4 shows the use of emerging
self-selected from five segments: Technology technologies by these segments.
n= 50 305 28 72 115
For each row the largest value is highlighted in green and the smallest value in pink.
Despite the previously noted gaps in the analytics create greater efficiency and “stickiness” of their
category of methods between buyers and suppliers, tools. Other segments are adopting these as well,
it appears that the Technology Provider segment is except for self-described Field Services companies
leading the charge in adoption of these techniques, that lag significantly behind. In general, however,
likely as components of their core offerings to we see broad increased usage of all methods across
13
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Technology is reshaping the all supplier segments, albeit to differing degrees. depth of insights via human understanding to
industry: more suppliers are These differences seem to be in alignment with their engagements.
retooling their skill sets to move the category positioning: the more data collection The key takeaway from this analysis dovetails
past general data collection to
focused the category, the greater the emphasis with the overarching findings that technology is
leverage specific capabilities
on exploring new approaches that address needs reshaping the industry and suppliers are looking for
around engaging and understanding consumers ways to differentiate between generally collecting
and in creating efficiencies in generating insights. data in many ways, in order to focus more on
The more service-focused the segment is, the more leveraging specific capabilities that are aligned with
emphasis it seems to place on maintaining parity their own unique positioning and value proposition.
with trends in data collection, but also in applying
Regional Differences
There are few interesting differences by global major regions, perhaps due to slower development of
region; the main message is that the advanced the technology for some languages.
market research world is essentially a homogeneous Table 5 shows the data for North America,
one. The only standout difference is that text Europe, and Asia-Pacific regions, with all other areas
analytics has lower adoption outside of the three rolled into “Rest of the World”.
Use regularly or occasionally Buyer & Supplier North America Europe Asia-Pacific Rest of World
14
Start
Knowing.
As we have seen consistently this year, most approaches that most effectively address the needs
changes can likely be attributed to adaptation to to engage consumers in new, digitally centric ways
forced market changes due to the pandemic, and have gained traction as have those that power
since COVID-19 is a global issue, it makes sense to greater efficiencies (speed/cost savings) as well as
see relative consistency across geographies. Those business impact.
16
GRIT Commentary
I t’s a new year, the perfect time to resolve to build your brand’s
health, the best way to ensure your brand’s survival into
measure awareness, familiarity, consideration, and usage, creating a
one-way, linear framework which worked perfectly in an age where
the next year and well beyond. Brands that don’t remain relevant, messages were pushed through mass media and communication was
innovate or add value to consumers’ lives could literally disappear, to one way. Those days are gone.
be speedily replaced by brands that have secured their place in the
marketplace. A New Brand Tracking Model to Plan for the Future
If you want to remain top-of-mind in the marketplace, you It almost goes without saying that today’s market has been
need to be constantly monitoring your brand’s vital signs and taking completely transformed. Consumers have constantly increasing
immediate steps to repair any weaknesses that could impact future influence on the market, asserting more control on brands than ever
brand performance. before. This trend is certain to escalate, giving consumers even more
powerful tools to exert pressure on brands. T
echnology disruption—
The First Step is Recognition continues to blur the boundaries between brands and consumers, as
Vigilant brand marketers and C-level executives in every these new approaches fill the market.
industry have begun to recognize the key role brand health plays in A completely new model for capturing brand insights is
their company health. According to a recent Gartner poll, 33 percent necessary to respond effectively to this new dynamic. It must:
of CMOs cite building brand strategy as their most vital competency, zz Assess future relevance and brand vitality.
a dramatic move upward from the near bottom of the list in zz Ensure a brand is fit for the future and to fight competitive
prior years. threats.
These marketers have realized that a healthy brand is zz Enable impactful decisions faster to ensure the future health of
central to a company’s performance, driving higher levels of buyer your brand and in-market success.
consideration, recommendation, and trust. Most importantly, a zz Produce a more holistic perspective by looking beyond just static
healthy and vibrant brand impacts overall corporate health by metrics.
boosting company value and reputation. Only a model with these capabilities will enable brands to grow
But some companies are abandoning brand tracking programs with consumers. Delivered as an online platform with automated
that they fear are not delivering sufficient ROI. Here’s why some solutions, this model enables faster, cost-effective brand insights
marketers are taking this drastic step, when an ultra-competitive using structured equation modelling to apply the pillar scores
marketplace demands constant brand monitoring. and overall score in real time. This is an entirely new way of
monitoring brand health and making complex content simpler and
Many Tracking Programs Stuck in the Past more actionable.
Too many tracking programs have failed to keep pace with This is the ideal tool to deal with the consumer-dominated
an ever-evolving marketplace. This is because traditional brand marketplace, ensuring brand health now and well into the future.
models are based on measuring current and past success rather than Transitioning into this model is the perfect way to ring in the new
determining whether the brand has the vitality and momentum year on a high note for your brand and business health.
to move forward and ensure continued success. These programs
17
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Usage of Established
Methodologies
While 2020 witnessed significant changes in usage of cost effectively understand the impact on consumers, driving
established methodologies, especially the shift from in-person – fairly predictably – use of quantitative research. Very soon
qualitative to online qualitative, the overall mix between afterward, a need emerged to conduct foundational research
qualitative and quantitative remained relatively stable. The to better grasp the longer-term business implications of the
initial shock of the pandemic created a need to quickly and pandemic, driving use of qualitative research.
(n=806)
From other sources (e.g., ESOMAR GMR), we know that qualitative methods are essential to insights
that quantitative research accounts for roughly work. For the average buyer or supplier organization,
80% of annual spend on established methods and less than half of projects are quantitative only (49%).
qualitative research is only 20%. However, looking The remaining 51% of projects, on average, are split
at average allocation of projects (rather than spend) across both quantitative and qualitative (21%) or
across quantitative and qualitative makes it clear qualitative only (23%); 4% do not use either.
18
Differences Between Groups For the average buyer or
supplier organization, less
This dual usage pattern in terms of whether difference: 91% of buyers say they use qualitative than half of projects are
quantitative only (49%)
quantitative and/or qualitative research is used is research compared with 83% of suppliers, but it is
consistent across all of the regions, i.e., there are no still the vast majority of each.
significant differences between the regions. The When we divide the suppliers into five sub-
pattern of usage between buyers and suppliers categories (reflecting their specific roles), we see
is also consistent with just save for significant some significant differences, shown in Table 1.
Neither of these 2% 4% 4% 0% 5% 0%
n=806 (Note, values that are significantly higher are shown in green, and those that are significantly lower are shown in pink.)
The key difference is that the technology qualitative approaches in the last twelve months.
providers and data and analytics providers tend Again, these findings are almost exactly in line with
to use qualitative research less frequently, which those from 19W2.
certainly makes sense considering the focus on In terms of the percentage of projects that are
quantitative data collection within those segments. quantitative or qualitative or both, there are a few
However, even in these groups, more than 60% used significant differences summarized in Table 2.
Buyer 45%
Buyer & Supplier 49%
Quantitative only
Supplier 51%
Data/Analytics 63%
Supplier 51%
Strategic Consultancy 40%
Buyer & Supplier 23% Europe 18%
Qualitative only
Supplier 23% Data/Analytics 10%
Buyer 9%
Buyer & Supplier 4% Supplier 2%
Neither Quantitative nor Qualitative Rest of World 1%
Full Service 0%
Supplier 2%
Strategic Consultancy 0%
n=806 (Note, values that are significantly higher are shown in green, and those that are significantly lower are shown in pink.)
The message from the earlier table is amplified consultancies and buyers are more likely to include
here. Data and analytics suppliers are more likely qualitative in the mix.
to do quantitative only projects, and the strategic
19
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
QUANTITATIVE METHODS USED REGULARLY OR OCCASIONALLY Anyone who said they used quantitative methods
(BUYER & SUPPLIER WHO USE QUANT METHODS)
was asked to indicate which they used regularly and
which occasionally. As has been true for many years,
Online surveys 89% 9%
online surveys are the dominant data collection
Mobile surveys 60% 31% method, with 89% saying they use these regularly,
and a further 9% using them at least occasionally.
Proprietary panels 45% 30%
Second (also not surprisingly) are mobile surveys,
Online communities 31% 33% with 60% saying they use mobile surveys regularly
and a further 31% using them occasionally.
CATI 24% 29%
CAPI 21% 25% Rounding out the top tier, proprietary panels are
Face-to-face
used regularly by 45% of respondents, with an
20% 33%
additional 30% using them occasionally and online
Mail 10% 18%
communities with one-third using them regularly
Nonconscious (Biometrics,
9% 28% and another third using them occasionally – placing
Neuroscience measurements)
online communities fourth overall in quantitative
Automated measures/
people meters 8% 16%
method usage.
Neuroscience measurements 7% 22%
20
GRIT Commentary
In the quantitative space, the long-term category pressure to be We did some [online] groups about digital transformation because
faster/better/cheaper/more intensified. Many long-steady categories of COVID and there was somebody from Kentucky, Atlanta, New
awakened to sudden new realities. Consumers scurried for toilet York, Chicago at the same time. And that’s powerful. If our corporate
paper and disinfecting wipes. People increasingly stayed home. mission is to empower everyone in every organization to achieve more,
At AYTM’s Insighter conference, Heather Dallam of ExxonMobil bringing in more diverse voices geographically has been huge. Getting
explained the impact for her team: all of those [voices] helps us message better, it helps us build better.”
“I joined ExxonMobil in November 2019… I had a great onboarding As I reflect on what we learned in 2020, I believe our future is likely to
experience and put a great plan in place. Then things took a left turn. be more of a hybrid—a new normal that delivers on our basic needs
Oil prices dropped to the lowest they’ve been in many years. We had but in new ways that are more digitally enabled, agile, contextual and
some budget cuts, and tragically, COVID-19 hit, leaving people with no technology driven.
option but to stay home.
21
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Automated measures/
8% Data & Analytics 17% In general, North America uses fewer
people meters
n=533 (Note, values that are significantly higher are shown in green, and of the non-digital methods
those that are significantly lower are shown in pink.)
22
Qualitative Data Collection Options
Perhaps the most obvious and immediate impact and “Use Occasionally” for all methods we track
of the pandemic has been its impact on qualitative and compare 19W2 to 20W2 results we see just how
research. We have all likely been aware of the startling the impact of COVID-19 has been on the
anecdotal evidence, but in this wave of GRIT we qualitative sector. For years online methods have
were able to quantify those changes. grown slowly and steadily while in-person has been
Before we dive into the specifics for 20W2, the the leading choice of qualitative methodologies, but
overall changes can perhaps best be summed up in COVID-19 abruptly changed that with online focus
this comparison. When we combine “Use Regularly” groups and IDIs now taking the lead.
0%
Online focus groups
with webcams
Online communities
In-person focus
groups
Mobile (diaries,
image collection,
etc.)
In-person IDIs
Telephone IDIs
Bulletin board
studies
In-store/shopping
observations
Chat (text-based)
online focus groups
Monitoring blogs
Chat (text-based)
online IDIs
Telephone focus
groups
Automated
interviewing via AI
systems
20W2 (n=685) 19W2 (n=1,189)
However, there is a silver lining here since in-person don’t change much whether it is online or in-person
approaches show surprising resiliency so perhaps and many of the tools that have emerged to create
reports of the demise of in-person research have more efficiency in qualitative research such as video
been greatly exaggerated. What we don’t capture recording, facial coding, automated transcription, When we track and compare
is the nature of the business issues each method is text analytics and report automation are equally 19W2 to 20W2 results we
being selected to address; it is certainly reasonable applicable in both modes. see just how startling the
impact of COVID-19 has been
to assume that any qualitative research that is Under the pandemic, buyers have adopted
on the qualitative sector. For
“experiential” in nature (dependent on touching, new methods out of necessity and now realize
years online methods have
tasting, smelling, or using something) cannot that online methods are not merely stopgaps to grown slowly and steadily
currently easily be replicated in digital methods survive the crisis, but offer enduring advantages. while in-person has been the
and that could constitute a significant portion of Online methods deliver methodological flexibility leading choice of qualitative
qualitative work in general. That foundation may and tangible pragmatic advantages such as travel methodologies, but COVID-19
abruptly changed that with
provide a path for suppliers heavily invested in cost savings, risk and liability mitigation, diverse
online focus groups and
physical facilities to adapt, while simultaneously recruitment options, schedule flexibility, and general
IDIs now taking the lead
incorporating more digital approaches into speed and cost efficiencies. It is safe to assume
their offerings. what we will see is a long tail of growth continue
What has always been interesting about to play out even as the pandemic recedes. This is
qualitative research is that some aspects of projects certainly something we will pay close attention to in
don’t change regardless of the medium: recruiting, the future.
project management and moderation for instance
23
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
QUALITITATIVE METHODS USED REGULARLY OR OCCASIONALLY Switching gears to focus on the details of 2020
(BUYER & SUPPLIER WHO USE QUAL METHODS)
usage, we see some important nuances that flesh
out the story of the change in qualitative more fully.
Online IDIs with webcams 41% 33%
The survey asked all of those who used qualitative
Online focus groups with webcams 40% 34% methods to indicate which they used regularly and
Online communities
which occasionally.
35% 36%
24
Regional Differences – Qualitative Methods
There are a few regional differences, and Table 5 Usage of Established Methodologies, Table 5
highlights significant differences with respect to the %Use
percentage regularly using a qualitative method. Regularly %Use
(Buyer & Regularly
Supplier (Buyer &
The key difference is that North America is far Region
Who Use Supplier,
less likely to regularly use in-person focus groups, Qual Single
Methods, All Region)
whereas the Rest of the World is more likely to use Regions)
these in-person techniques. Conversely, it appears
Rest of World 54%
that automated interviewing is more widely adopted In-person focus
31%
groups
outside of North America, which is an interesting North America 24%
(Note, values that are significantly higher are shown in green, and those that
are significantly lower are shown in red.)
The difference between buyers and suppliers in achieving research objectives using a variety of North America is far less
terms of the numbers using various qualitative tools versus specializing in methodologies, which is likely to regularly use in-
techniques is summarized in Table 6. Lower much more the purview of the supplier community. person focus groups
proportions of buyers report using every technique However, in both groups we clearly see the current
listed, which is reflective of the buyer focus on primacy of online approaches.
25
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
There are several differences between the types of The key message in the data is that the differences
suppliers regarding the qualitative approaches they are largely driven by the Technology Providers.
use regularly, as shown in Table 7. The Technology Providers are more likely to use
many of the online qual tools, and less likely to use
in-person tools.
(Note, values that are significantly higher are shown in green, and those that are significantly lower are shown in
red.)
