9 Highly Successful Market Research Examples
In the battle of instinct vs insight, there’s clear evidence that data-driven decision-making pays off.
A McKinsey study into the impact of market research found that organizations using data to make decisions are more likely to be profitable, and can more effectively retain and acquire customers vs those who fail to use this approach.
I’ve curated nine of the best market research examples to help you find innovative ways to fuel growth, adapt, and impact change when and where it’s most needed. This post guides you through the problems faced along with the processes and tools used so you can replicate actions and outcomes in your business.
Market Research Example #1 – Understand the competitive landscape
In any business of any size, having in-depth insights into competitors’ audiences, campaigns, keywords, (and more) allows you to shape or refine your own plans for success. You can cut through the noise, see what’s working, and uncover opportunities for growth.
Since 2013, Wonderbly’s business has grown exponentially and now sells personalized books to over six million customers worldwide. In order to validate its go-to-market strategy, it needed granular insights into competitors and market trends.
Here’s how it played out.
1. Competitive insights
Challenge: Low visibility into a key competitor’s activity
Action: By analyzing competitor audience demographics that showed both gender and age distribution of its rival’s audience, Wonderbly saw its competition was better at attracting a younger audience.
Impact: Through the development of a new audience profile and key changes to future campaign strategies, it was able to grow the business and attract new customers.
This snapshot shows competitors’ website demographics side-by-side. While it was attracting a larger female audience of 62% vs. 56%, they saw their rivals were better at appealing to a male audience, with a respective split of 43% vs. 37%. In age distribution, its share in the 18-24 bracket was just 12% vs. 19%. Showing a clear opportunity to do more to reach that younger audience.
2. Keyword seasonality
Challenge: Lack of data to enter new markets
Action: Using seasonal trends keywords that showed where competitors were winning traffic from paid ad channels, Wonderbly discovered an emerging category (weddings and anniversaries) that was not addressed with its own offering.
Impact: By demonstrating competitors’ success and subsequent consumer interest, a new product line was developed. It went on to achieve a 69% revenue increase in books purchased by a more mature audience.
Keyword seasonality screenshot shows traffic leaders for specific keyword sets, their seasonality, traffic share, volume, and CPC data. This shows where competitors are using paid ads to win traffic share.
3. Audience data
Challenge: Limited view of audience browsing behavior
Action: By looking into audience data that showed which sites its visitors were cross-browsing, Wonderbly was able to determine audience loyalty vs. that of its rivals.
Impact: The information was used to forge new content-focused partnerships in the UK, US, and Canada with several organizations and drove more traffic to its own site as a result.
Audience overlap screenshot shows which sites its customers are browsing, how loyal they are, and presented new information about a referral partnership.
See the full story behind Wonderly’s success here.
Market Research Example #2 – Market intelligence
Most business leaders and marketers have a solid understanding of their market. But if you want to stay ahead of the game, you need to reach deep inside a market, and often. Dynamic market intel enables you to do this and achieve sustainable growth by spotting emerging opportunities as they happen.
Red Arbor is the third-largest job board website in the world. Market intelligence is an integral part of its business; with granular data across multiple markets, it knows the how and why behind individual brands’ performance.
Challenge: Difficult to see what’s happening across websites, apps, and digital entities in relevant markets.
Action: By using competitive and market intelligence tools, Red Arbor could see market movements and shifts in rival traffic share in all relevant markets as they occurred.
Impact: Key data can be constantly monitored to provide intel around emerging competitors and enables Red Arbor brands to quickly close the gap on respective market leaders. Based on these insights, it helps brands become the ultimate competitor and retain their positions as market leaders.
Read the full article about Red Arbur’s successful market research example here.
Market Research Example #3 – Entering new markets
Diversification is key to survival. For both product and service-based businesses, entering a new market can, without question, yield huge rewards. But before investing time and effort, the crucial work of fleshing out the opportunity in its entirety is key.
Airbnb is a household name, and a huge part of its success has been breaking into new markets. Each market has unique factors, risks, and opportunities. When this global powerhouse wanted to enter the Israeli market, it needed to get a clear handle on both local and international leaders, along with emerging players; all of whom had deployed aggressive marketing efforts.
Let’s look at how it went on to achieve success in a bustling new market.
Challenge: Analyze a new, highly competitive market and get clear insights into its rivals’ traffic sources to enable them to build an effective marketing strategy.
Action: Airbnb already knew who the leaders and most active local competitors were, but to enter with confidence, it wanted to see its respective rivals’ growth strategies. Using detailed website analytics, it was able to see its top competitors were all focussed on four core marketing activities.
