| Goodmind's ThoughtCast vs. Traditional Focus Groups
Project Background
- The Public Relations Industry has evolved over the years,
and traditional newswire services have been forced to react, respond, or risk irrelevancy.
A major wire service provider requested a study to evaluate recent initiatives
within the new competitive context.
- The client had previously partnered with Goodmind on several
projects devoted to understanding the needs of current clients, and identifying
future opportunites for growth.
Client Objectives
- For this study, the client wanted to specifically understand
the outcomes of a recent operational consolidation, coupled with lingering effects
of various mergers and aquisitions.
- The client also wanted to test the effectiveness of its branding
strategy, as well as drill down into the value of its new products and services in
various markets.
The Challenge
- Prior research relied on traditional focus groups,
and in-depth one-on-one telephone interviews. These studies largely focused
on the end user; be it journalist, PR professional, or even blogger.
- Since the objective was essentially to test whether these
groups had provided valuable feedback (and whether we had given good advice),
we needed to come up with a way to objectively evaluate the product, market,
competitors, and operations of the client.
Our Approach
- We couldn't ask just anyone about the product,
market, competitors, and operational strategy of a legacy newswire, so
we had to be creative.
- The respondent in this instance turned out to be the
distributed sales force of the client. Who better to understand all the
nuances of the PR industry, while simultaneously offering a unique
perspective on brand positioning and competitive strategy?
The Outcome
- We conducted a three day ThoughtCast discussion
with various members of the sales force, and came away with perhaps the
longest transcript in our seven year history.
- Participants had an optimistic outlook, and were generally
positive in their feedback. However, we did uncover an unknown interaction
between product and operational changes: the sales force was compensated
according to an outdated model, with imperfect product emphasis.
The Payoff
- Left unaddressed, this minor detail could have
undermined the existing value of the brand, not to mention negate
recent strategic initiatives.
- If the client hadn't looked at the business from
the perspective of the sales force, their sound strategy wouldn't have
been worth much in the long term.
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