26
GRIT Commentary
O ver the life of the universe, the way matter is arranged and
information is processed has grown in complexity. This
As a single unit, the wants, needs, views and priorities of a
collectively intelligent community can change at nearly the speed of
progress has been the result of a small number of transformations of a single person. And just a few collectively intelligent communities
cosmic significance. Over billions of years, four have taken place. can comprise a whole market. The result is that entire markets
Fundamental particles combined to form single atoms. Many may be won or lost in the time it used to take to win or lose just a
atoms combined to form single molecules. Many molecules combined single customer.
to form single cells. And finally, many cells combined to form single Understanding and keeping up with customers is only going to
humans. In each transition, many individual entities combined to get harder. And more important. To survive and thrive businesses
form a new entity that was greater than the sum of its parts. will need to evolve quickly.
It is truly remarkable that in just four such transitions the Market research rooted in the assumption that “the whole”
universe was able to turn fundamental particles into the humans can be understood by experiments involving the “sum of its parts”
reading this article. will become increasingly misleading and need to be abandoned.
Now we are in the midst of the fifth transition of cosmic At the same time, insights will grow stale faster and faster. The
significance. And the consequences for businesses and the insights refresh rate of research will need to increase until snapshots of
they rely on are profound. understanding become more like a live stream.
** Businesses need new tools and playbooks built around
Since their emergence, humans began connecting, engaging and understanding the collectively intelligent
communicating, and coordinating within increasingly larger societies. communities they depend on.
Religions, governments, and economies helped scale trust beyond Thankfully the same forces driving these changes are giving
the confines of the family unit. Large groups began to function rise to new technology to address them. Chief among these is
increasingly as a community. Artificial Intelligence. It is enabling new paradigms we would have
Now, technology has made interacting from any distance never thought possible. But like any superpower, it’s all about how
fast, easy, and nearly ubiquitous. Humans today are connected and you use it.
communicating in real-time across the globe within networks of The leaders of businesses which dominate the next decade will
remarkable complexity. What neurons did for cells, the internet is be those who best leverage AI to do the right things.
doing for humans. To identify the collectively intelligent communities your
As a result, the fifth transition is taking place, where massive business serves, develop a relationship with them like you would
groups of humans are combining to create collectively intelligent a person, engage in real dialogue. Stay up-to-date on their needs,
communities. Single entities who think, create, react, and evolve as a thoughts, values, and goals. Build their trust by being honest. And
unit. Who seek agency and strive for independence. Entities who are build their loyalty by adapting with them to meet their needs.
greater than the sum of their parts. We are building Remesh for these leaders. For those who
see engaging and understanding the collectively intelligent
communities they serve as a key to their organization’s future.
27
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Buzz Topics:
Hype vs. Adoption
Dominated by technology-driven approaches outside of it is difficult to discern clear a “COVID effect”, we assume
traditional research methodologies, the topics that have been the challenges of 2020 have only reinforced the trend of
top of mind for insight professionals prior to 2020 continue to market pressures forcing the insights and analytics industry
show strength, often with room for further growth. Although to embrace technology for efficiency and impact.
WAVE-ON-WAVE Trends
Measuring sentiment around new concepts and “Automation/Research Automation”. In addition
topics as they enter the insights and analytics to these changes, we migrated “Big Data (including
industry has continued to be an effective tool in synthesis of multiple data sets/types)” and “Virtual
predicting their traction and adoption. We have seen Reality/Augmented Reality” to the emerging
early stage “buzz topics” move from interesting ideas methods question.
to growing parts of the industry toolkit and a basis Table 1 shows a wave-on-wave trend of current
on which whole companies are being developed buzz topics using both a Top 2 Box (In Use/Plan to
(AI, chatbots, and blockchain come to mind), while Use) and a ranking to facilitate comparisons.
others remain interesting but with still relatively Our hypothesis going into this wave is that
“niche level” adoption. we would see more “COVID-19 effects” in this area
Previously we tracked these as both verbatim like what we have seen in other questions related to
Measuring sentiment around comments and using a scale based an overall technology adoption, and we interpret these data as
new concepts and topics perception of usefulness and of “buzz.” Beginning confirming that.
as they enter the insights with 19W2 wave, we decided to use a similar model Clearly storytelling and data visualization
and analytics industry has
as we do in emerging methods and look at actual continues to reign as the “buzziest” topic among
continued to be an effective
adoption stages, and we continued that in 20W2. In GRIT respondents, however agile research, data
tool in predicting their
traction and adoption this wave we continued to tweak the question as integration and automation are also very much top
some topics were added based on the frequency of of mind and show strong growth.
verbatims we saw in 20W1 and as others migrated The only topic to decline is CX/UX, down
to the emerging methods question set. We also from 71% to 50%, a drop so steep that any question
continued to evolve the scales used to more is rendered moot regarding whether the surge of
effectively capture actual usage as a measure of the past few years, driven by multiple technology
adoption traction. platforms which power customer-centricity, has
New in 2020 were two topics: data integration begun to level off. The fall off has to be attributable
and alternatives to panel samples. We also reworded to conditions imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
some topics based on previous wave verbatims It’s also interesting to note the strong debut
such as “new approaches to CX/UX design”, of alternatives to panel samples at 43%, perhaps
“Artificial Intelligence (AI)/Machine Learning” and underscoring ongoing concerns regarding quality
28
Buzz Topics: Hype vs. Adoption, Table 1
Attribution analytics and single source data 52% 36% 41% 36% 39% 4 7 7 7 8
Marketplaces (such as for sample, talent, software, etc.) 49% 37% 42% 34% 36% 5 6 6 8 9
or cost, exposure due to data privacy legislation, All other topics remain relatively flat, meaning
and the seemingly unstoppable commodification of they have their adherents but have yet to
sample. It will be interesting to watch this one in the breakthrough as being considered “mission critical”
future for sure. to insights organizations.
100% 2%
3% 3% 5% 9% 8% 9%
7% 15% 17% 16%
12% 10%
16% 17%
80% 17% 20%
16% 43%
14% 20% 21% 21%
Agile research/
methods/
approaches
Data integration
Automation/
research automation
New approaches to
CX/UX design
Alternatives to
panel samples
Artificial Intelligence
(AI)/machine
learning
Attribution Analytics
and Single Source
Data
Marketplaces
Blockchain
applications
We do/use it now Plan to use it Probably will use it Will be adopted by others, but not me/us Will not be significantly adopted (n=806)
29
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
If we only look at “we do/use it now”, it may be than likely, this controversy reflects the lack of a
time to move storytelling/data visualization, agile, consistent definition of “storytelling,” ranging from
and data integration into emerging or established very casual to highly specific in terms of practices
methodologies next year; they clearly have reached and methods.
mainstream adoption. All others are still growing Differences between buyers and suppliers
Storytelling and Data as evidenced by the combined “plan to use it” and jibe very well with previous observations: data
Visualization continues to “probably will use it” responses, although blockchain integration leads more with buyers while more
reign as the “buzziest” topic remains at the beginning of its adoption curve. “process innovations” such as AI, automation and
among GRIT respondents
In last summer’s GRIT webinar, panelists marketplaces lead with suppliers. Storytelling and
challenged the 20W1 finding that storytelling has Data Visualization and CX/UX are roughly equal
reached a high level of adoption because they among both groups.
have not seen much first-hand evidence of it. More
85%
81%
80%
74%
69% 67%
63%
60% 57%
49% 50% 47%
50%
45% 43% 45%
40% 38% 38% 39%
29%
20%
8% 10%
0%
Storytelling & data
visualization
Data integration
Agile research/
methods/
approaches
New approaches to
CX/UX design
Artificial Intelligence
(AI)/machine
learning
Automation/
research automation
Attribution Analytics
and Single Source
Data
Alternatives to
panel samples
Marketplaces
Blockchain
applications
Buyer (n=207) Supplier (n=578)
30
GRIT Commentary
W hen asked in the most recent GRIT wave what one skill they
would add to their organization in their next hire, buyer and
Combining Technology and Market Research Expertise:
A Real-World Example
supplier-side researchers agreed: technical skills are most in demand. One of Bloomfire’s customers, Lubrizol, is an excellent example
The demand for tech-savvy researchers doesn’t come as a great of a company that drives action from insights by combining
surprise. Technology in the market research industry has advanced technology with a market research team that serves a consultative,
dramatically in the last decade, with artificial intelligence and strategic role. When the COVID-19 pandemic began, the organization
machine learning enabling research teams to automate repetitive and recognized they needed to leverage technology to track and share
time-consuming tasks like data cleaning, reviewing pools of survey rapidly changing information while also relying on their market
participants, and analyzing raw data. The modern market researcher research team members to smartly disseminate that information and
needs to understand how to leverage this technology to improve communicate its implications.
efficiencies and increase the speed of insight delivery. As part of the technology component, Lubrizol is using
However, while technology fluency is incredibly valuable to Bloomfire as their centralized research hub, allowing stakeholders
market research teams, it shouldn’t overshadow critical thinking to search for and access research along with industry and company
and communication skills. Ultimately, the goal of technology should news. Lubrizol’s market research team also contributes their
be to reduce or eliminate time spent on simple and repetitive tasks, own knowledge to the hub by documenting their perspectives
allowing market researchers to spend more time on complex tasks, and recommendations, encouraging stakeholders to engage in a
such as prioritizing data-based decisions and delivering insights to collaborative dialogue with them, and tailoring different calls to
stakeholders in impactful ways. action to different stakeholder groups. According to Dan Stradtman,
In a recent insights conference keynote presentation, Reed VP of Consumer and Market Research at Lubrizol, “Removing
Cundiff, CEO of Kantar North America, stressed that even with points of friction and making insights immediately actionable gets
technology providing robust analytics, human input is still necessary stakeholders one step closer to using the insights.”
to make meaning out of data. According to Cundiff, “That human While Lubrizol’s market research tech stack serves as a powerful
layer will always be critical when you need to go from insight toolkit, it’s the knowledge and expertise of their team members that
to action.” ultimately provide a competitive advantage for the business.
It’s interesting to note that when drilling down to the open- In Summary
ended GRIT survey responses about the most in-demand skills, the Technical skills will continue to be in demand in the market
top three skills for the buyer segment are “ability to synthesize data research industry, and researchers will always benefit from
and information,” “market research knowledge/comprehension,” and familiarizing themselves with tools that simplify the processes of
“communication skills.” These skills combine technical knowledge, collecting, parsing, and synthesizing data. However, as leaders build
critical thinking, and an understanding of how best to deliver insights their market research teams, it’s important not to lose sight of the
to decision-makers. This mix of hard and soft skills is essential for human knowledge and soft skills that will allow the team to be a true
market research teams to advance from a reactive function to a strategic partner to their organization.
proactive, strategic partner.
31
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
In-Demand Skills
As researchers and students of market research, With that in mind, GRIT continues to explore
For researchers looking to our field is constantly evolving as new technology the topic of the skills that are in demand and the
future-proof their careers, is developed and methods improve and evolve. changing role of the researcher, and, in this wave,
demonstrating competence We have witnessed and documented this change some compelling new insights present themselves.
in a variety of technical
in GRIT for several years, and the stark reality is For the past few GRIT waves, we have asked
skills is far and away the
that the in-demand skills of today are different respondents to tell us (open-ended) what one skill
most effective approach
than those of just a few years ago, and almost they would add to their organization in their next
unrecognizable as core hiring criteria from the hire. The results this year are very consistent with
early part of this century. In order to ensure both what we saw last year: for researchers looking
experienced practitioners and new hires are up to to future-proof their careers, demonstrating
speed we must constantly keep a pulse on what competence in a variety of technical skills is far
employers and clients are looking for, and who and and away the most effective approach, followed
what they will find valuable long term. by analytical skills. Remarkably, we see technical
skills as the most in-demand skill in all types of
In-Demand Skills: Buyer vs. Supplier organizations, whether we are talking about buyer
60% organizations, suppliers of all size and type of
business, and in all regions. The “general researcher”
51%
50% 48% of the past, whose main competency was in being
able to read the significance notes in tabs will have a
40%
hard time staying relevant in the near future.
30%
Beyond technical and analytics skills,
26%
the “softer” skills related to being an effective
21%
20% 19%
17%
consultant, and business and commercial skills are
15% 16%
13% seen as important for new hires, with the latter
10% 8% growing in importance this year, especially for
suppliers. As we have been saying in GRIT for the
0%
Technical Analytical skills Soft skills (net) Business and Other skills past few years, some companies are moving more in
skills(net) (net) commercial (net)
related skills a consulting direction, and these skills are critical to
(net)
Buyer (n=75) Supplier (n=254) success in this area.
32
Buyer and Supplier Differences
We thought it would be instructive to also look at In-Demand Skills (Buyer)
buyers and suppliers separately while breaking 16%
the aggregate skill categories into specific skills
14%
mentioned by respondents. The charts that
accompany this section show all skills that were 12%
mentioned by 5% or more.
10%
Communication skills
Data Analytics
Data visualization
Digital
on creating and activating insights than on the
mechanics of collecting it.
14%
Finally, we wanted to look at the overlap, as well 13%
as the non-overlap, in demand for skill sets to truly 12%
understand the differences in hiring priorities
10%
between buyers and suppliers. Table 1 below shows 9%
this clearly, organized around the delta between 8%
7%
buyers and suppliers.
6% 6% 6%
5%
4% 4% 4% 4% 4%
2%
0%
Sales and business
development
Data Visualization
Data analytics
Data analysis
Supplier (n=254)
33
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
In all, there are twenty skills that are in demand are more significantly looking for market research
across both groups, although the two ends of the knowledge and data synthesis. This gap could
spectrum show the most differences with suppliers indicate an opportunity for more classically trained
focusing on sales and business development as well supplier-side researchers to find roles within buyer
as software development (again demonstrating organizations, while suppliers increasingly look
the increasing importance of technology within towards technologists as key to driving their future.
that segment) while, perhaps surprisingly, buyers
35
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
29%
Other Research and
Non-Research Tasks 17% Managing
research
execution of
Other activities related 11%
to research
Collecting and
Analyzing Data 48%
Communication and
Implementation
23%
Consulting on
implications or forward 13%
planning based on
research Analyzing, interpreting,
17% charting, and/or
reporting research
results
Presenting research
results to key 10%
stakeholders (n=531)
36
Make the shift to agile,
in-house market research
Buyer & Market Knowledge Product Development Brand & Creative Analysis
% OF TIME SPENT ON RESEARCH PROJECTS & OTHER ACTIVITIES This pattern is similar around the world, with one
BY GLOBAL REGION (ALL)
significant exception: Europeans spend less time
100% than others presenting results to key stakeholders
16% or consulting on implications moving forward.
