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December 7, 2015
The data in the GRIT report suggests that our industry is a strong adopter of technologies.
By Matt Warta
According to the GRIT Report, the market research industry is a strong adopter of new technologies and, in many cases, embraces them. However, anecdotes and empirical data suggest otherwise.
Technology Adoption Life Cycle
To assess technology adoption in market research, Geoffrey Moore’s timeless work called “Crossing the Chasm” provides a useful model. He describes the Technology Adoption Life Cycle as having five segments:
Adoption but Immature Offerings
The data in the GRIT report suggests that our industry is a strong adopter of technologies. Two thirds of the technologies highlighted would fall in the Early Majority stage or better. If you include those considering using these technologies, 57% are in the Late Majority.
To many in our industry, the analysis above may not resonate. All you need to do is read an industry blog or listen to conversations at conferences, and the conclusion is there is not enough adoption of innovation.
As another proof point, there aren’t any new technology providers in market research generating $10s to $100s of millions in revenue within a ginormous $40B industry, which you would expect to see based on the aforementioned adoption data. So, what gives? I argue that most of the offerings that are being adopted are seeing limited use, because in Moore’s words, they are too “Generic” and they have not achieved “Whole Product” status.
Moore defines the Whole Product as that which is required to fulfill on the marketing promise. And for new technologies in market research, that often means doing things faster, more affordably, at scale, and with quality results…a lot to accomplish. And, the reason the purveyors of the technologies listed in the GRIT Report haven’t scaled is they can’t deliver on that promise. They are too Generic.
Generic Product versus the Whole Product
Here’s an example of how GutCheck is progressing from what was a Generic product to one that is evolving toward the Whole Product, and what that means for industry adoption.
The table below depicts GutCheck’s progression over time.
Note: For brevity, 2011 is not included. In 2011, GutCheck was largely a self-serve tool for qualitative research in the U.S.
As a company, we have hired key resources and secured $12MM (USD) to continue to innovate our platform toward the Whole Product so we can move well into the Early Majority and beyond. There are no shortcuts…getting to the Whole Product takes time and ample resources.
Clients Are Looking for the Whole Product
Observations and data suggest there is ample trial of new technologies. After all, there is no shortage of conference presentations or webinars where technology companies and their innovator clients are giddy over the results from their isolated, controlled experiments, and I’ve been there myself. It’s clear people want to use these new technologies, or the data wouldn’t be what it is. However, suppliers must provide the Whole Product in order to move toward being a $100MM company capable of owning their segment of technology. These companies must mature past a bare-bones offering leveraged by early adopters to one that can deliver on the marketing promise clients demand. The clients want to adopt; it’s the supply that is lagging.
To read more about what’s happening on the market research front, subscribe to the GutCheck blog.
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Disclaimer
The views, opinions, data, and methodologies expressed above are those of the contributor(s) and do not necessarily reflect or represent the official policies, positions, or beliefs of Greenbook.
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