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Your target audience’s opinions are crucial to ensuring the success of a marketing campaign and, ultimately, your brand. Soliciting survey data can help brands determine how their products and services are received, refine their marketing efforts and identify how to best promote future offerings. Here are the benefits of incorporating survey data into your marketing and how your business can gather this vital intel from consumers.
The widespread adoption of digital marketing has allowed businesses to collect survey data both formally and informally. Survey data and collection can make a massive difference in the success of a brand. In this era of data analytics, companies have more options than ever to solicit feedback through survey data from their target markets. Survey data allows small businesses to connect with specific demographics for the following purposes:
Survey data can also help businesses create and launch more effective marketing strategies by refining their approach to appeal to customers based on age, gender, location, digital platform (including social media) and socioeconomic factors. Businesses can also use surveys to understand how successful their marketing efforts were, what worked well and which marketing channels were the most effective, as well as to identify areas where they can continue experimenting to improve results.
Be judicious when deciding how often to survey your audience. If you poll your customers too frequently, respondents may get tired of completing surveys for your company and ignore your request.
These are some common survey types for businesses to use:
Just as there are many types of surveys, there are several methods of administering them.
Regardless of the method you choose, send your survey to an appropriate sample size. If you sample too small of a population, you may not yield accurate numerical data.
Surveys can help businesses with the following:
You can also use surveys to aid in talent acquisition. Create surveys and polls to understand how prospective hires rate your business against competitors who are also searching for top talent.
Even with more in-depth analytical tactics, a simple survey is sometimes the best way to get a clear snapshot of what consumers and potential customers are looking for. You can use surveys at any marketing campaign stage: in the preliminary stages to help shape your strategy, during your campaign’s run to gauge public perception and in the post-launch stage to gather feedback. Whether you use them for an existing product or a brand-new concept, don’t underestimate the importance of surveys. Their data can be critical to a product or brand’s lifespan.
Max Freedman and Becky Wu, Ph.D., contributed to this article.