28% 27%
33%
80%
The overall time allocation is similar across buyers
80%
60%
49% 48%
40%
30% 30%
0%
Collecting and
analyzing data
Designing research
Managing execution
of research
Analyzing,
interpreting,
charting, reporting
Communication and
implementation
Presenting research
results to key
stakeholders
Consulting on
implications or
forward planning
Other activities
related to research
38
Across professional focus segments, supplier differs from other suppliers’ notions, but that is
differences are intuitive. Compared to other types beyond the scope of this report. Even in strategic
of suppliers, technology providers spend less of consultancies, about half the time is spent on the
their time on the design, execution, and analysis of “core” of research – designing it, executing it, and
research, including a whopping 40% on non-research analyzing it, which is basically the same as everyone
activities, presumably minding and developing their else. This suggests that even the “higher end” types
platforms. Strategic consultancies spend a bit more of suppliers may still struggle to give buyers the
time on consulting, but not terribly much more than types and amount of consulting they claim to want.
other types of suppliers. Possibly, what self-defined Consulting is a key activity for the industry to
“strategic consultancies” regard as “consulting” further define and deliver.
% OF TIME SPENT ON RESEARCH PROJECTS & OTHER ACTIVITIES BY PROFESSIONAL FOCUS (SUPPLIER)
60%
53% 53%
50% 50%
43% 43%
40% 40%
36%
33%
30%
28%
27% 27%
24%
23%
21%
20% 20% 20%
19%19% 19% 19%
18% 18% 18%
17% 17%
16% 16%
15% 15% 15%
14%14% 14% 14%
13% 13% 13%
12%
11% 11% 11% 11%
10% 10% 10%
9%
8% 8%8%
7%
6%
0%
Collecting Designing Managing Analyzing, Communi- Presenting Consulting on Other Other Other
and analyzing research execution of interpreting, cation and research implications research and activities activities NOT
data research charting, implemen- results to key or forward non-research related to related to
reporting tation stakeholders planning tasks research research
Full Service (n=205) Field Service (n=19) Strategic Consultancies (n=70) Data & Analytics (n=56) Technology (n=34)
39
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Finally, when we look at department size for sized departments are acting more as internal
different buyer organizations, we see some striking suppliers than as internal consultants, executing
differences. Those in small (4 employees or fewer) with DIY platforms. From a career perspective, those
or medium-sized departments (5-19 employees) in smaller departments may struggle to upskill if
spend considerably more time than do those in they are “stuck” in execution, and either need to
larger departments in collecting and analyzing data. work with internal partners in HR or marketing for
Correspondingly, those in larger departments spend training/opportunities to go beyond execution, or
more of their time presenting, communicating, and seek new positions in larger departments that can
consulting with end users within their organizations. give them that.
We may be seeing that those in smaller or medium-
% OF TIME SPENT ON RESEARCH PROJECTS & OTHER ACTIVITIES BY DEPARTMENT SIZE (BUYER)
60%
53% 52%
50%
40% 40%
37%
30% 30%
0%
Collecting Designing Managing Analyzing, Communi- Presenting Consulting on Other Other activi- Other
and analyzing research execution of interpreting, cation and research implications research and ties related to activities NOT
data research charting, implemen- results to key or forward non-research research related to
reporting tation stakeholders planning tasks research
40
GRIT Commentary
41
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Role of Insights
Group
The supplier side of the industry has seen increased fragmentation and specialization across a range of business issues and
categories, but what about the buyer segment? Have some areas that we consider now to be “adjacent”, such as CX, UX, web
analytics, CI, BI, and shopper insights, drifted away from buyer-side insights organizations? The answer is yes… and no, with
some differences among buyer segments.
The GRIT Report covers a wide range of topics As this is the first GRIT Report to explore insights
While the size of the hybrid related to research and insights, but until this year, activities that might occur outside the insights
segment has fluctuated it has never directly addressed how insights impact department, this section may seem somewhat
up and down, the other the buyer’s business. The 20W1 report discussed how less developed than others; for example, we have
segments seem to be trending
different functional areas engage with insights work no previous waves against which to benchmark
in particular directions
and which participate in the selection of partners these results. So please consider this discussion an
and suppliers. The current report explores which introduction to the secret life of insights within
business issues are most impacted by insights work corporation at large.
and the role the insights department plays in various
kinds of research and insight development activities.
Data analysts 3%
Research outsourcing 6%
department
GRIT typically segments buyers according to their research provider (18%). Since GRIT began tracking
department’s primary role: data analysts, in-house these in 19W1, hybrid has almost always been the
research provider, research outsourcer, strategic largest segment, ranging from a low of 30% to a high
insights consulting, Voice of the Customer (or of 42%. Except for 19W1, when it edged hybrid as the
Consumer), or a hybrid of these. In 20W2, the most largest segment, strategic consulting has always
significant roles are a hybrid of functions (42%), been the second largest-segment, with a size ranging
strategic insights consulting (20%), and in-house from a low of 20% to a high of 31%.
42
While the size of the hybrid segment has RELATIVE SIZES OF BUYERs SEGMENT: GRIT WAVE (BUYER)
fluctuated up and down, the other segments seem 42%
35%
to be trending in particular directions. Strategic Hybrid of functions
42%
consulting has been trending downward, enjoying 30%
its peak in 19W1 and reaching its lowest point in the 20%
23%
Strategic insights consultants
current wave. Voice of the Customer also has been 21%
31%
trending smaller, from its peak of 27% in 19W1, to its
18%
lowest point, 9%, currently. In-house researchers
10%
In-house research provider
have grown from 4% in 19W1 to 18% today, and 14%
4%
research outsourcers, once the smallest segment,
9%
seem to be on a mini upward swing, from 2% in 23%
Voice of the customer
16%
19W1 to 6% today. The two smallest segments, data 27%
analysts and “other” functions, seem essentially
6%
flat. Data analysts have ranged from 2% to 5% with Research outsourcing
2%
4%
no clear trend, and “other” functions have been 2%
2%
2%
Other internal function
1%
2%
43
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Some of the less impacted issues include consumer/ finances or economics in some way, such as customer
shopper experiences in the digital and material value, pricing, and marketing mix.
worlds. Another set involves topics that relate to
Pricing 4% 37%
Other 5% 2%
zz Hybrid: as a group, appear to be more generalist zz Voice of the Customer: consumer purchase
zz Strategic consultants: advertising or media, behavior (retail), consumer/shopper experience
brand positioning, market size or opportunity, (digital), website experience optimization,
competitive assessment, customer share of consumer/shopper experience optimization
wallet/lifetime value (retail)
zz In-house researchers: customer satisfaction or zz Other (which includes data analysts and
loyalty outsourcers): brand tracking
44
AREAS MOST DIRECTLY IMPACTED BY INSIGHTS WORK (TOP 10): AREAS MOST DIRECTLY IMPACTED BY INSIGHTS
BUYER SEGMENT WORK (BOTTOM 9): BUYER SEGMENT
35% 12%
40% 15%
Advertising or media Marketing mix 4%
20%
24% 8%
33% 15%
32% 9%
40% 9%
Consumer purchase
Brand positioning 20% behavior – retail 14%
16% 28%
22% 11%
31% 6%
Product or service 27% 2%
Consumer/shopper
development - 34% experience – digital 8%
early stage 16%
24%
7% 7%
27% 5%
20% 2%
Website experience
Attitudes and opinions 18% optimization 2%
20% 16%
33% 7%
24% 4%
Product or service 20% 2%
development - Pricing 6%
28%
later stage 0%
28%
15% 11%
23% 4%
18% 2%
Customer satisfaction Customer share of
36% 10%
or loyalty wallet or lifetime value
20% 0%
19% 0%
20% 3%
25% Consumer/ 7%
Market size or shopper experience 4%
opportunity 18%
optimization – retail 16%
20%
11% 0%
20% 2%
16% Partner/channel 2%
Brand tracking 22% selection or 0%
optimization 0%
28%
48% 4%
15% 8%
22% 2%
Competitive Other 2%
assessment 16%
16% 0%
7% 7%
45
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
ALL AREAS DIRECTLY IMPACTED BY INSIGHTS ALL AREAS DIRECTLY IMPACTED BY INSIGHTS WORK (BOTTOM 9):
WORK (TOP 10): BUYER SEGMENT BUYER SEGMENT
73% 43%
67% 51%
Attitudes and opinions 72% Marketing mix 26%
76% 48%
67% 44%
71% 45%
84% 35%
Brand positioning 60% Pricing 48%
56% 28%
44% 37%
66% 34%
64% 38%
Brand tracking Consumer purchase
48% 36%
behavior – retail
56% 44%
63% 37%
60% 30%
67% 27%
Segmentation Website experience
64% 40%
optimization
56% 56%
33% 26%
61% 32%
67% 29%
Advertising or media Consumer/shopper
56% 32%
experience – digital
48% 56%
41% 19%
58% 28%
60% Consumer/ 31%
Market size or
opportunity 60% shopper experience 30%
56% optimization – retail 48%
44% 15%
63% 23%
Product or service 58% Partner/channel 29%
development – 64% selection or 18%
early stage 40% optimization 20%
33% 19%
64% 17%
62% 20%
Competitive Customer share of
assessment 48% 38%
wallet or lifetime value
52% 20%
37% 7%
52% 10%
51% 2%
Customer satisfaction
or loyalty 70% Other 4%
60% 0%
41% 15%
46
Regarding the role played by the insights AREAS LED BY INSIGHTS DEPARTMENT (BUYER)
function (leading, contributing, or not involved),
Consumer market insights 70%
unsurprisingly, most – but not all – take a leading
Advertising research 41%
role in consumer market insights (70%). After that,
they are most likely to lead advertising research Shopper research 35%
kind of research effort; they are least likely to Data Science 16%
be involved in web analytics (49% not involved),
Product development 15%
shopper research (38%), Big Data analytics (36%),
Brand management 13%
and data science (31%).
Usability 13%
They are least likely to be involved in web analytics Big Data analytics 13%
(49% not involved), shopper research (38%), Big
Data analytics (36%), and data science (31%). Web analytics 13%
47
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
AREAS LED BY INSIGHTS DEPARTMENT: BUYER SEGMENT By buyer segment, certain functions are more likely to
lead certain areas:
73%
71% zz Hybrid: more generalist
Consumer market insights 76%
68%
zz Strategic consulting: advertising research,
48% competitive intelligence, data science, and Big Data
41% analytics
53%
Advertising research 30% zz In-house researchers: business intelligence
56%
26%
zz Voice of the Customer: advertising research,
shopper research, customer experience, and brand
32%
40% management
Shopper research 28%
52% zz Other (including data analysts and outsourcers):
33%
competitive intelligence, data science, web analytics,
27%
brand management, product development, and Big
33%
Customer experience 36% Data analytics
44%
22%
48
GRIT Commentary
Management Strategies
Ian Elmer
Managing Director, US Behaviorally (Formerly PRS)
Email: Ian.Elmer@behaviorally.com | Twitter: @Ian_Elmer | Website: www.behaviorally.com
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ian-elmer-38a7453/
49
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Management
Strategies
Strategies for managing insights determine how decision been more subtle. The challenge of conducting insights
makers invest in technology, choose methodologies work during the pandemic seems to have led buyers to
and approaches, and select suppliers and partners. Like pursue novel ways to address their needs, resulting in a
everything else, 2020 has impacted the level of technology rearrangement of priorities for selecting methodologies and
investment and influenced investment priorities, while approaches. In turn, this reprioritization has had an impact on
preserving overall continuity: investment remains strong, how suppliers and partners are chosen, as some buyers seem
and analytics continues to be the highest priority. 2020’s more willing than before to trade off established relationships
influence on selection of methodologies and suppliers has to find the right approach for their current situation.
100%
80%
60%
49% 47%
44%
51% 53%
40% 46% 44%
42% 41% 41%
33% of buyers and 26%
20%
of suppliers claim that 6%
9%
6%
4% 15%
the pandemic has had a 0%
positive impact on spend 17W2 18W2 19W2 20W1 20W2
(n=343) (n=329) (n=297) (n=366) (n=257)
Increase About the same Decrease
50
Industry responses to the devastating COVID-19 CHANGE IN TECHNOLOGY SPEND: GRIT WAVES (SUPPLIER)
pandemic demonstrate this resilience. Among 100%
have decreased it, but overall the trend remains on Increase About the same Decrease
51
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
KEY PRIORITIES FOR TECH SPENDING: 20W2 VS. 19W2 (BUYER) Suppliers share some of these priorities: analytics
is still their top priority (56%); they have increased
56%
Analytics
52%
focus on data collection techniques (54%, up from
42%), DIY solutions (34%, up from 25%), and new
42%
Data collection techniques data types (32%, up from 23%); and the importance
32%
of visualization and dashboards is static (45%
41% versus 46%, fourth place, down from second).
DIY solutions
35%
However, they also have increased their priority
38% on the remaining investment areas: sample quality
Visualization and dashboards
40%
and/or management (51%, up from 40%) and data
54%
Data collection techniques
42%
45%
Visualization and dashboards
46%
Directionally, tech investment priorities
34%
differ according to how a buyer insights
DIY solutions
25% department classifies its function
27%
Data integration
21%
52
In fact, if secondary priorities are included, 69% investment radar for most buyers and suppliers,
of buyers place at least some importance on a fact that underscores the resilience of tech
tech spending for data integration, along with spending wave after wave and its importance to the
58% of suppliers. Each of these areas is on the insights function.
