Concept testing: 5 Best Practices for Unlocking Consumer Insights

 

Concept testing: 5 Best Practices for Unlocking Consumer Insights

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You've got ideas. So does your CEO, your product team, your marketing team, and everyone else at the entire organization. Coming up with ideas is fun and can be really energizing, but how do you know which ideas will actually work? It's hard to make a business case for why you should use a certain piece of creative or make one product decision over another without data to back it up. Fortunately, you can conduct concept testing to get the data you need to find the right ideas for your brand.

Concept testing is a powerful way to gain insight into how consumers perceive a brand’s ideas before investing in their development. Early-stage testing enables companies to pinpoint the strengths and weaknesses of their concepts, allowing for informed optimization and improved in-market success.  According to a recent study by Forbes magazine, 85% of products fail when proper testing is not conducted.

Why concept testing is important

Concept testing is a step that every business needs to incorporate into its product or marketing campaign development process. It involves going out to the market to gather information on whether customers will accept or love a new concept.

To understand why a brand should conduct concept testing, it's important to recognize the competitive advantage it offers in product development and market positioning. Concept testing involves presenting a concept idea for a new product, flavor, or campaign, before it has been fully developed or launched, to potential customers to gauge their reaction and feedback. This feedback is crucial for several reasons:

  • Risk Reduction: By validating concepts early in the development process, brands can reduce the risk of product failure. Concept testing helps identify potential issues or lack of interest before significant resources are invested in development and marketing.

  • Customer-Centric Development: It ensures that the product development process is aligned with customer needs and preferences, leading to higher satisfaction and loyalty. This customer-centric approach is vital in today’s market, where consumer expectations are higher than ever.

  • Market Fit and Demand Estimation: Concept testing can help estimate market demand and identify the most compelling features or benefits of a product from the consumer's perspective. Understanding what resonates with your target audience can guide marketing strategies and product feature prioritization.

  • Competitive Differentiation: It can uncover insights into how a new product or feature stacks up against existing solutions, identifying unique value propositions or areas for improvement to differentiate in the market.

Best practices for concept testing

Once you’ve decided that concept testing is something that will help you understand your customers, discover new markets, reduce time to market, and generally make your work more effective, you need a plan. Here are some steps that will help you succeed.

1. Use the latest tools.

Traditionally, businesses relied on sluggish market research techniques and costly in-person focus groups. Neither of these practices delivered timely or reliable results. In many cases, by the time the results came in, the whole game had changed.

Today’s consumers expect a lot of the products they buy. Incorporating the voice of your consumer into every decision you make is not a nice-to-have, it’s mission-critical. You need to take an idea from the boardroom to a product on the shelf quickly and accurately enough to meet customer demand.

Iterative concept testing is crucial to support the speed of product, flavor, and message development that all brands need to survive and remain competitive. Tools like Suzy offer a comprehensive approach combining qualitative and quantitative methodologies that allow you to dive deeper into consumer insights. 

2. Test Early and Iterate.

Concept testing is something that needs to happen in the early stages of decision-making. It is equally important to have the ability to iterate on your initial finding. There’s no advantage to waiting until you’ve devoted so many resources to developing an idea that you don’t feel like you can turn back. The earlier you start, the more opportunities there are to iterate on the feedback you receive from your initial testing. This approach not only saves time and resources but also ensures the final product resonates well with user expectations, maximizing the chances of success in a competitive landscape.

3. Agree on the concept’s value proposition.

If you’re planning to get feedback about a concept, make sure that you’ve defined it well. Starting the process with a nebulous definition of what you’re testing isn’t going to produce the results you want. Make sure that you are testing a value proposition that aligns exactly with your concept.  For example, if you’re working on a packaging optimization project, align on what you’re testing on and how that aligns with your brand’s strategic goals. 

4. Define a specific goal.

When you structure your test, make sure you have a specific goal in mind. One benefit of doing that is to ensure that you get the specific feedback you need. The other benefit is you’ll almost be writing the questions for your test at the same time.

Here’s a bad goal: Get feedback on package design.

Here’s a good goal: Determine if the package design indicates an upscale product.

5. Define customer segments.

If you’re testing a concept that applies to all of your customers, you’re probably not doing it right. Define segments based on what those particular customers have in common.

Think about what the customers are trying to accomplish, and what outcome they’re looking for. Add to that a definition of the things that prevent them from reaching their goals. For example, identify the pain the customer experiences.

You will undoubtedly find differences between the segments in terms of what you want to learn from them and the questions you need to ask.  

It’s often true that the answer you receive from one test will simply give you more ideas about other tests that would provide the insight you need.

How can Suzy Help

Suzy simplifies research with both basic and advanced tools for survey design, automated templates, data analysis, and reporting, making it easy to design, execute, and analyze concept tests. Additionally, Suzy's flexible engagement model, including DIY, hybrid, and fully managed services, ensures that brands can choose the level of support they need to get actionable insights.

Category Exploration Uncovering Opportunities

This is an opportunity to get insights on consumers’ mindsets, behaviors, and drivers within your category that will inspire the strategic framework behind your concepts.  Our qualitative offerings including Video Open Ends, In-Depth Interviews, and Focus Groups are a great place to start before running qualitative studies.  

Early and Iterative Concept Testing

Test early-stage concept ideas and comms concepts to understand how they resonate with your consumers and solve their pain points.  Understand how more developed concepts are perceived, and how they break through and differentiate your brand.  By leveraging Suzy’s advanced methodologies, such as Monadic Testing, MaxDiff, and TURF Analysis, as well as AI-powered Heatmapping, brands can gain a comprehensive understanding of their concept's appeal and potential market performance. 

Final Concept Testing

Test iterated concepts to determine the final assessment among consumers and identify any additional opportunities for iteration before launch. Suzy's integrated platform, combining quantitative and qualitative research methods, enables brands to gather in-depth consumer feedback across all stages of product development, ensuring the concept is refined and optimized before launch​​​​.

With its proprietary audience of over 1 million diverse and engaged consumers, Suzy offers precise targeting and powerful retargeting capabilities, allowing brands to connect with the right audience for their concept testing needs.

Final thoughts

There’s no argument over the effectiveness of concept testing. Today, businesses are sometimes less likely to do traditional market research for concept testing because of the cost and the length of time it takes. Those businesses are learning the hard way that they need to find approaches to make concept testing more agile and cost-effective.

By utilizing methodologies that offer both breadth and depth of consumer insights, brands can make informed decisions that resonate with their target audience. Platforms like Suzy provide the tools and resources needed to conduct these tests efficiently and effectively, making it an invaluable partner for brands looking to innovate and grow.

Want to see how concept testing works at Suzy? Book a demo with our team today, and we’ll show you how to test your concepts quickly and iteratively for truly effective products, campaigns, and more.