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What's the difference? The terms data visualization and data representation can be easy to confuse. They sound pretty similar, and at first glance, one may find it's tricky to keep the two straight. And since data is ubiquitous these days, we are seeing more examples of both almost everywhere from our watches and fitness bands to the apps on our phones and dashboards on our computers.  Both have been employed in insights research and reporting for some time and they both fulfill specific functions. They both sound pretty similar, too, and they do similar things – it’s no wonder how it can be hard keeping data visualization and data representation straight. So, we've created a new downloadable infographic to explain the differences between the two and how they are used. We've been using it around our offices to help our researchers and data professionals explain the styles of data representation or data visualizations we might utilize in our reports. We've also been employing it to work with research professionals who are new to the field to help them also become acquainted with the uses and development of both - and now it's available for you to download for your own use! Scroll to the bottom of this article to download the infographic right away, or read on to learn more about the differences between data visualization and data representation for market research. Data visualization crunches numbers Putting it simply, data visualization is the process of taking information and representing it graphically. Common in insights and market research reporting, data visualization makes it easier to communicate the story in the data. When one is looking at a complex, large and perhaps varied data set, data visualization can be a great choice to impart that data story in a way that can be quickly and easily understood. Data visualizations are developed programmatically; that means they are built through the use of software. Think Google Maps or complex GIS systems - they crunch large data sets through sometimes sophisticated algorithms to find trends and correlations in the data, producing interactive representations that allow one to communicate or understand data more easily. Common examples of data visualizations include heat maps, streamgraphs and word clouds. Download your own copy of our infographic, The Difference Between Data Visualization and Data Representation for Market Research, by filling out the form below to see more data visualization examples and how they are used. Data representations support data reporting Sometimes referred to as infographics, data representations can support almost any kind of data reporting. They allow one to drill down to and communicate the most important parts of a data story graphically. Data representations, unlike data visualizations, are human generated. Design software is employed to build them (like Adobe Creative Suite, Canva or Piktochart), but they require a professional to take an editorial role in deciding which data to include to tell the data story best. Infographics communicate information creatively and stylistically to engage and create memorable experiences. This makes data representation ideal for executive summaries or to highlight key data points that may not be as well communicated in a data table or chart. Some ways data representations are used are in timelines, hierarchical representations, flow charts and comparisons.           Want to know about data visualization? Listen to Ep. 14 of Stories of Market Research: The Insightrix Podcast - it's all about how to use them, best practices on how to build them and more. Always know which to use and when We’ve developed an infographic that will help you remember the differences and uses of both data visualizations and representations. This rich and engaging chart offers insights into how both visualizations are representations are used and why, as well as the most common forms of both. You can hold onto it to refer to later, or share it to help teach others about infographics and visualizations. Go ahead - put it on your wall and never be unsure which chart or graphic to use to tell your next data story! Fill out the form below to access your own copy of The Difference Between Data Representation and Data Visualization for Market Research infographic.   Want to access the entire infographic? Fill out the form below to receive an email to download your own PDF copy.   hbspt.forms.create({ portalId: "374811", formId: "ae9b4751-7c2e-41f9-bde5-07da17ec7a90" }); ...