New data types (e.g., passive data, visual data) 25% 44% 31%
New data types (e.g., passive data, visual data) 32% 40% 28%
zz Visualization and dashboards are a higher zz Data integration is a higher priority among
priority among hybrids; lower among in-house “others;” lower among strategic consultants
researchers and others (including data analysts zz Sample quality is a higher priority among
and outsourcers) “others;” lower among hybrids
zz DIY is a higher priority among in-house zz New data types are a higher priority among
researchers and others strategic consultants; lower among hybrids and
zz Data collection techniques are a higher priority in-house researchers
among strategic consultants and others
53
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Investment priorities are more varied across supplier For specialists, technology investment in particular
professional focus areas than they are across buyer areas is crucial to growing their chosen area of
functions. Priorities of generalists, full-service expertise. However, the importance of tech spending
suppliers, and strategic consultancies are not very is not unique to supplier specialists: it is dyed into
distinctive. Specialists, however, differentially the fabric of the insights industry.
emphasize certain areas of investment:
zz Field service: data collection techniques, sample
quality
zz Data & analytics providers: analytics, data
collection techniques, sample quality,
visualization & dashboards, and data integration
zz Technology providers: analytics, visualization
and dashboards, DIY solutions, data integration
KEY PRIORITIES FOR TECH SPENDING: KEY PRIORITIES FOR TECH SPENDING:
BUYER SEGMENT SUPPLIER PROFESSIONAL FOCUS
54% 69%
50% 38%
Analytics Analytics
66% 55%
56% 46%
75%
42%
32% 63%
Visualization and dashboards
37% 81%
Sample quality and/
32% or management 52%
39%
38% 46%
39%
Data collection techniques
50% 61%
50% 77%
Data collection techniques 53%
38% 47%
45% 50%
DIY solutions
37%
47% 56%
38%
34% Visualization and dashboards 40%
Data integration including
warehousing and meta- 32% 45%
analysis platforms 26% 69%
44%
39%
23% Data integration including 19%
Sample quality and/ 34% warehousing and meta-
or management 22%
34% analysis platforms 24%
44%
48%
20%
39%
New data types (e.g., 23%
passive data, visual data) 35%
39% DIY solutions 26%
29%
33%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 69%
54
GRIT Commentary
55
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Criteria to Prioritize
Methods and Approaches
When buyers or suppliers choose methods or of synthesis with other data sources (37%, up from
approaches, it is no surprise when their top priorities 25%), and scalability (31%, up from 25%) have ticked
are “better”, “cheaper”, then “faster.” For buyers, up in importance. All the pressures and constraints
these criteria in this order remain the same as they of the pandemic seem to have placed more urgency
were in 19W2, although speed may be somewhat on maximizing the value and scope of each method
more urgent (57% key priority, up from 52%) and and approach, especially if it can be delivered faster.
quality a little less (89%, down from 94%; still
dominant). Total cost is similar to 19W2 (60% vs. 61%), Among buyers, there is a clear hierarchy across
but innovative approach (45%, up from 30%), ease criteria considered as key priorities. When secondary
priorities are considered, the hierarchy is less clear.
KEY PRIORITIES FOR METHOD SELECTION: 20W2 VS. 19W2 (BUYER) Everyone considers quality to be some kind of
priority, but the “other criteria” cluster within a
Quality of insights generated 89%
94% narrow band between 80% and 94%. Key priorities
60%
for methods and approaches vary across buyer
Total cost, including price
61% segments. Each type of function seems to be best
Total cost,
including price 60% 34% 6%
56
KEY PRIORITIES FOR METHOD SELECTION: BUYER SEGMENT
94%
89%
Quality of insights generated
82%
82%
69%
Each type of function seems to
57%
Total cost, including price be best distinguished by which
42%
59% criteria they de-emphasize
compared to other functions
58%
50%
Speed of results
58%
65%
37%
48%
Innovative approach
50%
56%
32%
23%
Ease of synthesis with other sources
29%
41%
32%
34%
Scalability
45%
47%
On the supplier side, 19W2 priorities were as KEY PRIORITIES FOR METHOD SELECTION: 20W2 VS. 19W2
(SUPPLIER)
predictable as can be: “better” (90%) “cheaper” (57%),
91%
Quality of insights generated
then “faster” (53%). Along came 2020, and their 90%
57
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
For suppliers, when secondary priorities are zz Full service: quality of insights and cost
considered, virtually everyone agrees that quality zz Field service: quality of insights, cost, speed of
and speed are important, and the other criteria results, and innovative approach
cluster in a narrow band between 80% and 94%. Key zz Strategic consultancy: quality of insights and
priorities for methods and approaches vary across innovative approach, and ease of synthesis with
supplier professional focus areas. Each supplier other sources
focus area is distinguished by how it prioritizes zz Data and analytics providers: no unique priorities
these criteria: zz Technology providers: scalability and ease of
synthesis with other sources
92%
88%
Quality of insights generated 97%
81%
83%
61%
77%
Speed of results 66%
68%
67%
59%
The percentage of suppliers 69%
Innovative approach 65%
who say cost is a key priority 56%
has not changed, but cost has 54%
34%
46%
Scalability 42%
49%
67%
26%
31%
Ease of synthesis with other sources 45%
40%
48%
58
Data & Analytics Provider (n=80) Technology Provider (n=52)
Overall, buyers and suppliers place similar emphasis KEY PRIORITIES FOR METHOD SELECTION: BUYER VS. SUPPLIER
on quality of insights and total cost, and these are
89%
key priorities for most of each group. Suppliers Quality of insights generated
91%
Scalability 31%
41%
59
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
KEY DECISION FACTORS WHEN CHOOSING POTENTIAL PARTNERS In this light, we can understand why some supplier/
OR SUPPLIERS: 20W2 VS. 19W2 (BUYER)
partner criteria dropped slightly in priority: some
buyers are more willing to change their evaluation
80%
Data quality
85% process to get a new solution. The sharp drop in the
Service levels
56% priority of relationship is the strongest clue because
58%
it suggests that some buyers are more open to
41%
General pricing
46% working with new suppliers and partners. The next
8% 2. Service levels
Global offices
11%
3. General pricing
Support for social 8%
causes or issues 0%
4. Innovative approach or tools
60
Key decision factor Significant consideration Not usually significant (n=215)
Each buyer segment places a similar emphasis KEY DECISION FACTORS WHEN CHOOSING POTENTIAL PARTNERS OR
SUPPLIERS: BUYER SEGMENT
on data quality as the top criteria when
79%
selecting suppliers or partners. After that,
Data quality 77%
some buyer functions place more emphasis on 84%
79%
different criterion:
60%
zz Hybrid: data quality and service levels are as Service levels 41%
63%
important to them as to others, but no other 59%
criteria stand out 39%
45%
zz In-house researcher: general pricing and General pricing
37%
innovative approach or tools 44%
34%
zz Strategic insights consultant: innovative
Innovative approach 41%
approach or tools and thought leadership or tools 29%
50%
zz Others (including data analysts and outsourcers):
33%
general pricing, reputation, thought leadership, Thought leadership
48%
53%
relationship, use of technology in communicating 32%
or sharing, support for social issues or causes, 29%
41%
local to me, and size of the organization Reputation
37%
56%
29%
Relationship with me 39%
or my organization 50%
50%
27%
Each buyer segment places similar emphasis Use of technology in 34%
research and analysis 32%
on data quality as the top criterion when 35%
selecting suppliers or partners
11%
Use of technology in 14%
communication or sharing 13%
24%
9%
18%
Negotiated rate cards
18%
35%
6%
9%
Diversity of staff
5%
15%
5%
5%
Local to me
5%
26%
5%
As with buyers, data quality and service levels
9%
Global offices
are clearly the two most important criteria 13%
24%
5%
Support for social 7%
causes or issues 5%
21%
1%
2%
Size of organization
11%
18%
61
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
KEY DECISION FACTORS WHEN CHOOSING POTENTIAL PARTNERS When suppliers prioritize criteria for selecting
OR SUPPLIERS: 20W2 VS. 19W2 (SUPPLIER)
partners and suppliers, the trend is similar to the
buyer pattern. Similar to buyers, data quality and
86%
Data quality
84% service levels are the two most important criteria. As
Service levels
58% with buyers, relationship plunged, from a solid third
64%
ranked to sixth in 20W2 (44%, down from 55%), but
47%
General pricing
48% reputation also fell from fourth to eighth (49%, down
Relationship with me 44% to 41%). After those two, the biggest change was
or my organization 55%
service levels (58%, down from 64%), but no other
42%
Innovative approach or tools
38% changes are noteworthy. The new criteria debuted
41% almost identically to their positions for buyers; use
Reputation
49%
of technology for communication and sharing was
Use of technology in 36%
research and analysis 35% ninth (21%); diversity of staff, eleventh (10%), and
28% support for social causes and issues, thirteenth (8%).
Thought leadership
32%
7% 6. Reputation
Global offices
7% 7. Use of technology in research and analysis
6%
Size of organization 8. Thought leadership
4%
9. Use of technology in communication and sharing
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
20W2 (n=591) 19W2 (n=790)
62
By primary professional focus, the following criteria KEY DECISION FACTORS WHEN CHOOSING POTENTIAL PARTNERS OR
SUPPLIERS: SUPPLIER PROFESSIONAL FOCUS
are higher priority for suppliers:
89%
zz Full service provider: data quality, service levels, 81%
Data quality 83%
and general pricing 85%
81%
zz Field service provider: general pricing, reputation,
60%
thought leadership, and local to me 50%
Service levels 64%
zz Strategic consultancy: service levels, innovative 56%
37%
approach or tools, reputation, and thought 53%
50%
leadership General pricing 35%
44%
zz Data and analytics provider: use of technology 38%
in communication and sharing, negotiated rate 45%
Relationship with me 42%
cards, size of organization, and support for social or my organization 45%
43%
causes and issues 37%
40%
zz Technology provider: use of technology in 27%
Innovative approach or tools 50%
research and analysis 44%
44%
38%
50%
Reputation 49%
43%
37%
Key decision factors for selecting suppliers 31%
and partners do not differ substantially Use of technology in 31%
research and analysis 34%
between buyers and suppliers 46%
60%
23%
35%
Thought leadership 44%
29%
19%
18%
12%
Use of technology in
25%
communication or sharing
31%
Key decision factors for selecting suppliers and 27%
12%
partners do not differ substantially between buyers 15%
Negotiated rate cards 13%
and suppliers. For suppliers, higher priority is 23%
10%
given to data quality (86% to 80%), general pricing
10%
(47% to 41%), relationship (44% to 37%), and use of 19%
Local to me 10%
technology in research and analysis (36% to 30%). 13%
6%
Buyers place more emphasis on thought leadership 7%
15%
(38% to 28%). None of these differences, however, Diversity of staff 15%
18%
make a difference in the order of priority. 12%
6%
8%
Global offices 8%
13%
10%
5%
4%
Support for social
13%
causes or issues
18%
10%
5%
4%
Size of organization 3%
13%
6%
86%
80% 80%
60% 56%
58%
47%
44%
41% 42% 41%
40% 39% 38% 37% 37% 36%
30%
28%
21%
20% 17%
14% 14%
10% 10% 10%
8% 8% 8% 8% 7% 6% 6%
0%
Data quality
Service levels
General pricing
Innovative approach
or tools
Thought leadership
Relationship
with me or my
organization
Reputation
Use of technology
in research and
analysis
Use of technology
in communication or
sharing
Negotiated rate
cards
Diversity of staff
Local to me
Global offices
Size of organization
Buyer (n=215) Supplier (n=591)
65
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Supplier
Performance
Since 19W2, buyer satisfaction with suppliers has decreased arising from the pandemic. Deprived of the ability to match
overall and on important aspects, such as understanding preferred suppliers to specific situations, buyers may be
the issue to be researched, conducting the research, and settling for the service and deliverables they can afford
implementing the research plan. Reduced satisfaction may instead of the service and deliverables to which they are
be due, in part, to the fact that buyers are working with a accustomed.
reduced set of suppliers because of financial pressures
Generally speaking, buyers and suppliers have whether those particular buyer expectations apply
similar views of supplier performance. However, to their professional focus area or not, and, if so,
they are not aligned on some of buyers’ key determine what gaps need to be closed.
satisfaction drivers, and suppliers need to evaluate
66
SUPPLIER PERFORMANCE, TABLE 1
Buyer
19W2 20W2
Types of Provider
Rarely or Rarely or
Work With Work With Work With Work With
Never Work Never Work
Regularly Occasionally Regularly Occasionally
With With
Data & Analytics Provider 40% 36% 23% 29% 42% 29%
n = 295 n = 271
In 19W2, overall satisfaction was highest among difference is negligible as all supplier types but data
buyers who worked regularly with strategy and analytics providers are clustered within 3% of
consultants (74%). Since then, overall satisfaction each other. Satisfaction among those who regularly
within that group has dropped 15%, to 59%. Those use data and analytics providers also dropped 15%,
who work regularly with strategy consultants from 61% in 19W2 to 46%.
are still more satisfied than anyone else, but the
67
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
For some buyers the potentially What happened? Did strategy consultants and data However, there is a much more plausible hypothesis:
critical synergy derived from and analytics providers suddenly start providing in GRIT, buyers express their satisfaction with
using a strategy consultant poor results, poor service, and/or poor value for the their portfolios of suppliers, and portfolios that
in tandem with a data and
cost? It’s possible. Suppose the constraints imposed included regular use of strategy consultants and
analytics provider may not have
upon them by the pandemic prevented them from data and analytics providers may have collapsed
been sustainable in 2020
providing a valuable service; e.g., they no longer in 2020. In 19W2, 71% of portfolios that included
had the staff to support projects or clients could no regular use of strategy consultancies also included
longer put in the effort or provide the access needed regular use of data and analytics providers; in 20W2,
to conduct successful projects. Perhaps clients only 59% included regular use of them. Similarly,
could not afford the level of project they were used 45% of 19W2 portfolios that included regular use of
to receiving and bought watered-down versions data and analytics providers also included regular
from their incumbent providers or poor work from use of strategy consultants; in 20W2, only 37% did.
cut-rate ones. Maybe the evolution of supplier This is a simple example of how for some buyers
categories discussed in previous GRIT Reports has the potentially critical synergy derived from using
resulted in diluted offerings as data and analytics a strategy consultant in tandem with a data and
providers try to take on full-service work, full- analytics provider may not have been sustainable
service providers add data analytics or reposition in 2020, and the use of one without the other may
themselves as strategy consultants, and so on. These not have provided sufficient value. There are other
are possible explanations for the precipitous drops possible combinations that were affordable before
in satisfaction. the pandemic but not sustainable after it hit,
combinations that needed each of its components in
order to meet client needs.