- Building partnerships with niche sites
- AdWords, display, and search campaigns
- Local social network ads via organic and paid campaigns
- Running local digital news publisher’s ads
The snapshot shows at a glance who the top industry players are, with booking.com attracting 1.4 million unique visitors in the period with a yearly change of 57% vs. Airbnb’s unique visitors of 249k and a traffic increase of 42%. Two key players are losing traffic, with a 42%+ reduction in traffic share. It also identifies five emerging players in the market with significant growth of over 3000%.
Airbnb chose to focus its resources on social marketing, display and search ads, and partnerships. Its findings revealed specific keywords, social sites, and referrals that enabled it to enter a new market in a position of strength.
Impact: It entered a new market with a 360-degree view of what marketing channels and tactics to use.
Read more on how Airbnb shaped its marketing strategy with this market research example
Market Research Example #4 – Business benchmarking & competitive landscaping
Benchmarking in business is a great way to see how well you’re doing. But it’s so much more than just this – it lets you discover, understand, improve, grow, and set goals. If there’s one crucial thing I want you to know about successful market research examples, it’s the importance of doing benchmarking – often and well.
Croud is a global digital marketing partner to some of the world’s greatest brands. It develops and iterates marketing strategies on a daily basis..
Want to find out how it consistently shapes successful growth strategies? Read on.
Challenge: Brand and category-level traffic analysis across different markets are limited.
Action: Using detailed site-level traffic data and competitor app engagement metrics, Cloud could quickly understand what sites people visit, traffic share, growth of a sector over time, and how a client’s own growth compares with its rivals.
Impact: The impact of market research intelligence on Croud’s business is multifaceted. It can serve clients’ fresh data insights that shape marketing channels and revenue opportunities. This, in turn, builds trust, loyalty, and revenue:
- A global lingerie client was able to fine-tune localized marketing strategies and adjust media mixes to reflect category benchmarks. Ad copy was ‘tweaked,’ and new audiences were uncovered.
- A video-on-demand client was alerted to emerging players entering the market, as well as what tactics were being used to obtain traffic.
- A homecare retail client has been able to see the successful ad channels of its clients and adjust the marketing mix accordingly.
Read the full market research success story from Croud here.
Market Research Example #5 – New product development
When organizations develop plans for a new product or service, it requires insight, investment, and often a little intuition. Dynamic market intel can help you reveal shifts in consumer trends or behaviors before your rivals.
As a business in the travel sector, the pandemic hit Staysure harder than most – in fact the travel sector experienced losses of around 70% year on year. Market demands became an anomaly, and many rivals were forced to close their doors. To survive one of the toughest periods a business could ever face, Staysure needed to pivot, adapt, and go in a new direction.
Here’s how it turned things around.
Challenge: Survive the global pandemic and pivot its digital marketing strategy to meet the demand for new products in a shifting industry.
Action: Using Similarweb Digital Research Intelligence, Staysure analyzed competitors’ marketing tactics in real-time. This continuous monitoring enabled it to know when post-lockdown recoveries were occurring in real-time and allowed it to spot emerging trends, one of which was identified as an opportunity to bring a new product to market to address a shift in consumer demand.
Impact: Armed with this intel, it was able to develop a new insurance product that protected consumers against cancellations, medical expenses, and repatriation.
See more about how Staysure identified a new product opportunity for its business during one of the most challenging of times.
Market Research Example #6 – Shape stronger strategies
Making key business decisions about the future is tough at the best of times. Add in a global pandemic, the possible end of globalization as we know it, and who knows what other variables – business leaders have never (likely) known a time like it. Creating future-proof strategies is a must for any organization, and with the current climate, it’s harder than ever. A data-informed approach is the only logical route to take at any time, but none more so than now.
eToro is a market-leading social investing platform with a presence in over 100 countries and more than 27 million registered users. Each region operates within a different set of regulations and caters to unique market demands. To support eToro’s international expansion, the most up-to-date and accurate intel is needed to spearhead successful customer acquisition efforts across the globe.
Challenge: Finding reliable, competitive intelligence across international markets in a timely fashion
Action: The dedicated media buying at eToro used Similarweb Digital Research Intelligence to monitor competitor campaigns and evaluate potential media outlets, partnerships, and ad networks. Using deeper insights into website traffic, trends, and competitors’ campaigns, it could evaluate trends periodically, at both a regional and national level, to discover new traffic sources, evaluate and optimize existing media partnerships, and conduct keyword research each month.
Impact: The improved access to granular data insights has helped eToro negotiate with its publishers. As a result of being able to clearly see ad placement and creative campaign performance, it has improved ROI and increased its ability to out-trade rivals and gain market share.
Read more about how the team at eToro used digital insights to save time and make smarter decisions.
