Quality Assured with ISO20252


For the third year running Acumen have successfully completed their audit for the ISO20252 accreditation in market research with zero discrepancies.

After a two-day process where external auditors came into the company and scrutinised the processes of our qualitative market research team, plus quantitative and healthcare teams they found us to be fully compliant with the quality control measures implemented as part of the standard.

Leading Acumen in this is Wendy Durn who, as our Head of Compliance, has overseen the creation and implementation of the ISO20252 standard within the business, in addition to the new requirements of GDPR.

Acumen received particular praise for the work we have done with regards to GDPR in addition to noting the steady growth of the business and the continually high levels of satisfaction amongst Acumen’s clients.

To achieve the ISO20252 standard in market research is an achievement that everyone at Acumen is rightfully proud of – but to do it without having any discrepancies for the third year in a row is a remarkable achievement and one which we will all be celebrating.

If you’d like to know more about how our quality standards can add value to your research contact costings@acumenfieldwork.com

 




Winners: Best Data Collection (F2F) MRS Oppies


We’re thrilled to announce that Acumen have been named as the winners in the Best Data Collection (Face to Face) category at this year’s MRS Operations Awards.

Acumen were given the award for our truly innovative approaches to collecting data with the judges stating that:

Acumen clearly demonstrated how their face-to-face team delivered genuinely inventive data collection within hard to reach audiences in the last 12 months. Two case studies involving creative interviewing methods backed up their submission and the quality of their fieldwork and client servicing was strongly reinforced by glowing testimonials. A worthy winner for 2018.

Acumen had previously been named as finalists in this category in 2017 but it wasn’t until this year that we were able to pick up the trophy for the work we’d done in 2018 and we couldn’t be happier.

If you’d like to speak to our award winning team about how we can help with your research, whether qualitative or quantitative, then please contact our Fieldwork Director, Becki Pickering, who’ll be more than happy to discuss your research needs.

 




How Advertisers Ruined It For Market Research


Tell me if this sounds familiar. After a long day at the office – probably poring over the findings of a complex and detailed piece of research you’ve spent weeks working on – you find yourself at home trying to unwind. If you’re like me then unwinding usually involves scouring through the TV channels – hopping left and right – in the search for something that fits that happy balance of vaguely interesting but not deeply engaging – just enough so you can switch yourself off.

The other night however, as I was bouncing from one station to the other, something caught my attention. It wasn’t the latest happenings in a reality show or even the latest ‘must-watch’ that’s been buzzing around the office; it was, quite simply, an advert. Usually I wouldn’t pay much attention but due to the lack of anything else to focus on my brain was piqued by something they were saying.

The advert in question was for a well-known optician who were promoting a pair of glasses with a special optical lens to combat the glare of traffic lights when driving at night. But what caught my attention wasn’t the product itself, it was the messaging that came with it – messaging in the form of a number of research statistics supporting the value of the new lenses.

“Based on a consumer survey conducted with 105 existing lens wearers, 85% agreed they felt less concerned about headlight glare when driving at night with our lenses.”

“LENSES FOR EVERYDAY USE AND SAFER DRIVING*”

*Based on a wearer trial with 100 participants conducted by Aston University. 67% agreed or strongly agreed they would recommend these lenses for everyday use.

Now while I don’t doubt the voracity of the research, my experience of conducting research gave me a bit of insight which allowed me to question some of the  things around these claims.

The first issue is around the size of the sample. While research can be reasonably conducted with smaller samples the results, and any statements of fact pulled from them, should always be shown in conjunction with the representative quota of the sample. Here we see that they’ve taken the results from existing users of the glasses which slightly skews the perspective of the research. Would non-users have so strongly advocated for this product in a similar trial?

These sorts of quasi-research findings are nothing new in advertising. You can find similar ‘studies’ propping up the marketing straplines on a number of products, from shampoo to skincare regimes, toothpaste and even sports and nutrition drinks. All of them exhibit the same sort of skewed representation to support whatever angle they’re trying to pursue. And I’m not saying that market research has no place in advertising; it’s just that the misleading and questionable positioning of these studies represents a wider malaise about market research in general.

It’s probably not hard for anyone in our industry to cast their minds back over the past two years and recall the scorching criticism that researchers received in the aftermath of the General Election and the previous EU referendum. The scorn piled on for our industry’s lack of ability to predict the outcome of these events was also set against a backdrop of people in the public eye advising everyone to “not trust the experts”.

And it’s this last part which goes to the heart of the issue for me. While we, as an industry, have always demonstrated our integrity by maintaining impartial and unbiased insight, often backed up with empirical data, there greater, and less frequently articulated,  value that we rely upon as researchers; the value of trust.

For the work of market researchers to matter, not only to us but the people it is used to serve, then there needs to be an implicit trust in what we do. It is an essential component both now and in the future, if our industry is to continue to grow and be sustainable. The misappropriation of market research by advertisers serves to devalue the work of our industry – not directly or purposefully, but by creating a background hum of quick facts and figures which, with even a quick glance, only really devalue the authenticity of both the research and the product. If we as researchers cannot see that truth then we’re truly myopic; and no amount of miraculous glasses with special lenses is going to correct that for us.