68
SUPPLIER PERFORMANCE, Table 3
Top 2
Delta
Aspects sorted by change in score Scope 16W2 17W2 18W2 19W2 20W2 Box
%
Rank
Overall satisfaction with strategic aspects Strategic 46% 50% 47% 51% 52% 1%
Overall satisfaction with tactical aspects Tactical 39% 51% 54% 50% 53% 3%
Conducting the research Strategic 70% 74% 70% 74% 70% -4% 1
Implementing the research plan Tactical – 71% 69% 70% 66% -4% 2
Understanding the issue to be researched Strategic 53% 58% 58% 63% 56% -7% 8
Project management related Research relevant to organization Data analysis and reporting Value for cost
69
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
SATISFACTION WITH SUPPLIERS ON STRATEGIC ASPECTS: TYPE WORK WITH REGULARLY (BUYER, % TOP 2 BOX)
100%
84%
81%
80%
80%
79% 67% 63%
66%
77% 65%
71%
74% 63%
61% 59%
65%
59% 56%
60% 59% 62% 62%
58% 58% 58% 53% 55% 54%
57% 58% 53% 50% 50%
55% 48%
56% 60%
46% 51% 43%
51%
47% 51% 47%
40% 51% 42%
41% 35%
31%
26%
20%
0%
Overall Conducting the Understanding Designing the Interacting Reporting Understanding Recommending
satisfaction research the issue to be research plan with senior research results your business business
researched management actions based
on the research
70
The next chart shows similar information for the zz Technology provider portfolios are lower rated
tactical aspects, with a few highlights: on implementing the research plan
zz Strategy consultant portfolios stand out zz Field service provider portfolios are lower rated
positively for managing scope or product on data analysis
specification changes zz The most differentiating tactical aspects are
zz Data and analytics provider portfolios tend to managing scope or product specification changes
be lower rated, especially for implementing the and data analysis
research plan and managing scope or product
specification changes
SATISFACTION WITH SUPPLIERS ON TACTICAL ASPECTS: TYPE WORK WITH REGULARLY (BUYER, % TOP 2 BOX)
100%
32%
30%
20%
0%
Overall Implementing Adjusting to Managing Project Timeliness of Data analysis Value for cost Data
satisfaction the research COVID-19 scope or management/ deliverables visualization
plan impact project service
specification
change
Full Service (n=143) Qualitatve Research (n=120) Field Service (n=74) Strategic Consultancy (n=49)
Data & Analytics Provider (n=79) Technology Provider (n=70)
This analysis by regular use shows that when zz Portfolios in which data and analytics providers This analysis by regular use
strategy consultants are a regular part of the mix, are used occasionally have higher satisfaction shows that when strategy
good (or, at least, better) things are more likely to with designing the research plan and interacting consultants are a regular
part of the mix, good (or,
happen. However, only 18% of buyers work with with senior management
at least, better) things are
them regularly, implying that most buyers are not zz The most differentiating strategic aspect is
more likely to happen
getting the best supplier experience available. managing scope or product specification changes
Looking at satisfaction on strategic aspects These findings do not necessarily mean that
when each supplier type is used occasionally yields data and analytics providers are good at designing
some observations: the research plan and interacting with senior
zz Overall satisfaction with a portfolio is generally management. For example, they might mean
lower when its only defining characteristic is that another type of supplier, such as a strategy
occasional use of a supplier type consultant, led the project and decided to include
zz Overall satisfaction is highest when data and a role for a data and analytics provider in the
analytics providers are used occasionally; the research design.
opposite finding from when they are used
regularly
71
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
SATISFACTION WITH SUPPLIERS ON STRATEGIC ASPECTS: TYPE WORK WITH OCCASIONALLY (BUYER, % TOP 2 BOX)
100%
80%
67%
67%
0%
Overall Conducting the Designing the Interacting Understanding Reporting Understanding Recommending
satisfaction research research plan with senior the issue to be research results your business business
management researched actions based
on the research
Full Service (n=143) Qualitatve Research (n=120) Field Service (n=74) Strategic Consultancy (n=49)
Data & Analytics Provider (n=79) Technology Provider (n=70)
With respect to tactical aspects, a couple of Insights work that includes field service or
observations about portfolios in which suppliers qualitative research may have the highest potential
types are used occasionally jump out: for in-person human interaction. It’s possible that
zz Adjusting to COVID-19 impact has the widest buyers are less satisfied with how these projects
satisfaction range, with portfolios that have adjusted to COVID-19 because they don’t like
occasionally use field service and/or qualitative how the human interaction has been handled or
research providers on the low end replaced. Another possibility is that the providers
zz The next widest range occurs with data have introduced more restrictions on the work,
visualization; portfolios that occasionally use making it more difficult or expensive to execute.
qualitative researchers are on the high end and
those that occasionally use technology providers
are on the low end
SATISFACTION WITH SUPPLIERS ON TACTICAL ASPECTS: TYPE WORK WITH OCCASIONALLY (BUYER, % TOP 2 BOX)
100%
80% 69%
64%
63% 56% 60%
60% 53% 56%
51% 56% 55%
59% 55% 56% 57%
60% 66% 54% 56%
54%
49% 54%
58% 58% 55% 40%
48% 48% 48% 57% 58% 38%
51% 53%
46% 51% 51% 53% 50% 30%
40% 48% 49% 51% 48% 34% 33%
51% 28%
48% 26%
32%
31% 26%
20%
21%
24%
0%
Overall Adjusting to Implementing Timeliness of Managing Data analysis Project Value for cost Data
satisfaction COVID-19 the research deliverables scope or management/ visualization
impact plan project service
specification
change
Full Service (n=143) Qualitatve Research (n=120) Field Service (n=74) Strategic Consultancy (n=49)
72
Data & Analytics Provider (n=79) Technology Provider (n=70)
This analysis has presented very simple examples that satisfaction with suppliers may be driven The analysis is consistent with
of supplier portfolios defined by one supplier type more by the configuration of a portfolio than by the hypothesis that satisfaction
and one level of usage. Though portfolios with experience with any particular supplier or supplier with suppliers may be driven
more by the configuration
multiple supplier types and different levels of type. For example, the analysis suggests that
of a portfolio than by
usage are clearly more in line with reality. Perhaps satisfaction may be enhanced in certain situations
experience with any particular
fully specifying portfolios along these dimensions when occasional use of a data and analytics provider supplier or supplier type
would discover even stronger relationships between complements use of other suppliers in the portfolio,
satisfaction and how suppliers are used. Short of but perhaps not when a data and analytics provider
that, the analysis is consistent with the hypothesis is used regularly.
73
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
SUPPLIER PERFORMANCE DRIVERS: STRATEGIC ASPECTS (BUYERS) A similar analysis of the tactical aspects found
data visualization to be the strongest driver of
Conducting the research 32
satisfaction with supplier performance. Followed
Understanding the issue
to be researched
23 by, somewhat surprisingly, adjusting to the
Recommending business
of making adjustments for COVID-19 is a good
10
actions based on the research
example of how drivers can change from time
Reporting research results 9
to time: we can assume this would have had no
Understanding your business 6 significance in 19W2. The finding immediately
SUPPLIER PERFORMANCE DRIVERS: TACTICAL ASPECTS (BUYERS) The next tier of tactical drivers consists of project
management and service and value for cost. The
Data visualization 27
final tier includes implementing the research plan
Adjusting to COVID-19 impact 21 and timeliness of deliverables. Data analysis and
Project management/service 15 managing scope and project specification changes
did not drive overall satisfaction in this analysis.
Value for cost 14
0 10 20 30 40 50
Relative Impact on overall satisfaction
74
Suppliers’ Perceptions of Performance
Suppliers were asked their opinion of how well zz Data and analytics providers: none
suppliers who share their professional focus meet zz Technology provider: none
client needs overall and on the same 15 aspects Notable lower self-ratings come from specialists
evaluated by buyers. Overall, full and field service on aspects in which they would not normally be
providers gave their segments higher ratings (60% expected to patriciate:
and 65% completely meet needs/meet needs very zz Field service providers: designing the research
well, respectively) than strategy consultants (52%), plan, reporting research results, understanding
data and analytics providers (46%) and technology the issue to be researched, and recommending
providers (38%). business actions based on the research With respect to strategic
With respect to strategic aspects, full-service zz Data and analytics providers: interacting with aspects, full-service providers
providers see themselves as performing well when senior management, understanding their see themselves as performing
well when the research is
the research is the main focus, strategy consultants business, and recommending business actions
the main focus, strategy
see themselves as strong across the board, and the based on the research
consultants see themselves
other supplier types don’t seem to see themselves as zz Technology providers: designing the research as strong across the board
very strongly positioned on strategic aspects. Higher plan, understanding the issue to be researched,
self-ratings went to: interacting with senior management,
zz Full-service providers: conducting the research, understanding their business, and recommending
designing the research plan, reporting research business actions based on the research
results, and understanding the issue to be
researched
zz Field service providers: none
zz Strategy consultants: all
PERCEPTION OF SATISFACTION ON STRATEGIC ASPECTS WITH SUPPLIERS IN THEIR SEGMENT (SUPPLIER; %TOP 2 BOX)
100%
87%
80% 80%
77%
74% 73%
71% 72% 71%
68%67% 69%
67%
65% 64%
61% 62% 62%
60% 60%
58% 58% 57%
56% 56% 55%
52% 52% 53%
50%49%
46% 45% 46%
41% 42%
40% 40% 40%
38% 37%
33%
31%
20%
0%
Overall Conducting the Designing the Reporting Understanding Interacting Understanding Recommending
satisfaction research research plan research results the issue to be with senior your business business actions
researched management based on the
research
Full service provider (n=289) Field service provider (n=26) Strategic consultancy (n=122)
Data and analytics provider (n=80) Technology provider (n=52)
75
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
PERCEPTION OF SATISFACTION ON TACTICAL ASPECTS WITH SUPPLIERS IN THEIR SEGMENT (SUPPLIER; %TOP 2 BOX)
100%
80% 78%
76% 76%
73%
68% 69%
66% 67%
65% 65% 65% 65% 65% 64%
63%
60% 59%59% 59%
60% 58% 57% 58%59%57% 58%
55%
52% 53%54% 54%
52%
50% 49% 50%
46% 47%
44% 45% 44%
43%
40% 41%
40% 38% 37% 36%
20%
0%
Overall Implementing Data Project Timeliness of Adjusting to Managing Value for cost Data analysis
satisfaction the research plan visualization management/ deliverables COVID-19 impact scope or project
service specification
change
Full service provider (n=289) Field service provider (n=26) Strategic consultancy (n=122)
Data and analytics provider (n=80) Technology provider (n=52)
Supplier self-ratings align with buyer ratings in suppliers are over-confident and negative scores
some ways, but diverge in others. Table 4 shows reflect under-confidence. Table 4 is sorted from most
top 2 box scores for buyers and suppliers; however, over-confident to most under-confident.
because they answered different questions, it may be By far, the biggest area of over-confidence
more relevant to compare the rank order. is data visualization with a gap of 41%. A
By far, the biggest area of First, taking the top 2 box scores at face possible driver of this difference may be various
over-confidence is data value, we’ll revisit previous GRIT Reports which interpretations of what data visualization means,
visualization with a gap of 41%. subtracted the buyer scores from the supplier scores. and buyers may have a more sophisticated view
Interestingly, the overall ratings are fairly close, than most suppliers. The next biggest areas of
51% for buyers to 55% for suppliers. In this analysis, over-confidence are recommending business actions
positive differences are considered to be areas where (20%) and reporting research results (18%). Other
76
areas with a gap of 10% or more are understanding be researched (#8 versus #7), interacting with senior
their business (12%), designing the research plan (11%), management (both #10), understanding their business
value for cost (10%), and conducting the research (#12 versus #11), and recommending actions (#14
(10%). Unfortunately, three of these are satisfaction versus #13). Buyers and suppliers are perfectly aligned
drivers for buyers: data visualization, conducting the on the top two areas of performance and well aligned
research, and value for cost. on five other aspects in the buyers’ top 10.
At the “under-confident” end of the scale, the However, there are aspects which are
only aspect that jumps out is data analysis. However, misaligned, and the most danger for suppliers is
some types of suppliers do not do much data analysis; to over-estimate performance where buyers think
this gap may be irrelevant if the suppliers who are they do poorly. These areas are data visualization
more responsible for it are aligned with buyers. (dead last for buyers, #4 for suppliers) and reporting
With respect to the rank order, buyers and research results (#11 versus #5). Suppliers should take
suppliers are aligned on conducting the research a moment to consider whether these are aspects on
(both #1), implementing the research plan (both #2), which they are expected to deliver. Then evaluate
designing the research plan (#4 versus #3), project how well they are aligned with client expectations of
management and service (both #6), timeliness of visualization and reporting,
deliverables (#7 versus #8), understanding the issue to
Top 2 Box %
Delta
Buyer Supplier
Scope Buyer Supplier (Supplier
Rank Rank
– Buyer)
Recommending business actions based on the research Strategic 31% 51% 20% 14 13
77
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
78
79
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Business Outlook
The starkest indications of the profound impact of 2020 on transformation is significantly impacting the business itself.
the insights and analytics industry can be found in our analysis Buyers are doing more with less and often doing it themselves.
of the business outlook. Throughout this report we have Traditional suppliers are scrambling to find new business models
shown how the role of technology in reshaping the practice of and value propositions, and technology providers continue to
research has accelerated, but herein we demonstrate how that gain strength while redefining mainstream insights work.
60% 60%
42% 46%
51% 55%
52% 38%
44%
40% 44% 40%
61%
24%
20% 20% 25% 21%
28% 25% 25%
20% 23%
8% 12% 8% 10%
0% 0%
20W1 20W1 After 20W2 20W1 20W1 After 20W2 20W1 Before 20W1 After 20W2
Before March 11 (n=267) Before March 11 (n=271) March 11 March 11 (n=219)
March 11 (n=83) March 11 (n=83) (n=83) (n=234)
(n=41) (n=40)
80
Suppliers have experienced something quite wave, the GRIT Report, without fail, shows supplier The revenue downturn is
different. Similar to buyers perspective in the revenue increases more than doubling decreases. sobering. If the number
spring on budgets, suppliers didn’t see much change The suspicion is that GRIT would never see a lower of suppliers reporting a
revenue decrease was only
in revenue because it was a 12 month look back. ratio because suppliers who consistently lose
half of this amount, it would
Their optimism about the insights industry didn’t revenue eventually disappear, but 2020 has been an
still be unprecedented
change, but they became less optimistic about endless series of bad surprises. The revenue trend In the GRIT Report
their company. As with buyers, optimism about pattern suggests that many suppliers are running
the insights industry rebounded strongly in the on fumes, trying to outlast the pandemic. Yet, if
fall. However, supplier revenue fell off a cliff, and that were the case, optimism about their company
optimism about their company grew even weaker. wouldn’t have weakened, it would have collapsed.
The revenue downturn is sobering. If the This leads one to speculate that the reason why
number of suppliers reporting a revenue decrease there is any optimism at all is because the supplier
was only half of this amount, it would still be employees most at risk are already gone while a few
unprecedented In the GRIT Report. Wave after mildly relieved survivors remain.