Market Research Example #7 – Identify the target audience
Every successful market research example I’ve ever seen starts and ends with the customer. Buyer personas shape product, price, and placement – and the development of these personas are relevant to all organizations. Being able to clearly identify a target audience in any market is crucial. Market dynamics mean a target audience is susceptible to change, so even established businesses need to keep watch.
Simplr is a customer support solution for growing brands, delivering staffing solutions via remote specialists and AI. As with any service-based business, being able to find and attract the right audience is crucial for growth and sustainability. It used market research to find and qualify high-caliber prospects and secure a more effective sales process.
Challenge: Targeting the right customers at the right time
Action: Simplr was able to get a detailed view of which new brands were growing the fastest by using digital performance data. This gave its sales team the ability to identify, qualify and prioritize potential companies based on solution fit and increasing need. Using a range of reports that show monthly traffic changes and traffic spikes in a custom sector, it saw high-growth sites with an expanding customer base and with this, an increased need for support services like Simplr.
Impact:Market sizing is now more dynamic and well-informed than ever before. Sales efficiency has increased, lead quality has improved, and sales performance is more effective as outreach is done in a more timely manner. Now, Simplr can identify and reach out to prospects during peak growth periods, and it’s seeing better conversions as a result.
Read more about how Simplr used successful market research to close more deals and improve pipeline efficiency here.
Market Research Example #8 – Find out what marketing channels deliver ROI
In good times and bad, it’s important to optmize marketing spend to ensure you invest time, efforts, and money in channels that deliver. A great example of market research in action is to apply research efforts and take the time to know which channels work, and where rival’s are winning and losing in your space.
Anything is Possible (AIP) is a data-driven, communications strategy, media planning & buying company that covers all digital and offline media. Needless to say, it’s a business that depends on reliable, insightful, timely data to impact its clients and their goals.
Challenge: During COVID, a key client (the Institute of Cancer Research) faced declining donations. To survive, it needed to find new ways to find and convert audiences to donate.
Action: AIP utilized Similarweb’s Digital Research Intelligence to do a basic competitive analysis on key rivals of its client. This identified which channels were optimal, and where the most referrals on rival sites were originating from. It shows that premium publisher sites, such as The Guardian were sending significant traffic to competitor sites. With this information, it was able to develop a paid-ads campaign that displayed advertising on targetted guardian.com pages.
Impact: The campaign was a huge success, exceeding previous campaign conversion rates by 817%. Read more about how AIP used Similarweb to understand the right marketing channels to use.
Market Research Example #9 – Trendspotting to find growth opportunities
During the pandemic, many companies in the hospitality sector were forced to close their doors. It was a case of fight or flight, and there were clear winners and losers. Having the ability to spot industry trends and adapt fast was key to the survival of many firms. In this market research example, we explore how one consulting firm was able to help its customers pivot and thrive during turbulent times.
Wiideman Consulting Group provides multi-location brands with SEO research, audits, and strategy services.
Challenge: During the pandemic, food chains had to pivot from offering dining-in services to takeout and delivery services. With IHOP and Applebee’s as key clients of its firm, it needed to develop robust strategies quickly to help its clients survive. With consumers performing non-banded searches to find food delivery and take-out services, these traditional dine-in venues have no visibility online and were at risk of not being found by people looking to order alternative dining solutions while dine-in restaurants were closed.
Action: Using Similarweb, it identified the right keyword opportunities, industry trends, and delivery service provider insights. This enabled it to develop a strategy that focused on increasing visibility in the locations where the business could provide takeaway and delivery services. With this data, it was able to help reposition brands within the search engine results pages, and optimize content to generate leads and sales.
Doing this market research enabled it to make three key changes.
- Optimize the Google My business profile to emphasize new service options for lunch, evening, and family meals.
- Design and deploy optimized content with new delivery and takeout subpages for each location.
- Addition of the ‘start order’ button as a floating call-to-action across all localized pages.
Impact: Driven by Similarweb insights, these tactics delivered favourable results for both of its clients in the hospitality sector.
- Organic traffic for both brands improved by 63% & 37%
- Revenues increased by 167% & 70% yoy
Ultimately, this market research enabled its clients to adapt to a changing market, and thrive when many others were forced to cease trading.
You can view the full write-up here to hear more about this success story.
In summary
Market research isn’t a one-and-done activity – rather, it’s a highly-habitual process and a powerful tool in your marketing arsenal. Due to fast-changing market dynamics, business leaders and strategists need market insights on the fly to respond and react to shifts in consumer behavior while staying focused on growth.
I’ve shared with you nine market research examples demonstrating how companies around the globe have successfully used market analysis to strategize, adapt, and grow. Similarweb Digital Research Intelligence impacted each of these examples, helping take the guesswork out of market research; so you can confidently make informed strategic decisions to grow your business.
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