 

Insightrix Holiday Spending 2019 has arrived! What is the Saskatchewan holiday shopping scene looking like for 2019? Did you know that this year, 93% of Saskatchewan residents plan to buy holiday gifts? And what’s more, 78% of those holiday shoppers expect to make at least some of their purchases online. The holiday shopping experience in Saskatchewan is as unique as the people who live here. So, we’ve developed a web report to let you know just how Saskatchewan shoppers plan to make their holiday purchases this year, how much they expect to spend and where they will be shopping. Whether you need to know because you’re a decision maker in the retail industry, whether you want to know because you like to keep an eye on what's happening in the Saskatchewan retail marketplace – or even if you’re just someone who is curious, Insightrix Holiday Spending 2019 has all the Saskatchewan-specific Christmas shopping statistics you'll want. What’s in Insightrix Holiday Spending 2019? Insightrix Holiday Spending 2019 has all of the up-to-date facts about the holiday retail experience in Saskatchewan. What’s more, it is deep on context, containing Saskatchewan holiday shopping intelligence that has been trending from 2015. Find out how just how many Saskatchewan residents expect to buy gifts during the 2019 holiday shopping season and how certain demographics will be spending. Learn about which proportions of residents expect to do their holiday shopping online in 2019 and who expects to do their shopping locally in brick-and-mortar stores. More than just that, you can discover how much residents expect to spend this year, what means of payment they will be using and how that compares to their holiday spending in previous years. Get an understanding of how discounts affect expected holiday shopping behaviour… and much more! You can access Insightrix Holiday Spending 2019 right here on the Insightrix website. hbspt.cta.load(374811, 'dfa7ed65-a26d-49d3-8eab-a45427eb22c7', {}); ...
 

Adding video responses to your research project can build on your insights story One of the qualitative tools our clients have recently requested more of lately has been the adoption of online video research (video surveys) to tap into consumer behaviours. Video surveys are a powerful tool to evoke customer feedback in a way that is simply unmatched by more traditional approaches than say...
 

The spookiest time of the year is back in Saskatchewan! Halloween in Saskatchewan 2019 is almost here, and we wanted to know how the folks in the province would be celebrating this hair-raising holiday. So, we ran an independent OnTopic® survey with 803 people from all over Saskatchewan with our online panel, SaskWatch Research®, earlier this month to learn how Sask. residents plan to spend their Halloween 2019. In 2019, more than half of Saskatchewan residents (64%) plan on celebrating Halloween. This is a slight increase since 2018, when 59% of Sask. residents said they’d be celebrating the holiday. In fact, it brings us almost back in line with the 66% of folks who planned on celebrating Halloween in 2017. Who exactly will be getting in on the frightful festivities in 2019? This year, more Saskatchewan women (70%) plan on celebrating Halloween than men (58%), and folks with one or more children in their household (84%) will be celebrating much more often this year than folks without kids (53%). Saskatoon and the northern parts of the province will be the Halloween hotspots this year, with 66% of respondents from both of those areas saying they plan on celebrating the haunted holiday. That’s not to say residents in other parts of the province aren’t getting in on the fun – 61% of those from Regina and 64% of residents from southern parts of the province also plan on celebrating Halloween 2019. So, how will Saskatchewan residents celebrate Halloween 2019? When we asked folks who would be celebrating Halloween what they’d be getting up to, we got back a wide array of responses. The most popular way to celebrate this year is hand out candy (77%), followed by decorate (47%), take the kids/grandkids trick or treating (42%), dress up in a costume (36%), watch a scary movie/TV show at home (30%) and eat your kids candy once they’ve gone to sleep (23%). This is all in line with what Saskatchewan residents got up to on Halloween 2018 when their answers to the same question were hand out candy (75%), decorate (49%), take the kids/grandkids trick or treating (46%), dress up in a costume (38%), watch a scary movie/tv show at home (27%) and eat your kids candy once they’ve gone to sleep (23%). One thing’s for sure, if you’re a kid this Halloween, you may want to sleep with your candy under your pillow! A Halloween Grinch? We also learned that there may actually be such a thing as a Halloween Grinch! Not only may the Halloween Grinch exist, it turns out there may be more of them than there were last year. In 2018, 1% of respondents said they planned to turn out the lights and hide when the doorbell rings on Halloween night. This year, that number has grown to 3%. Halloween cheer may not be for everyone, it seems. Staying safe on Halloween This Halloween, we wanted to know some of the ways Saskatchewan residents are keeping safe while they enjoy their macabre merrymaking. The Top 5 common-sense practices Sask. residents suggest include wearing bright/reflective clothing (31%), accompany children/supervised by adult (28%), check over candy (26%), go with a buddy/in groups (26%) and be aware of surroundings/watch for traffic (14%). Some other suggestions we received were drive carefully/don’t drink and drive (11%), curfew/avoid after dark (8%), only go to houses with lights on (7%) and stay in well-lit areas/avoid dark areas (7%). Remember to stay safe while you’re having fun on Halloween folks! What age is too old to go trick or treating? The age to hang up one’s pillowcase for good remains a topic for debate for Halloween 2019. Almost one third of Saskatchewan residents say you are never too old to trick or treat (31%), while a quarter say 11-13 years of age (25%) is the perfect age to give it up. Others state that 14 years old is the age to quit trick or treating (22%), and about the same number of residents think 15 years old (7%) and 16 years old (7%) are the right age. Still others debate that 10 years of age or younger (6%) should be the age to give up trick or treating, while some of those Halloween Grinches return to answer that kids shouldn’t be trick or treating anyway (2%). One thing’s for sure, when Halloween night comes around, we’ll be out with our pillowcases and costumes – and some of us MAY bring our kids. Maybe. Who’s Halloween for anyway? And speaking of kids and Halloween, there’s been some talk about who Halloween is for – the kids or adults? We asked Saskatchewan residents what they thought, and we found out that Halloween is seen by many as a holiday for both kids and adults (58%). About one third of respondents say that it’s a holiday for kids (31%) while 0% report it is a holiday just for adults. Those Halloween Grinches showed up again for this question too; 11% of Saskatchewan residents responded that Halloween is a silly holiday that’s not worth celebrating… Tell us what you really think, why don’t you? Top places to take the kids or grandkids trick or treating in Saskatchewan When it came to Top 5 places to take the kids or grandkids out trick or treating, many of the answers we received were pretty unsurprising. For the 42% of Halloween celebrators who planned to take kids or grandkids trick or treating, my/local neighbourhood/near home was the top trick or treating destination (29%), followed by the neighbourhood-unspecific (17%), around town/small town (13%), specific neighbourhood/town (12%) and friends/family houses (11%). What will you be doing for Halloween 2019? Whether you’re dressing up, taking the kids trick or treating, watching scary movies at home or eating your kids candy when they’ve gone off to bed, Halloween 2019 is sure to be a lot of fun for the 64% of Saskatchewan residents who plan on celebrating it this year. Research details A total of 803 randomly selected SaskWatch Research® panel members participated in the online research study between October 8 and 10, 2019. Quotas were set by age, gender and region to match the general population of the province and as such the data did not need to be weighted. Since the research is conducted online, it is considered to be a non-probability proportion sample; therefore, margins of error are not applicable. Is there a question you’d like to ask the people of Saskatchewan? Do you have a question or group of questions about your business or a specific issue that you’d like to ask the residents of Saskatchewan? The Saskatchewan OnTopic® employs our 18,000+ strong SaskWatch Research® online panel and offers three sampling options: a representative sample of 800 Saskatchewan residents or, if greater accuracy is desired in one of the major urban centres, sampling of 400 residents in Regina OR 400 residents in Saskatoon. ...
