The right kind of shopper research

By: Rajiv Raghunath

Last updated : April 19, 2018 7:39 pm



Rima Gupta, Executive Director, TNS consult, talks about using the right kind of shopper research information while planning shopper marketing initiatives


Marketers want to develop strategies and tactics to influence shopper behaviour to drive brand and category growth via packaging,promotions and pricing, point-of-sale and in-store marketing, shelf layout and assortment optimisation, secondary displays, store layout and category adjacencies and new product development. They realise that shopper research can provide this input.
The research tools are a mix of quantitative and qualitative tools and techniques that can be customised and integrated to answer any brand/category questions taking into account the local trade structures.

Type of questions fall into three sets:


1. Understanding the shopper landscape in terms of who, what, where, how and why - this is usually done via shopnographies; accompanied shopping; mystery shopping; face to face interviews and intercepts etc.

2. Figuring out what triggers and barriers there are to purchase at each stage? Actions to improve the search process focus on shelf layout, visibility, findability and are different from actions to improve the selection process, Rima Gupta Executive Director, TNS Consult which focus on information, price and value proposition. Insights from this are used to inform plan-o-gram, shelf layout and  assortment to optimise the category search process, plus POS, instore communication, packaging and promotions/pricing to  optimise the brand selection process. The research can be complemented by in-store eye-tracking to understand visual cues, shelf  position and pack stand out, POS and in-store communications

3. Testing ideas born out of shopper insights research: This is essential to gain confidence that shoppers will respond as expected,  manage risk, quantify potential gain, gain buy - in from retail partners with solid proof of concept etc. Research incorporates actual  shopper purchasing from the simulated shop, shopper behaviour (for example, time spent at shelf, product interactions, conversion)  and shopper motivations (from integrated questionnaire). Tests are compared to a control cell, allowing the marketer to quantify the  likely impact of changes.
 
The methods are:

Rima gupta TNS

First Published : April 15, 2013 4:15 pm

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