Are you planning market research? You should start your work with a research brief. The research brief describes the objective and outcomes of the research. The better brief you create, the more accurate and better quality survey results you will get.
- Company description and background
Start with a company description, market environment, competition, trends, … If you have knowledge from previous research or acquired in any other way, you can share it here. This information will help the researcher better understand your needs. - Business objective
Business objectives should be defined separately to research objectives, eg. new product market launch. In most cases, it is different from the research objective. - Research objective
Issue we want to solve or questions on which we want to find an answer. While you define the research objective, it is good to ask yourself questions : What do I want to examine? Why do I want to examine it? What will I achieve thanks to this information? - Methodology preferences
Some clients have precise expectations regarding research methodology. If you have precise requirements in this area, write about them. - Target group
If you know what your target group (eg. women, age 21 – 34, living in cities with a population above 50k) is, include this information in the brief. Your target group may also be your own customers or partners (if you have contact information like email, phone) - Timing
When research should be conducted and when the final report should be delivered. - Budget
Do you have a dedicated budget for the research or budget constraints? This information can help eliminate some more expensive options at the very beginning. - Deliverables
Are there any requirements concerning the final report format, eg. should it be delivered in PowerPoint format, as a Word document, or any other form? Do you need row data to be delivered in Excel or SPSS format? - Contact information
Contact information (name, surname, email, phone) for people responsible for the research, including preferred or primary contact point. - Additional information
Any additional information concerning research, eg. if we are conducting research of a retail chain, information if there are specific shops that should be examined.