 

Media monitoring services have always been an integral way of providing the most important news about brands and their competitors. Though, since the newspaper clipping services of the last century, things have gotten a whole lot more sophisticated. Today’s media monitoring services scour internet blogs and reviews, social media platforms and broadcast media for mentions of your brand. But why would you want to engage a media monitoring service? What purpose would it serve your company and its brand? Read on and find out for yourself why media monitoring is essential. Building & maintaining your brand It goes without saying that you want to know what people are saying about your brand. But what about everything else that’s being said in your industry? What is being said about your competitors? Let’s take a look at how media monitoring lets you learn more about your brand’s marketspace and the position it occupies within it. First, media monitoring lets you find out just how much share of voice your brand is earning. Share of voice is a marketing term that essentially means how much of the conversation in your industry is mentioning your brand by name, i.e., the share of the discourse your brand is receiving. So, if more people are talking about your brand than others, you are getting a greater share of voice than your competitors – go you! And once your brand has built up a good share of voice in its industry, it can show that it has developed some brand equity. This is something you can absolutely use in your business strategies. Second, beyond monitoring share of voice, media monitoring allows you to audit the media presence of your brand’s competitors. Knowing what is being said about competitor brands provides you competitive intelligence you might never had gotten. Further, learning the ways competitor brands are positioning themselves in the market, in the media and on the internet will give your brand the advantage it needs to develop effective messaging and strategy, ensuring it stays relevant and maintains its place in the market. Also, by monitoring the media presence of your competitors, you can keep an eye on the tone of their brand messaging and crisis communications and learn from their successes – and their mistakes. And third, you can learn more about innovation in your industry. Through media monitoring, brands can learn what new trends in technology, processes or methodologies are becoming hot, and what’s on its way out. Through media monitoring, brands are able to stay in front of innovation in their industry. They can foresee changes in the market much better than brands who don’t keep an eye on the media. Building the best customer experience for your brand Developing the best customer experience for your brand goes well beyond the physical walls of your business. Building and maintaining the best customer experience means meeting your customers every place they are talking about your brand. In 2017, 80% of Saskatchewan residents said they have read an online review to inform their thoughts on products, services or entertainment.* Media monitoring services can let you know the moment a new review has been posted about your brand. Whether it may be on a reviews website, on social media or even on the news, media monitoring allows you to take steps to recognize reviewers' kind words or resolve issues promptly. Several Insightrix studies have shown consumers appreciate brands who respond to customer complaints and resolve customer experience issues right away. This goes even more for brands with an online sales platform, for whom media monitoring services are imperative. [BLOG] Media Monitoring Services: In-House or Subscription – Find out which works best for your brand Media monitoring services are essential To manage and grow any brand’s reputation, you need to know what is being said about it in the media and on the internet. And the most practical way to do this is with a media monitoring service. So, whether you’re building and maintaining your company’s brand or working on developing the best customer experience, media monitoring services are a necessary and valuable tool. Want to learn more about media monitoring and the Insightrix Media Monitoring service? Get the Insightrix Media Monitoring brochure and learn what your champions and critics are saying online, and how the media are positioning your company in their news stories and opinion pieces.               hbspt.forms.create({ portalId: "374811", formId: "3defb124-ebc0-4a4c-b252-1ea5b74a555e" }); *Source: Insightrix 2018 Saskatchewan Social Media Report©   ...
 

Insightrix has chosen to prove its commitment to privacy by pursuing and achieving ISO/IEC 27001:2013 certification. The discourse around information security has changed and will continue to change how business is done. The future is in increased regulation and ever-improving standards management. Insightrix understands the importance of this business reality – that is why we invested 18 months of senior management time and significant investment in capital purchases and expert consultation to achieve the ISO/IEC 27001:2013 certification. “Implementing ISO standards proves our commitment to privacy and assures our clients that secure systems and procedures are in place at all stages of our business,” says Corrin Harper, Insightrix President. To become compliant, Insightrix underwent an extensive, 18-month company-wide audit of its quality management systems, a management system review, the enhancement of standard operating procedures and policies and the formation of a change management team. This was followed by an independent, three-stage audit process, including a five-day on-location assessment from an independent body. We are very proud to have taken this proactive step to further ensure our clients’ information remains secure and private. What is ISO/IEC 27001:2013 – Information Security Management System? ISO/IEC 27001:2013 is an information security standard published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). It specifies best practices and procedures that relate to how companies can manage information security in a way that reduces overall risk. Organizations meeting the family of standards may be certified by an accredited certification body, following the successful completion of a formal audit. We chose to work with BSI Canada, a member of the intellectual accredited certification body based in Canada. Now that we’ve achieved this certification, we are committed to annual audits from our accreditor to ensure we maintain ISO standards and procedures. Failure to do so would risk losing our certification. In addition to maintaining compliance, we must also demonstrate continued improvement. Feel free to validate this certification with BSI. What does ISO/IEC 27001:2013 certification mean for your business? Our certification means we have made a significant investment of time and resources to implement an ongoing Information Security Management System. It means our commitment to your data privacy goes beyond simple assurances; instead, it represents an entire management system that ensures data privacy and security is considered at every stage of Insightrix operations. Your IT security team, legal team, privacy team and procurement team may be very interested in our achievement, and we encourage you to share this information in your organization. Our certification means we are ready to demonstrate our commitment to data privacy when asked by your organization’s vendor management team. What’s next for us? ISO/IEC 27001:2013 certification means our commitment to data privacy and information security is a way of life for Insightrix. Insightrix has the management framework and systems in place to ensure we can meet and exceed current and future privacy requirements in Canada and worldwide. Insightrix will continue improving, upgrading and maintaining our commitment to data security and privacy. Learn more about how you may benefit from our ISO/IEC 27001:2013 certification by visiting: https://insightrix.dev1.commandbase.ca/iso-27001-2013-certified/ ...