33% 29%
60% 60%
45% 37% 35%
50% 50%
50%
45%
40% 40% 19%
49% 18%
20% 20% 37% 39%
34%
23% 22% 25% 23%
14%
0% 0%
20W1 20W1 After 20W2 20W1 20W1 After 20W2 20W1 Before 20W1 After 20W2
Before March 11 (n=267) Before March 11 (n=271) March 11 March 11 (n=219)
March 11 (n=83) March 11 (n=83) (n=83) (n=234)
(n=41) (n=40)
The 20W1 analysis did not identify any downturn in time, but each of these trends continued with the
in project spending or supplier revenue, but there fall wave. Instances of research project budgets of
were some clues about what was to come. Buyers $20MM or more are one-third of what was measured
surveyed after the COVID-19 tipping point were in early March, and the instances of buyer project
only about half as likely to have annual project volumes exceeding 250 have declined at a similar
budgets of $20MM+ as buyers who took the survey rate. (Caveat: it can be difficult to compare budgets
earlier. The percentages of buyers and suppliers reported in the spring to budgets reported in the fall,
reporting annual research project volumes of 250 or and GRIT usually compares spring to spring and fall
more also declined. These may be spurious results to fall).
caused by uneven sampling across different points
81
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
ANNUAL RESEARCH PROJECT BUDGETS, PROJECT VOLUMES, & COVID-19 EFFECT (BUYER & SUPPLIER)
30%
Annual Research Project
Budget $20MM or More 16%
10%
34%
Annaul Project Volume
250 or More (Buyers) 27%
13%
57%
Annaul Project Volume
250 or More (Suppliers) 49%
37%
80%
59%
60%
44% 44%
% 45% 44% 45%
38% 39% 38% 39% 39% 35%
40% 45% 32%
43% 42% 35%
37% 40% 35% 34%
36% 33%
26% 27% 32% 34% 29%
20% 27% 27% 29% 27% 22%
19% 16% 19%
13% 13% 16%
0%
2014 15W1 15W2 16W1 16W2 17W1 17W2 18W1 18W2 19W1 19W2 20W1 20W2
(n=239) (n=371) (n=196) (n=455) (n=322) (n=585) (n=316) (n=847) (n=303) (n=764) (n=296) (n=317) (n=221)
82
While the percentages of buyers who increase Focusing on the second GRIT wave of each year Compared to last year, the
and decrease, research budgets is one of GRIT’s since 17W2, the percentage of small budgets ($1MM) proportions of budgets in
oldest metrics and provides a snapshot of what fluctuates more than any other category. In this categories above $3MM
are stable; the under $1MM
research professionals as a population are GRIT wave, it is the largest recorded percentage yet
category has grown at
experiencing, we know that all budgets are not (43%). The largest budget category shown in the
the expense of the $1MM
equal and there is more to the story. As mentioned accompanying table and chart, more than $10MM, to $3MM category
earlier, the percentage of large budgets ($20MM fluctuates the least, but has declined gradually
or more) appears to have decreased dramatically and consistently since 17W2, from its high of 16%
in the COVID-19 era, and it would take a lot of to its new low of 12%. Compared to last year, the
individual increases from smaller budgets to replace proportions of budgets in categories above $3MM
that spending. are stable; the under $1MM category has grown at
the expense of the $1MM to $3MM category.
BUSINESS OUTLOOK, Table 1
20% 43%
37% 35% 36%
32% 32% 31% 31%
0%
17W1 17W2 18W1 18W2 19W1 19W2 20W1 20W2
(n=555) (n=298) (n=762) (n=286) (n=653) (n=255) (n=307) (n=221)
More than $15MM $10MM to $15MM $3MM to $10MM $1MM to $3MM Under $1MM
83
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
In fact, 30% of buyers with budgets under $1MM The stability of the sizes of the two largest
experienced a budget decrease, and it is likely that categories may not be as reassuring as it seems at
most of these were in the $1MM to $3MM category first glance. In the $3MM to $15MM category, 36%
last year, accounting for the shift in category saw budget increases, but a larger percentage (40%)
size. The same proportion of buyers with current experienced decreases. We don’t know how many
budgets of $1MM to $3MM saw decreases, and we of these decreases were formerly in the more than
do not know how many of these were in the same $15MM category last year; these could represent
category last year versus how many were in a larger moderate losses to the industry or they could
budget category. represent large dollar amounts, depending on the
average magnitude. It’s potentially encouraging
ANNUAL RESEARCH PROJECT BUDGET SPENDING TREND: BUDGET to see that the category with the largest budget
SIZE (BUYER)
amounts saw more increases (29%) than decreases
84
Insights departments will respond to budget HOW INSIGHTS FUNCTION WILL RESPOND TO BUDGET DECREASE
(BUYER)
decreases similarly to how they would in the
Start looking into ways 57%
past. In both 20W1 and the current wave, buyers to do more with less 62%
increased corporate challenges (62%), but no other Management values the 41%
work and championed it 88%
driver was mentioned by a majority. Management
valuing and championing the work was the second Strong focus on delivering 33%
great value 81%
most significant driver (41%), followed by company
Company grew and 33%
growth and strong focus on delivering great value budget grew with it 66%
(33% each). In better days, budget increases may be
6%
Other factors
driven by multiple factors. When times are tough, 11%
however, the main driver of budget growth seems to 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
be the belief that these challenges can be addressed 20W2 (n=87) 20W1 (n=141)
85
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
60%
60% 64%
55% 56%
40% 49%
21% 19% 24% 25%
18% 18% 32%
20%
18% 17% 21% 19% 19%
0% 11% 8%
17W2 18W1 18W2 19W1 19W2 20W1 20W2
(n=1,080) (n=2,541) (n=874) (n=1,879) (n=771) (n=1,516) (n=748)
REVENUE TREND: SUPPLIER PROFESSIONAL FOCUS The devastation has not been equally distributed
100% across the industry because some professional focus
4%
13% areas were better positioned to succeed under the
21%
26% 16% conditions of the pandemic. Generally speaking,
31%
the more specialized the supplier, the better the
80%
22% chance of thriving. Put another way, suppliers
16% tended to be more successful when they offered
necessary services that buyers could not easily
11%
60% 36% 28% take in-house. Most technology providers have
26%
done well; their revenue trend looks very much
22% 31% like the trend lines from every other GRIT Report.
40%
Data and analytics providers have not done as well
16%
as technology providers, but they have done a lot
20%
18% better than generalists (full-service providers and
22% strategic consultancies). The next most specialized
16%
20%
supplier type, field service providers, have also done
15% 32%
better than the generalists, though not nearly as
22%
14% 15% well as data and analytics providers. If one accepts
8%
0% the argument that strategic consultancies are
Full service Field service Strategic Data and Technology
provider provider consultancy analytics provider more specialized than full-service providers, the
(n=391) (n=36) (n=141) provider (n=68)
(n=101) rule still applies. Among technology providers, 63%
Sig. increase Slight increase Same Slight decrease Sig. decrease experienced revenue increases while only 20% had
decreases. At the other end of the spectrum, only
23% of full-service providers increased revenue
while 57% saw their revenue decrease.
86
As discussed in past GRIT Reports, downturns often REVENUE TREND: EMPLOYEE SIZE (SUPPLIER)
hit the smallest companies hardest, but that is less 100%
the case during the pandemic. Among companies 13% 13%
18%
with 4 employees or fewer, 28% experienced revenue 21%
13%
19%
23%
33%
80%
The pandemic did not spare any region of the globe; 28%
in North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and the
30%
rest of the world, at least 41% of suppliers suffered 60% 33%
increases (22%). The rest of the world also has the 18%
most significant decreases (33%), ten points higher 16% 15%
10%
than Asia-Pacific, the next highest region (23%). 0%
4%
North America Europe Asia-Pacific Rest of World
(n=457) (n=142) (n=82) (n=67)
87
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
SIGNIFICANT FACTORS BEHIND REVENUE DECREASE (SUPPLIER) Most suppliers cited the unfavorable economy and
market conditions (88%) and decreases in clients’
88%
Economy/market conditions not favorable
40% budgets (65%) as significant drivers of the revenue
5%
Loss of key staff
9%
HOW ORGANIZATION WILL RESPOND TO THE REVENUE DECREASE Suppliers’ expected responses to the revenue
(SUPPLIER)
decreases are similar to the expected actions in the
Improve marketing and 50%
business development 60% spring, with two exceptions: fewer think they can
More vigorously promote the 48% address it by improving marketing and business
value our work delivers 44% development (50% versus 60%) and more think they
28%
Improve operations
26%
6%
Other actions
6%
88
GRIT Commentary
Among the 32% for whom revenue increased, most Although perhaps multiple narratives could be
explained it as the outcome of their strong focus on built from this, one that seems likely, given that we
delivering great value (57%), strong focus on client know specialists were the most likely to increase
experience and client needs (54%), growth of their revenue, is that specialists were competing against
Among the 32% for whom company’s reputation (54%), and increased client other supplier categories before the pandemic, but
revenue increased, most needs (51%). The main difference from 20W1 was not so much after it became a day-to-day reality.
explained it as the outcome the significance of the increase in client needs (only If they offered unique solutions, such as online
of their strong focus on
33% in 20W1) which jumped from ninth-ranked to platforms for quantitative research, the conditions
delivering great value (57%)
fourth most significant. A few other differences under the pandemic would render the use of
are noteworthy: traditional suppliers problematic for a number of
zz Strong focus on client experience and needs reasons while exposing the value of their solutions.
dropped from 70% to 54% and first place to If a client needed to conduct research but lacked
second the ability to hire a traditional supplier, the value
zz Strong, positive senior management leadership of the technology solution would become clear to
fell from 54% to 45% and remained fifth them. Tech providers would no longer have to put
zz Strong focus on innovation dropped from 63% to significant effort into differentiating their service
45% and tied for second to sixth from more familiar ones, and perhaps new clients
zz Strong portfolio of offerings fell from 53% to 43% would seek them out even if they had not been
and sixth to seventh targeted by the provider.
zz Marketing and business development efforts
improved dropped from 51% to 41% and seventh Such a narrative would explain why factors
to eighth such as focusing on client experience, strong
senior management leadership, and marketing
FACTORS BEHIND THE REVENUE INCREASE (SUPPLIER) and business development were considered less
significant; the client would be mostly pre-sold on
57%
Strong focus on delivering great value
63% the concept. It would also explain why innovation
44%
Strong focus on innovation
63%
Other factors 6%
3%
90
Staff Size Trends
Staff sizes are trending downward compared to CHANGE IN NUMBER OF FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT POSITIONS:
GRIT WAVE (BUYER)
20W1, but, somewhat surprisingly, are not much 100%
different from previous waves. Among buyers, 80%
staff size increases are at their lowest (24%), but 60% 51% 49%
45% 45% 46%
the trends for decreases and no changes are very 40%
54%
28% 28%
38% 24%
34% 36%
similar to 19W1 and 19W2. The base rate for buyers 20%
20% 19% 21% 23% 16% 22%
decreasing staff has hovered around 20% since 0%
17W2 18W2 19W1 19W2 20W1 20W2
17W2, the first measurement. Most of the wave-to- (n=343) (n=329) (n=844) (n=287) (n=331) (n=267)
wave movement has been between increases and Increase About the same Decrease
91
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
CHANGE IN NUMBER OF FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT POSITIONS: For the first time, GRIT buyer respondents were
DEPARTMENT SIZE (BUYER)
asked for the size of their department (suppliers
100% were not). Looking at department size trends with
6% 7% 7%
the department size as the frame of reference
9%
10%
proves to be a bit more unsettling. Departments
80%
31% with 4 employees or fewer were stable; 71% reported
no change and increases and decreases are nearly
9%
with 101 to 500 employees were not much different
80% 20% 22%
as 49% experienced decreases compared to 21% who
increased. This seems like a lot of personnel loss.
31%
40%
60% Earlier, we discussed how companies with 21
14%
as size categories represent larger companies. On the
6% 8% 8% 10%
0% 2% increase side, however, the middle-sized suppliers
4 or fewer 5 to 20 21 to 100 101 to 500 More than 500
(n=126) (n=165) (n=196) (n=131) (n=128) represent the apex of staff increases: the categories
Sig. increase Slight increase Same Slight decrease Sig. decrease to either side have fewer.
92
Buyer Performance Against Goals
Despite the challenges posed by the pandemic, PERFORMANCE AGAINST RESEARCH AND INSIGHTS/ANALYTICS GOALS:
GRIT WAVE (BUYER)
buyers met or exceeded their department’s goals 100%
experienced budget decreases. This is often the Exceeded goals Met goals Fell short of goals
40% 32%
to meet goals is harsher now that budget decreases
are more significant. 30%
20%
17%
18%
16%
6% 9%
0%
Exceeded Goals Met Goals Short of Goals
(n=105) (n=110) (n=47)
93
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
OPTIMISM ABOUT ROLE: RESEARCH PROJECT BUDGET SIZE TREND Optimism About Role at
AND PERFORMANCE AGAINST GOALS (BUYER)
100% 2% 1%
Company
3% 3% 4% 6%
5% 6% 6%
12% 10%
9%
13%
Budget trends and performance against goals are
23%
80% 28% related to optimism about the buyer’s role at their
company. When budgets increase, 83% of buyers are
28%
32%
optimistic; when budgets are static, only 74% are
60% 42%
38% optimistic; when they decrease, optimism drops to
52%. When goals are exceeded, optimism is at 79%;
52%
when met, 65%; and when departments fall short,
40% 48%
56%. Buyer optimism is clearly associated with
36% 46%
budget trends and performance against goals and
may be a function of one or both of these. Although
20% 41% 41%
budgets and performance against goals are directly
22%
16% 17% related, it is possible that a third circumstance drives
10%
0% all three.
Increased Stayed the Decreased Exceeded Met our Fell short
(n=86) Same (n=77) (n=104) goals (n=50) Finally, it is possible that it is more important
(n=95) (n=116)
to employee confidence to exceed goals than it is to
Very optimistic Optimistic Neither Pessimistic Very pessimistic
increase budgets. The optimism gap when budgets
are static versus increased is 9%; between exceeding
Budget trends and and meeting goals, it’s 14%. On the other hand,
performance against goals are a budget decrease may be a stronger signal that
related to optimism about the employees should be worried, compared to a failure
buyer’s role at their company
to meet goals. The optimism gap between meeting
goals and falling short is 9%; between static budgets
and decreases, it’s 22%. A budget decrease may be
a more tangible, unambiguous milestone than a
failure to meet goals.
94
For suppliers, revenue trends and performance PERFORMANCE AGAINST RESEARCH AND INSIGHTS/ANALYTICS GOALS:
REVENUE TREND (SUPPLIER)
against goals are directly related. When goals were 100%
6%
exceeded, 64% of suppliers increased revenue. 15%
15%
34%
When they met goals, only 25% increased revenue, 80%
and when they fell short, just 13% increased their 16% 32%
60%
revenue. The percentage whose revenue decreased
is only 21% when goals were exceeded, 47% when 33% 39%
40% 29%
they were merely met, and 73% when they were not
met. Because of the nature of their business model,
20% 15%
31% 15%
supplier goals have to be directly related to revenue
9%
10%
generation and revenue performance is often very 0% 4%
Exceeded Goals Met Goals Short of Goals
transparent to employees. (n=229) (n=225) (n=294)
Sig. increase Slight increase Same Slight decrease Sig. decrease
For suppliers, when revenue increases and goals maintaining revenue and meeting goals. Optimism For the first time since
are exceeded, optimism about the company is falls apart when revenue decreases or the company GRIT started tracking it,
similar, 89% and 87%, respectively. When revenue falls short of goals. Pessimism and indifference suppliers failed to meet
goals more often than they
stays the same and goals are met, optimism is also become more pronounced and optimism tumbles
met or exceeded them
similar, 85% and 81%, respectively. While both sets to 58% for revenue and 57% for goals. The optimism
of numbers seem comfortably high, the optimism metrics for revenue and performance against
related to revenue increases and exceeding goals are practically mirror images of each other,
goals is stronger because they include so many demonstrating how tightly entwined the two types
“very optimistic” (top box) ratings compared to of milestones are.
