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Author: Vicky Brock | Total views: 20 Comments: 0
Word Count: 746 Date: Tue, 5 Feb 2008 5:54 AM

How Hercule Poirot Can Improve Your Business Research

"It is the brain, the little grey cells on which one must rely."

As the great Belgian detective himself declared, "Try and vary your methods as you will, your tastes, your habits, your attitude of mind, and your soul is revealed by your actions."

Handily, his words don't just apply to fictitious murder suspects. Great detectives (even the fictional ones) are by their very nature great researchers. And they know it's the human aspect, the little grey cells, which really matter.

After all, what is research? It is the process of gathering appropriate evidence - evidence about human beings and their behaviour. Evidence that is hidden or hard to find and evidence that is right there in plain view.

Research is also the process of organizing that evidence in order to see the gaps, themes and contradictions.

And of course, research is the process of analyzing that evidence appropriately and accurately, in order to drive correct assumptions from it.

Sounds a lot like detective work to me - though thankfully less fraught with danger.

The DIY Research route

I'm fully aware that it is not always affordable or desirable to have an external agency conducting your business research. And of course, most great detectives tend to be fictional or unavailable.

That's why Highland Business Research is currently developing the Data Detective Kit - a practical DIY research kit with tips, tools and Excel templates to help you get better business results from your research. We'll highlight the things to think about and look out for that can make the difference between useful research and wasted effort.

This means better business decisions from the research you conduct yourself - so more revenue earned and fewer costly mistakes.

So the most important DIY research tools are those little grey cells - but evidence doesn't collect itself. There are many other tools that will help and they don't have to break the bank.
Four free tools that can help

As a quick Data Detective Kit taster, here are three free tools that can help you track down the evidence you need to answer key business questions:

1. Google alerts - http://www.google.com/alerts

Want to know what is being said about you online? Want to know what your competitors or clients are up to? Google Alerts lets you set up automatic email notifications based on key phrases of your choice (these could include names, phrases or companies). The search engine does the hard work and you get a daily summary of the pages and blog posts on which the phrases have appeared. Leaving you prepped to respond as appropriate.

2. Google analytics - http://www.google.com/analytics

Do you need to understand how people use your web site? Do you know where your traffic arrives from, which pages cause people to leave in droves and how cost effective your web advertising activities really are? Do you know what language your web visitors speak or the search terms they used to find you? Google Analytics (and other similar tools) can help. It's a powerful tool, so it takes some work on your part to really get the full benefits. But if your business is online, understanding how to make your website work harder is a research must.

3. Surveymonkey - http://www.surveymonkey.com

Need to find out more about your customers or website visitors? Want to find out how satisfied customers are with your service? Surveymonkey is a handy tool that lets you produce online questionnaires and surveys. A good survey involves asking the right questions, in the right format, to the right people at an appropriate time - and no tool can do that kind of thinking for you. But Surveymonkey can help you easily build, circulate and collate responses to your research questions and if used well, it's a great tool for DIY research.

Think like a detective

As Hercule Poirot and his little grey cells demonstrate, taking a detective like approach in your gathering and analysis of evidence improves the likelihood of reaching a correct outcome. And in business terms, if you can directly improve the quality and usefulness of your DIY research, you can make better decisions and directly improve your profits.

About the Author

Vicky Brock is Co-Founder of Highland Business Research one of Scotland's leading market research agencies. She is also International Committee Co-Chair of the Web Analytics Association and a renowned international speaker and workshop leader. She co-authors the blog Tracking Tourism and authors the Data Detective Kit.




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