 

What’s the difference? How your company is being mentioned in the media can have a big impact on the business it does. But what is the best media monitoring service for you? Free? Paid? Subscription? In-house? Let’s work through it! Let’s face it. Today, brand reputation is everything. These days, we are all quick to connect and engage. Media is getting news out faster through more channels than ever before. It is important to understand what is being said about your business to manage its reputation. Media monitoring is nothing new. In fact, media monitoring started as far back as the 1800s as a press clipping service. Way back then, news publications scanned articles in printed news and searched manually for keywords, and would try to sell their findings to large industrial companies that would hire them to understand public sentiment.* This was a real grind for people to manage, and it was tedious and unfulfilling work for those who did it.   Fast-forward 100 years in the future and you will see many organizations monitor editorial content of news sources that include newspapers, magazines, trade journals, forums, blogs, television, radio stations and, of course, the internet. And while brands still use press clipping services, it is done without the toil of repetitious and meticulous manual labour. In fact, most media monitoring tools are “set-it-and-forget-it” services – so your staff are not focused on the onerous task of pulling clips from media but can still benefit from the insight this provides - like gauging sentiment of the general population for a public relations strategy. A lot of the time, media monitoring tools are managed by research consultants or public relations experts who assist organizations by providing them access to commercial media monitoring services. While many organizations use in-house staff to monitor their brand in the news, some corporations, government agencies, non-profit organizations and entertainment companies regularly outsource media monitoring tools. They do it to track the success of their releases, as well as to find information about their competitors and specific issues relevant to the organization. In thinking about the media monitoring needs of an organization, it’s easy to assume that monitoring done in-house may be inexpensive compared to hiring a service provider. But what are the trade-offs for in-house media monitoring over monitoring services?   In-house media monitoring vs media monitoring service providers – which is better? Media monitoring is not a one-size-fits-all service. In fact, that’s why most organizations monitor news media by using a process they often build or borrow. While news monitoring techniques differ from business to business, the foundation of media monitoring revolves around the same notion – listening to what people are saying about your brand, about your competitors and about your industry. If you work in an organization that deals directly with the public, then you are likely already involved in some form of monitoring service. But are you monitoring your brand through an alert system like Google, and then pulling other channel data to create one report? This is often the case when administering monitoring in-house using only the available resources. Some of the perks to media monitoring in-house include staff members’ historical and contextual knowledge of their organization. Often, there are already employees on-site with a breadth of knowledge about the organization - and that is something that media monitoring tools do not have. That said, in-house experience can lead to a "can't see the forest for the trees" form of assumption based on prior experience, and not based upon what's actually being said about your company. As a result, the tools you have available in-house are not always spot on with gauging sentiment of news stories. Often, that leads to misrepresented sentiment. Media monitoring may be easier and more effective. Now, say you are a service provider in an urban centre. Chances are you are an organization that’s being discussed in the media. However, this coverage is most likely on the local news rather than the national outlets. Therefore, your exposure across television, radio and online sources may only appear on local TV news programs and radio – and if you’re lucky, the digital channels they manage. Knowing this, your company’s level of monitoring may be more focused on a specific location, and often will not require the full media monitoring package. Sometimes a paid subscription to include just television or just radio may not be the best use of your media budget, either. While in-house media monitoring