OPTIMISM ABOUT COMPANY: REVENUE TREND AND PERFORMANCE AGAINST GOALS (SUPPLIER)
100% 1% 1%
3% 3% 4% 4%
10% 11%
12% 13% 14%
16%
80%
26% 25%
46% 40%
60%
61%
64%
40%
48% 48%
43% 47%
20%
24%
17%
10% 9%
0%
Increased Stayed the Same Decreased Exceeded Met our goals Fell short
(n=237) (n=145) (n=364) (n=238) (n=228) (n=301)
95
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
ALL BUYERS
BUDGET GROWTH
-0.8
DEPT GROWTH
2.6
TECH INVESTMENT
27.6
100%
96
For context, the pre-pandemic budget growth trend and -26.9, respectively. Voice of the Customer, which
metric has been as high as 13.2 for hybrids, 20.3 for has been shrinking, and hybrid, which fluctuates
strategic insights consultants, and 45.2 for in-house have had negative scores in the past, possibly a
researchers, 8.3 for Voice of the Customer, and 34.5 testament to their tenuous staying power.
for other functions. Now, they stand at -9.9, 1.9, 26.5,
−10 −1 20
10 29 55
Hybrid of functions
13 8 47
−16 −6 0
2 8 36
Strategic insights 20 17 73
consultants
10 −7 47
1 19 0
27 4 38
45 42 70
In-house Researcher
5 15 31
44 4 0
8 −4 30
0 26 59
Voice of the customer
0 15 31
−18 6 0
−27 2 20
Other (Data analysts 35 52 79
& Outsourcer)
−5 0 47
26 12 0
−20 0 20 40 60 80 −20 0 20 40 60 80 0 20 40 60 80
20W2 20W1 19W2 19W1
97
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
RELATIVE SIZES OF PROFESSIONAL FOCUS CATEGORIES: GRIT WAVE Larger suppliers are very different from smaller
(SUPPLIER)
ones, and it is useful to segment full-service
19%
providers and strategic consultancies into smaller,
36%
Strategic Consultancy
30% larger, and largest categories.
32%
57%
Full and/or Field 28%
Service Provider 42%
32%
9%
21%
Technology Provider
12%
16%
13%
Data & Analytics 15%
Provider 14%
13%
2%
1%
Other Provider Type
2%
7%
Technology Provider 9%
22%
Specialists
(total) Full Service Agency
32% (11 to 1,000 employees)
Full Service Agencies 52%
(All sizes)
Strategic Consultancy Strategic Consultancies
(4 employees or fewer) 6% (All sizes)
19%
Strategic Consultancy
(5 to 100 employees) 8%
Strategic Consultancy
(More than 100 employees) 5%
Full Service Agency
Field Service Agency 5% 13% (10 or fewer employees)
(n=766)
98
Similar to the buyer segment discussion, a “health At the most granular level, we see every generalist These three metrics suggest
tree” diagram is presented that summarizes and sub-segment regardless of size struggling to increase that suppliers see the journey
compares each supplier professional focus segment revenue. Mid-size strategic consultants (-9.8) are upward must be enabled by
technology more than by
on revenue trend, department size trend, and faring best among them, while smaller strategic
manpower or womanpower
tech investment trend. At the top level, the earlier consultancies (-71.7) are the worst off. However,
discussions of revenue and department size trends that fact provides cold comfort to the largest full-
are clearly summarized: suppliers suffered deep service providers (-53.6) and the smallest (-58.6). The
revenue decreases (-22.6) and reductions in staff largest full-service providers (68.5) are shedding
(-14.7). Technology investment (28.3) remained staff more than any other segment, and the largest
solid if not robust, and these three metrics suggest strategic consultancies (58.8) are right behind them.
that suppliers see the journey upward must be Solid investment in technology is still possible for
enabled by technology more than by manpower mid-size strategic consultancies (48.3), field service
or womanpower. providers (42.9), the largest strategic consultancies
(27.3), and larger full service (26.1). Smaller strategic
The next level down summarizes other points consultancies (2.2) are treading water on tech
touched on earlier. Generalists (full/field service investment, and smaller full service (-6.2) and the
providers and strategic consultancies) are largest full-service providers (-5.8) are falling behind
experiencing steep drops in revenue and will have in technology investment.
to leverage technology to claw their way out of the
hole. In other words, any money they can make
available is better spent on technology than on
people for the near future. Specialists, on the other
hand, are seeing very solid revenue increases and can
re-invest in both technology and staff.
ALL SUPPLIERS
REVENUE GROWTH
-22.6
DEPT GROWTH
-14.7
TECH INVESTMENT
28.3
100%
FULL/FIELD STRATEGIC
SPECIALIST OTHER
SERVICE CONSULTANCY
REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH
-43.6 -32.6 36.7 9.1
DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH
-30.5 -15.6 26.5 -25.0
TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT
16.5 28.3 57.7 18.2
57% 19% 23% 1%
DATA &
LARGEST FULL LARGER FULL SMALLER FULL FIELD SERVICE LARGEST SC LARGER SC SMALLER SC TECHNOLOGY
ANALYTICS
REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH REVENUE GROWTH
-53.6 -39.3 -58.6 -22.2 -20.6 -9.8 -71.7 13.9 70.6
DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH DEPT GROWTH
-68.5 -22.8 -40.2 0.0 -58.8 -11.3 -20.0 10.9 49.3
TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT TECH INVESTMENT
-5.8 26.1 -6.2 42.9 27.3 48.3 2.2 49.0 70.6
7% 31% 13% 5% 5% 8% 6% 14% 9%
99
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
−33 −16 28
98 83 92
Strategic Consultancy
47 33 57
83 55 0
−44 −31 17
Full and/or Field 91 66 27
Service Provider 54 27 60
82 53 0
71 49 71
130 111 122
Technology Provider
75 57 87
131 85 0
14 11 49
Data & Analytics 104 88 97
Provider
63 33 68
89 64 0
9 −25 18
120 64 108
Other Provider Type
31 15 92
67 45 0
The specialist segments, technology providers, and To give these numbers more context, we can refer
data and analytics providers, are in much better to metrics from the past three waves. Across all
positions. For technology providers, revenue is very full/field service providers, their revenue trend
robust (70.6), as is department growth (49.3) and index has been as high as 91.1 and never lower than
technology investment (70.6). Their metrics look 54.3; it’s currently -43.6. For strategic consultancies,
nearly identical to pre-pandemic levels. Data and the revenue trend index has been as high as 97.8
analysis providers are positive, though not exactly and never lower than 46.8; currently, it sits at -32.6.
thriving, Revenue trends (13.9) and department By contrast, the highs for technology providers
growth trends (10.9) are positive though modest and data and analytics providers were 131.1 and
while tech investment is (49.0) is fairly robust. 103.7, respectively, and never lower than 75.0
and 62.5, respectively; now they are 70.6 and 13.9.
Although both types of specialists are better off
than generalists, only technology providers are
functioning at pre-pandemic levels.
100
Impact of COVID-19
By this point in the report, a discussion of how IMPACT OF COVID-19 (BUYER)
buyers and suppliers responded to direct questions
Ability to meet your
6% 17% 37% 35% 5%
about the impact of COVID-19 almost seems organization’s goals
were negatively impacted.
For 36% of buyers, COVID-19 had a positive impact
on overall research volume; it had a positive impact
on more buyers than for whom it had a negative Buyers need to do more themselves and
impact. Similarly, 33% said it had a positive impact have learned that technology providers
on technology investment, affecting more buyers can help them accomplish that
101
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
A deeper analysis might reveal more nuances, (31%). These numbers obviously don’t have a 1-to-1
but based on the results as presented, there’s an correspondence across buyers and suppliers – i.e.,
apparent disconnect when 36% of buyers say the if two buyers increase volume, it doesn’t mean
pandemic had a positive impact on research volume, two suppliers will also increase volume – but they
but only 24% of suppliers said so. COVID-19 had raise questions, such as whether the gap can be
a negative impact on research volume for 64% entirely explained by work taken in-house instead of
of suppliers, but only for half that many buyers using suppliers.
102
GRIT Commentary
103
THE GRIT
FUTURE LIST
The Next Generation of Insights Leaders
104
To the Future
of Insights
“Recognition is the art of remembering. While our minds might
be trained to recall and remember the past, we need to also
spend time remembering those who dedicate their energy
towards future-proofing our industry. We need to lift up those
who are pioneering, experimenting, and evolving the world of
insights 1.0 to 2.0” – Bianca Pryor, Future List Judge
GreenBook is proud to announce the third annual GRIT Future List—an awards With hundreds of nominations and very
program to inspire, support, and celebrate young leaders who are driving impressive submissions, this year’s judging
consumer insights forward in unexpected ways. The List recognizes leadership, process continues to be a challenging one.
professional growth, personal integrity, and a passion for excellence in the Each of these honorees has a decade or less
next generation of insights leaders. These honors have outstanding multi- in the insights industry, yet all are well on
disciplinary career performances, and a wide range of research, community their way to having a lasting impact on
roles, and entrepreneurial ambitions. They’ve published research, launched the direction of our field. We are thrilled to
companies, received numerous awards and accolades, and spoken at industry showcase these future leaders.
conferences around the world.
Anouar El Haji Bianca Pryor Dmitry Gaiduk Gregg Achibald Jamin Brazil
Veylinx BET Networks CoolTool Gen2 Advisors Happy Market Research
Jodie Wang Kristi Zuhlke Mario Carrasco Roben Allong Zontziry Johnson
Midea Knowledgehound ThinkNow Lightbeam Zappi
Communications
105
GRIT FUTURE LIST HONOREES
Mark Alvarez
Managing Director Philippines, InSites Consulting (Philippines)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mark-david-alvarez-71557635/
Rebaz Bahadeen
Operations Director and Co-founder, Thinkbank (Kurdistan Region of Iraq)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/rebaz-nuri-16b9bb15b/
Mary has over seven years of experience in FROM THE NOMINATOR: “Mary
driving value for businesses by leveraging has been focused on applying
data, analytics, models, and products. She analytics in innovative ways and
enjoys leading new initiatives and applying her converting analytical solutions
analytical background to solving challenging into automated products for the
new business problems in the most actionable market. Her high performing
way. Mary excels at product development cross-functional teams
through the automation of analytics. developed a suite of proprietary
analytics products, reduced
turn-around time by 50%,
and powered DIY analytical
capabilities for clients.”
Melissa Ferere
Director, Globant (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/melissa-ferere-811b6261/
Julia Görnandt
Director, DACH Region, SKIM (Germany)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/jgoernandt
After some years abroad, Julia went back to FROM THE NOMINATOR:
Berlin to set up SKIM’s first office in Germany. “Julia has opened SKIM’s
With innovative, methodologically robust Berlin office 2 years ago and
approaches she and her growing team deliver has led the team to strong
high quality insights to leading brands. As a growth, through guiding her
psychologist at heart and by training, she is clients through their business
passionate to shape the future of insights and challenges, always pushing
guide the next generation of researchers. for innovative approaches and
working collaboratively with
clients and her team.”
107
GRIT FUTURE LIST HONOREES (CONT.)
Stephen Griffiths
Associate Manager, Consumer & Market Intelligence, General Mills (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/stephenrgriffiths/
Manuela Isliker
Technology Insights Manager, Colgate Palmolive (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/manuela-isliker-22011415/
Maya Kantak
Consumer Insight Manager, Disney Parks, Experiences and Products (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mkantak/
108
GRIT FUTURE LIST HONOREES (CONT.)
Katrin Krüger
Senior Project Director, Happy Thinking People (Germany)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/katrin-kr%C3%BCger-07203a157/
Anije Lambert
Founder , Project Development Consultancy (PDC-Research) (Guyana)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/anije-lambert-a1900170/
Anije is a lover of all things market research. She FROM THE NOMINATOR:
is a multi-award-winning entrepreneur and is the “Anije has single-handedly
founder of Project Development Consultancy put Guyana on the research
(PDC- Research), a market research company map, creating a company,
she started at the age of 19. She is paving the winning awards, and creating
way forward and promoting market research international networks.”
within her country Guyana and the Caribbean
Region.
Konstantin Morjan
CTO, Phebi Limited (United Kingdom)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/konstantin-morjan-b06044107/
109
GRIT FUTURE LIST HONOREES (CONT.)
Lauren Murphy
Director, Research Scientist, LRW, a Material Company (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/laurenelisemurphy/
Laarni Paras
Research Manager, Sklar Wilton and Associates (Canada)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/laarnigparas/
Lynzie Riebling
VP, Insights & Strategy, REVOLT (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/lynzie-riebling-61b11a26/
Over the last decade Lynzie has earned FROM THE NOMINATOR:
her reputation as a creative and effective “Lynzie has long been a force
powerhouse within the insights industry. for bringing innovation to
Specializing in qualitative research, she market research, rising to
approaches her work in a way that most become one of the industry’s
don’t–by finding new and unique methods preeminent thought leaders
to reach consumers. Her no holds barred and best practitioners in
approach has garnered the attention of mining the Millennial and Gen
publications such as Forbes, TIME, and Z segments. She’s a game
Billboard. changer, and represents the
future, now.”
110
GRIT FUTURE LIST HONOREES (CONT.)
Beth Rogers
Sr. Manager, Data Science, Fruit of the Loom, Inc. (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/beth-tyrie-rogers/
Beth leads and helped to build the Data Science FROM THE NOMINATOR:
division at Fruit of the Loom, Inc. She is a “Beth is developing new
strategic data science leader with over 10 years analyses that change the
of experience in Retail, Manufacturing, Biology, trajectory of understanding of
and GeoScience. She is also a published consumer behavior especially
scientist in marine camouflage research and with geolocation capabilities
has performed research in brain imaging and and modeling. She is an
eye-tracking. Beth also holds a MS from Western excellent team leader and
Kentucky University. cross-functional collaborator.”