services can be time consuming and come at a higher cost than a media monitoring service provider, a media monitoring service provider will take the entire hassle of managing an online media tool - so your business can focus on the results. Replacing your in-house monitoring tools with a commercial media monitoring service will deliver better results at a lower cost than in-house staff. Why? Because your staff can focus on what matters - the results. Leave the boring, tedious and time-consuming task of finding clips to the monitoring service provider so your staff can do more fruitful, and perhaps more gratifying, work. Determining Media Monitoring Needs: Traditional? Online? CyberAlert has a fantastic comprehensive media monitoring guide. In their guide, they explain in detail about the “increased emphasis on investment for corporate communications, an effective monitoring service is essential for both a media intelligence service and to demonstrate the success of an organization’s public relations and social media programs.” The guide neatly details how to determine your needs, especially when deciding if a free service can manage the monitoring needs of your organization. The first question is – what to monitor? Online news monitoring is a requisite for most organizations. In addition, most monitoring tools – including Insightrix Media Monitoring – offer additional online news media monitoring from which we can capture clips from most media in Canada, the United States and elsewhere. Our online software monitors most news outlets (both offline and digital) and, as a result, it misses fewer clips. There are free online news search engines like Google News that use similar tools as subscribed monitoring services, such as real-time alerts and up-to-the-minute search results with news clips relevant to time and date. You can receive daily emails, monitor aggregated keyword lists and more. Subscription-based online news monitoring services can offer greater efficiencies than the free model of monitoring, such as auto-search inquiries that go weeks back and use advanced algorithms to extract irrelevant clips, translate clips and articles, and create robust data visualization using sentiment analysis. Media monitoring service providers can create customized dashboards to meet your company’s needs and will often work with clients regularly to ensure media monitoring is capturing the essence of what is being said about your company’s brand. Then there’s traditional news – like television and radio – which are arguably best monitored through a paid service provider. While there are ways to monitor traditional news through a means of online search, it is hard to quantify and narrow down specific stories and tie them back to the brand.   That is why service providers are often used to monitor designated market areas so businesses have access to their local broadcast. Not all newscasts are available online; therefore, managing media monitoring in-house – as it pertains to traditional news – can prove to be rather pricey. Often, integrated media monitoring is key for most organizations who require different services for news and broadcast and social media. According to the CyberAlert Media Monitoring Guide, the trend is geared towards integrated services in which one media monitoring company provides all three media intelligence services: news and broadcast and social media. So which method is better? As we’ve seen, the choice to go in-house for media monitoring or to employ a service to do it for you can be a tricky one. Ultimately, it’s about the needs your company has, how many and what types of news services you wish to monitor, how wide the net you wish to cast will be and – of course – how much you’re willing to invest. While in-house monitoring may often seem like the most cost-effective and most reliable source (given employee knowledge and memory), this is regularly not the case. In-house monitoring will not give you the range of coverage that a subscription or third-party service can provide and often comes at a greater cost. Subscription services, like Insightrix Media Monitoring, will usually give you the best option when it comes to range and depth of monitoring, number of sources monitored and price.   Want to know more about the Insightrix Media Monitoring Service? Get the Insightrix Media Monitoring brochure and learn what your champions and critics are saying online, and how the media are positioning your company in their news stories and opinion pieces. hbspt.forms.create({ portalId: "374811", formId: "3defb124-ebc0-4a4c-b252-1ea5b74a555e" }); Source: CyberAlert – Media Monitoring: The Complete Guide  ...
 

You’ve got the data insight – now how do you present it? Market research is often regarded as a valuable tool packed with useful insights that businesses and organizations can use to maximize their potential. But what happens when you have deep, rich insights with no idea how to paint a positive picture that will solidify stakeholder buy-in, especially among general audiences? Usually, professionals provide their learnings to stakeholders in the form of market research reports - a proven and reliable way to get complex information across to stakeholders in ways that are actionable right away. Reports are often rich in detail and contain executive summaries that help tell your story or inform your business problem. But what about when you need to get market research data out to a wider audience of people? People who may or may not know they have a stake in the organization or business? Or more challenging yet – an audience who may not care? Learn how to make your market research reports stand out with 6 Creative Ways to Present Your Market Research Data. This situation is something that is perhaps more common than you’d think for organizations like municipalities, government agencies, non-profits and many others. For industries like these, getting research details and findings out to a mass audience of stakeholders can prove to be difficult. And sometimes a market research report may not be the solution to get concise information to those who have a stake in the subject matter. In cases such as these, market research reports will be a tool to help inform those who commissioned the research in the first place, but they may not be enough to get the underlying intelligence out – quickly – to the people who matter. In cases like these, a different approach may be what is called for! There are ways for brands to get market research intelligence out there that will not only get their audience’s attention, but will also keep it long enough for the market research data to speak for itself. Often, the best tools available are those that are familiar (or look familiar) to a general audience. That’s because familiarity with a medium engenders comfort with it – making these messages much easier to digest. That’s because familiar things make us feel comfortable. Think about it this way – when we’re exposed to the same stimulus over and over, and we don’t suffer any ill effects as a result, we learn we can trust that thing. The same goes with content. The more we are exposed to a specific kind of content, or the channel that content is on, we become familiar with it. When these become familiar, we don’t have to bother worrying about whether we can trust – we just engage.   Check out the creative outputs listed below to see how some familiar media can be used as great ways to relay market research data to general audiences. Blogs It may seem head-slappingly obvious, but adding a blog roll to your organization’s website may be a great place to start. Blogs present information in a comfortable style that many readers are used to. Familiarity with this format will allow many who may be unfamiliar with the concepts presented to learn about them in an unintimidating way. What’s more, blogs allow for either linking or embedding of many of the creative outputs discussed later in this post, which makes them like Swiss Army knives for reporting to mass audiences. Check out some of our blogs to see how we do it!   Vox Pops & Other Multimedia When it comes to relaying research data to mass audiences, video is a great tool to use. That’s because when it comes to getting and holding the attention of audiences and getting information across to a wide audience, video cannot be beat. Why it is a great tool comes back to engagement – people love video. In fact, according to HubSpot, a leading software in customer reputation management, using videos on landing pages will increase conversions by 86%. What’s more, just having the word “video” in the subject line of an email can increase open rates by 19%. One of the ways Insightrix has used video to relay and encourage discussion about the findings of our independent research is through vox pops. Vox pops are short interviews in which participants are asked research questions like those fielded in the market research and their responses are recorded. Another way to make vox pops work is to present market research findings themselves and get reaction to them. Have a look at a vox pop Insightrix developed in the past embedded below to get a better idea of what they are all about. There are many different other ways to use multimedia for market research data – from motion infographics to explainers (short videos that are used to explain concepts through the use of visuals and narrative) to re-enactments (staged recreations of events or occurrences). Watch the explainer video below that we produced to see how they can be effective in getting complicated messages across to wide audiences. Both multimedia strategies go a long way to humanize the research data itself by giving a face to research participants. Infographics Not everybody takes in information in the same way. Generally, some people may be more drawn to the written word, others will prefer video to access information – others, on the other hand, will connect more with your research data if it’s relayed to them through a graphic representation. Infographics are a great way to get a large amount of data across all at once in an easy-to-swallow form. They combine text, images and design to tell the story of your data. What’s more, they are easily shared through social media, which will help to amplify the messages you want to get across. Infographics do more than engage and entertain - they help audiences internalize and understand complex or subtle data stories easily and demonstrate insights in a rich and communicative way.    