Christopher South
CEO, Spot Trender (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/christophersouth1/
Lance Worley
Manager, Customer & Market Insights, Salesforce (United States)
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/lworley/
111
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Final Thoughts
112
APPENDIX
Methodology and Sample
For those interested in understanding the sample level individuals from a spectrum of business sizes,
the GRIT Report is derived from, the following types, and verticals.
breakdown will provide you with the necessary
information. Overall, the GRIT sample is broadly While we do not claim GRIT is a census, we consider
global, reflects the order of size of market spend, and it strongly directional in terms of the overall trends
is largely comprised of very experienced and senior- associated with the topics we explore.
Segment Composition
The total sample size for this wave of GRIT is n=1,071: BUYER SEGMENT IDENTIFICATION
274 completed interviews by self-identified buyers of In-house research
Strategic insights
insights & analytics, 769 by self-identified suppliers, consultants 20% 18% provider to internal
clients
plus 28 other insights industry professionals.
Voice of the
9% Customer or
Further, we have applied our segmentation model Consumer
3% Data analysts
For this wave the largest buyer segment was Hybrid of these 42%
represented by respondents that described their 2% Other
(n=271)
organizations of hybrids of multiple segments (42%),
followed by strategic insights consultants at 20%,
Voice of the Customer at 9% and in-house research
providers at 18%. All other segments constituted less SUPPLIER PROFESSIONAL FOCUS
than 6% each.
Strategic
Consultancy 19% 13% Data and Analytics
Provider
For suppliers, 52% define themselves as full service
providers, 19% as strategy consultancies, 13% as
9% Technology
data and analytics providers, 9% as technology Provider
providers, 5% as field services providers and 2% as
5% Field Service
“other” specialists. Provider
2% Other
(n=769)
113
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
Organizational Affiliation
On the supplier side, we have a good cross-section from all industry sectors has remained relatively
of the various sectors of the industry. This is in line constant across each wave of the study.
with previous waves. Proportionally, representation
30%
20%
14% 14%
10%
5% 4% 3% 2% 2% 2% 1% 1% 1% 1% 1% 1% 1% 1% 1% 0% 1%
0%
Full-service research
provider
Strategic insights
consultancy
Quantitative data
collection company
Marketing communications
consultancy
Customer or user
experience consultancy
Nonconscious
measurement tools and
services
Secondary or syndicated
data provider
Product innovation
consultancy
Other
Supplier (n=769)
In looking only at buyers, we have a well-rounded analogous to the categories of largest buyers
sample of respondents from many sectors, identified in other industry reports with Consumer
ensuring a wide breadth of experience and views Non-durables, Healthcare, Financial Services and
are represented. The proportion is also roughly Media making up 40% of the sample.
Education 9%
waves with some marginal +/- differences. Regional
Consumer durables 7%
Industrial products 6%
Information technology 5%
Retail 4%
Not-for-profit 4%
Automotive 3%
Government 2%
Hospitality/travel 2%
Telecommunication services 2%
Transportation 2%
Other 1%
114
GLOBAL Region
65%
62%
60%
40%
22%
20% 19%
11%
8%
5%
1% 2% 1% 1% 1% 0% 0% 1% 1%
0%
North America Europe Asia-Pacific Africa Middle East South America Central America Undefined
In exploring the physical location of GRIT below. This is quite a bit smaller than previous
participants via IP matching, we find that 60 waves, which we assume are due to general
different countries are represented within the “2020 challenges”.
sample, with respondent density shown in the map
Responses
Responses
Size of Organization
Historically, slightly less than half of GRIT employees. In this GRIT wave, more respondents
respondents work within organizations of 50 came from large organizations, driven by buyers
employees or fewer, one-quarter within organizations (about 70% coming from organizations of more
of 51 to 500 employees, and approximately another than 500 employees). Suppliers were more evenly
quarter within organizations of more than 500 distributed across employee size categories.
25%
20%
18%
17%
16%
15%
13% 13%
12%
11% 11%
10% 10% 10%
9%
8%
7%
6% 6% 6%
5% 5%
4% 4%
3% 3% 3%
2% 2%
1% 1%
0% 0% 0%
1 employee
2 to 4 employees
5 to 10 employees
11 to 20 employees
21 to 50 employees
51 to 100 employees
1,001 – 2,499
employees
2,500 to 4,999
employees
5,000 to 9,999
employees
10,000 to 24,999
employees
25,000 to 49,999
employees
50,000 or more
employees
Buyer (n=271) Supplier (n=766)
Respondent Seniority
RESPONDENT SENIORITY – YEARS WORKED IN AN The GRIT sample is comprised of largely senior-level
INSIGHTS-RELATED ROLE: BUYER VS. SUPPLIER
50% research professionals. The largest group among
both buyers and suppliers have worked in the
42%
40% industry for more than 20 years, with about one-
36%
third reporting working in an insights role for less
30%
than ten years. Only about one-third
have been working in an insights role for less than
20% 18% 18%
17%
15%
ten years.
13% 13%
10% 10%
7%
4% 5%
1% 2%
0%
Less than 1–2 3–5 6 – 10 11 – 15 16 – 20 More than
1 year years years years years years 20 years
116
Respondent Titles
24%
22%
20%
14%
13%
11% 11%
10% 9% 9%
8% 8%
7%
6% 6%
5%
4% 4% 4% 4% 4% 4%
3% 3% 3% 3%
2% 2%
1% 1% 1% 1% 1%
0% 0%
Owner
Partner or part
owner
Principal
C-Suite
Executive
Management
General
Manager
Vice President
Group Director
Group Manager
Research
Director
Project Manager
Department
Head
Associate
Professor/
Instructor
Research
Assistant
Other title
Buyer (n=274) Supplier (n=769)
51%
I influence decisions on
strategic issues 23%
13%
I make decisions on strategic issues 44%
117
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Concept Originator & Data Collection Advertisers
GRIT Executive Editor AYTM – Ask Your Target Market Ascribe
Leonard Murphy – GreenBook Civicom Marketing Research
Data Processing Services
Report & Questionnaire Infotools Feedback Loop
Gregg Archibald – Gen2Advisors Potentiate Schlesinger Group, New Jersey
Melanie Courtright – Insights Q Research Software SurveyMonkey
Association Suzy
Larry Friedman – GreenBook Data Access Tango Card
Leonard Murphy – GreenBook KnowledgeHound Toluna
Nelson Whipple – GreenBook Infotools
Sample Partners
Project Coordinator Infographic A.C. Nielsen Center for Marketing
Kristine Mensching – GreenBook AYTM – Ask Your Target Market Research (at The Wisconsin
School of Business)
Design Partner Publication AEDEMO
Keen as Mustard GreenBook AIM
Idea Highway AMAI
Commentary Providers American Marketing Association
Research and Production AYTM – Ask Your Target Market New York
AYTM – Ask Your Target Market Behaviorally (Formerly PRS) APRC
Displayr Bloomfire AYTM
Gen2 Advisors Feedback Loop Cranbrook Search
Infotools Gutcheck Dynata
Potentiate Lucy Gen2 Advisors
Remesh Insights Now
Sentient Decision Science Knowledge Hound
Suzy Llittle Bird Marketing
Toluna Michigan State University
Veriglif MROC Japan
MRS
OfficeReports
planung&analyse
Qualitative Research Consultants
Association (QRCA)
Researchscape International
Toluna
Triggerpoint
University of Georgia | MRII
Go to University of Texas
www.greenbook.org/mr/grit Women In Research
Zappi
to access all GRIT data and charts via OfficeReports and Knowledgehound
KnowledgeHound, which you can use for your own analysis AMC Global
118
Research & Production
IDEA
Highway
AYTM Idea Highway
www.aytm.com www.id-highway.com
Aytm is a Consumer Insights Automation solution that drives Idea Highway is a strategic design studio with offices in
agile innovation for some of the largest consumer brands, Bucharest, Romania and Linz, Austria.
advertising agencies and marketing consultancies in the
world. Researchers are empowered to conduct sophisticated
research with a click of a button from a powerful but easy to
use interface – cutting down the time to insights from days or
weeks to hours. To learn more about aytm and its innovative Infotools
research platform, please visit www.aytm.com. www.infotools.com
Infotools is an award-winning software and services provider,
with particular expertise in processing, analyzing, visualizing
and sharing market research data. We have almost three
decades of experience working with both in-house corporate
Displayr insights teams as well as market research agencies. Our
www.displayr.com powerful cloud-based software platform, Infotools Harmoni, is
How much of your analysis and reporting time is spent purpose-built for market research data. From data processing
doing manual tasks? Endlessly cutting & pasting, formatting, through to analysis, reporting, visualization, dashboards,
checking for mistakes, redoing work, using too many tools, and distribution, and data alerts – Harmoni is a true ‘data-
trying to figure things out. At Displayr, we create software that todecision- making’ solution. We also offer data experts who
automatically does the painful tasks for you. Today, 1000s of can help with things like research design and management,
companies use our software to cut their analysis and reporting data design and organization, and insights discovery, analysis,
times in half. visualization and reporting.
119
Commentary Providers
AYTM Gutcheck
www.aytm.com www.gutcheckit.com
Aytm is a Consumer Insights Automation solution that drives GutCheck was founded on the reality that brands need
agile innovation for some of the largest consumer brands, to be agile to succeed in a dynamic market, and that
advertising agencies and marketing consultancies in the traditional research firms and DIY tools have failed to
world. Researchers are empowered to conduct sophisticated deliver. That’s why the world’s leading brands trust
research with a click of a button from a powerful but easy to GutCheck to uncover and action their optimal audience
use interface – cutting down the time to insights from days or by combining the rigor and speed required to gain a
weeks to hours. To learn more about aytm and its innovative competitive advantage. For more information, visit www.
research platform, please visit www.aytm.com. gutcheckit.com.
Bloomfire Lucy
ww.bloomfire.com www.lucy.ai
Bloomfire is the leader in knowledge engagement, delivering Lucy® helps enterprise teams make the most of their data.
an experience that connects teams and individuals with the Built for the Fortune 1000, she reads, listens, watches and
information and insights they need to excel at their jobs. Our learns all of the data that you share with her—a one stop
cloud-based knowledge engagement platform gives people one AI-powered knowledge platform for all the data you own
centralized, searchable place to engage with shared knowledge and license. She was shaped by the needs of our clients and
and grow their organization’s collective intelligence. For more she continues to evolve with the market. Lucy exists to
information or to schedule a demo, visit www.bloomfire.com. amaze, delight, and empower knowledge workers.
120
Sentient Toluna
www.sentientdecisionscience.com www.toluna-group.com
We Harness the Power of Emotional Insights Sentient Decision Toluna delivers real-time consumer insights at the speed of the
Science is a globally recognized pioneer in the automation on-demand economy. We do what no other insights company
of behavioral science. Providing businesses a competitive can, we combine the industry’s first end-to-end consumer
advantage through uncovering the emotions that drive intelligence platform, Toluna Start with, award-winning
consumer decision making. research design, vertical expertise and a panel of over 30
million consumers.
Suzy
www.suzy.com
Whether you’re a novice or an expert researcher, Suzy helps Veriglif
you make better, faster, more data-driven decisions. Our www.veriglif.com
platform combines advanced research tools with the highest Veriglif is the global Verified Data Network that allows all
quality audience to deliver trusted insights in minutes. data stakeholders to connect, transact, and thus maximize the
value of consumer data assets. It will be the world’s first global
consumer data ecosystem that will help unlock the full value
of consumer data through increased data veracity, velocity,
variety, and volume.
Behaviorally (Formerly PRS)
www.behaviorally.com
We are Behaviorally, formerly PRS. With decades of experience
and category expertise in shopper research, we apply our
unique behavioral framework and a digital-first approach to
help global clients navigate the uncertainty of a changing retail
environment. We help brands make better shopper marketing
decisions by defining and diagnosing the digital and physical
behaviors that drive shopper growth.
121
Report and QuestionNaire
Contributors
Gregg Archibald – Gen2 Advisors Larry Friedman, Ph.D. – GreenBook
Gregg Archibald is a marketing researcher Larry Friedman, Ph.D. is former Chief
and strategist dedicated to helping Research Officer, TNS North America. Larry
the research industry benefit from the has over nearly 40 years of experience in
consumer and technology changes that research and has worked on both the client
are making the field both more challenging and more exciting. and research company sides of market research. Larry consults
He is the Managing Partner for Gen2 Advisors – a strategy extensively with senior level client executives on the business
and consulting firm for the marketing research industry. implications of their research. He also publishes widely, and
Gen2 Advisors works with both client side organizations speaks before numerous industry forums, including ARF, IIR,
and supplier organizations to capitalize on the changes for AMA and ESOMAR conferences. He is a winner of a 2009 ARF
business transformation and success. Working with several “Great Mind in Innovation” Award. Larry’s market research
Fortune 100 organizations has framed the vision of the future experience began at General Foods Corporation. Since then he
in client needs and opportunities. has worked in numerous categories, including FMCG, financial
services, pharmaceuticals (OTC and Rx), IT, telecoms, automotive
Melanie Courtright – Dynata and others. He has considerable experience in a wide variety
Melanie serves as the Chief Executive of research areas, including brand equity research, tracking
Officer at the Insights Association, where research, communications research (digital and traditional),
she advocates for the industry and its social media, customer experience research, strategic/
members in the areas of quality standards, segmentation studies, and new product development. He has
legal and business advocacy, education, and certification. extensive experience with integrating these different types of
Melanie has spent more than 25 years designing, executing, research and distilling larger strategic implications from them.
and interpreting research for agencies and corporations, and
has been a fixture in market research for quality, trends and
the next generation of data collection. Known as an expert
methodologist, she started her career at a full-service research Leonard Murphy – GreenBook
firm in Dallas where she spent ten years developing her strong Leonard Murphy is the executive editor
research background. She then followed that with a decade and producer at GreenBook: guru in
specializing in all forms of digital research including online, residence, influencer-in-chief and product
mobile and social. Melanie has successfully developed and mad scientist. Over the last 15 years, Lenny
launched leading sampling platforms, routers, methodology has served in various senior level roles, including CEO of full
best practices, panels, and research and data product lines. service agency Rockhopper Research, CEO of tech-driven
BrandScan360 and Senior Partner of strategic consultancy
Nelson Whipple – GreenBook Gen2 Advisory Services. His focus is on collaboration with
Nelson brings over 30 years of market organizations to help advance innovation and strategic
research experience to his consulting positioning of the market research industry, most prominently
projects and role as Director of Research as the Editor-in-Chief of the GreenBook Blog and GreenBook
for GRIT. Much of his career has Research Industry Trends Report, two of the most widely read
involved quantifying, analyzing, and simulating customer and influential publications in the global insights industry.
preferences to inform product development and marketing
decisions in B2C and B2B markets such as mobile devices,
personal financial services, CPG, industrial equipment,
telecom services, and retail.
122
How do nearly half
of Fortune 100 brands
stay one step ahead of
their consumers?