While infographics can be a quick way to represent your data – the tools used to build infographics are not always the quickest to learn and are sometimes not the cheapest option either. But don’t let that discourage you! There are plenty of great resources available to the aspiring or intermediate infographic developer such as platforms like Piktochart - combine a platform like Piktochart with graphic resources such as Flaticon for an inexpensive but professional result. Below is a recent example of a study infographic we’ve developed through publicly accessible assets:  Podcasts When podcasts started out in 2004, they were pretty niche in their messaging and their audiences. Since then, though, they have grown to become one of the major communications channels out there today. And many organizations and businesses are jumping at the opportunity to use podcasts for their own needs. This is mostly because of two factors: easily affordable reach and versatility. Reach Podcasts are one of the fastest-growing communications and marketing channels organizations have at their disposal. According to "The Canadian Podcast Listener - a Landscape Study 2018”, across every metric they measured, podcast awareness and usage has grown even since 2018. In fact, more than 10 million Canadian adults have listened to a podcast in the last year. This alone makes podcasts a great way to relay your business data to a wider audience. Sure, the reach of podcasts may not be as large as legacy media like radio or television, but they’re much more affordable (much, much more affordable!). This affordability, combined with the growth in the medium, means that podcasts will continue to be one of the best ways for organizations to reach a broad audience. Versatility And podcasts are also quite versatile, which makes them ideal for relaying complex messages and data to a general audience. The messaging and the style in which messages are conveyed are up to podcast producers, opening up untold possibilities when it comes to the way information is relayed. Podcasts can be dry and informational, entertaining and fun - or a mixture of both. Take a listen to our own podcast series, Stories of Market Research: The Insightrix Podcast, for an example of the ways that a podcast can be an awesome way to relay market research data to general audiences.   It Is Possible to Relay Market Research Data to General Audiences Even though market research intelligence can sometimes be a little enigmatic to general audiences, it is entirely possible to get the story of the data across to folks who may not have a background in data interpretation or market research analysis. Some of the best ways to do this is to take the data out of market research reports, which may be a bit cryptic to the average person, and put it into formats that are more familiar to general audiences, like blogs, videos, infographics and podcasts. And what’s more, each of these media have their own benefits and each can be used in different and mutually complementary ways. As tools to communicate with and relay market research data to general audiences, they are invaluable. Using one, or all of them together, can be a great way to relay market research data to general audiences. Interested in seeing how Insightrix uses video and podcasts to get our data story told to folks without a research background? Check out the Insightrix YouTube Channel for vox pops, video clips and podcasts. ...
 

Stories of Market Research: The Insightrix Podcast is back with a brand-new episode of a brand-new season. Season 2 of Stories of Market Research opens with Episode 9 – Market Research, Digital Marketing & Small Business, in which we are joined by social impact entrepreneur, author and communications consultant, Katrina German. In our conversation, Katrina unpacks some of the tricks and strategies she has developed in her book, Action Tracking: Master Your Digital Marketing Strategy in Under 30 Days, to help small-business owners and marketers employed in small- or medium-sized businesses create digital marketing plans that will help them break through the digital clutter and stand out against the marketing of much larger businesses. We discuss the tools (like CRMs, social media applications and Google AdWords) that business owners and marketers can use to develop their own plans, as well as how they can use the data gathered from experiments with these tools to do their own market research to make their digital marketing plans and campaigns even better. We also discuss some of the more accessible resources available to SMB owners and marketers from market research agencies, like omnibus surveys or syndicated reports, and how they can use them. Later in the episode, Katrina German lays out some of the new trends that digital marketers can expect to see in the future, as well as some tricks of the trade that will help get digital marketing messages and content noticed. If you’d like more information about Katrina or would like to contact her, go to Katrinagerman.com. There, you’ll be able to find more out about the work she does, contact her or get more information about her book, Action Tracking: Master Your Digital Marketing Strategy in Under 30 Days. It’s a great resource for folks looking to either begin marketing their small business or to augment the digital marketing strategies they already employ. You can learn more about the Insightrix products and programs, like syndicated reporting and omnibus surveys, here on the Insightrix website. More from Insightrix Research You can follow Insightrix Research on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, and subscribe to never miss a new video on YouTube. You can also access Stories of Market Research: The Insightrix Podcast on your favourite podcasting app, like Apple Podcasts, Stitcherand Google Play Music. ...