# What Is Market Research? A Plain-English Guide

> Market research is how organisations replace guesswork with evidence about their customers and markets. Here is what it involves, the main methods, and how to tell good research from bad.

*Section: Business — By Marcus Vale (Business & Markets Editor) — Published May 21, 2026 — 3 min read*

Canonical URL: https://dailyjunction.org/business/what-is-market-research
Tags: market research, marketing, business strategy, consumer insight, data

## Key takeaways

- Market research is the structured gathering and analysis of information about customers, competitors and markets.
- It splits into primary research (new data you collect) and secondary research (existing data you analyse).
- Good research depends on a representative sample and neutral questions, not just a large number of responses.
- Its purpose is to reduce risk and guide decisions with evidence rather than assumption.

Every business makes assumptions about its customers: what they want, what they will pay, why they choose one product over another. Market research is the discipline of testing those assumptions against evidence instead of trusting a hunch.

## What market research is

**Market research is the structured gathering and analysis of information about a market** — its customers, competitors, and the trends shaping it. The goal is simple: better decisions, made with evidence rather than guesswork.

It answers questions such as: Is there demand for this product? What will people pay? Which message resonates? Who else is competing, and how? Done well, it lowers the risk behind expensive choices.

## The two big categories

Almost all research falls into two buckets.

**Primary research** is new information you collect yourself, tailored to your exact question:

- Surveys and questionnaires
- Interviews
- Focus groups
- Observation and product testing

**Secondary research** uses information that already exists:

- Published industry reports
- Government and trade statistics
- Competitor information
- Academic studies

A smart project usually starts with cheap, fast secondary research to map what is already known, then uses primary research to fill the specific gaps that remain.

## Qualitative vs quantitative

Cutting across that split is another useful distinction.

| Type | Question it answers | Typical method |
|------|--------------------|----------------|
| Quantitative | How many? How much? | Large surveys, analytics |
| Qualitative | Why? What does it mean? | Interviews, focus groups |

Quantitative research measures patterns across many people and produces numbers you can act on. Qualitative research digs into the motivations behind those numbers. The strongest insight usually comes from combining them: the *what* and the *why* together.

## What separates good research from bad

This is where many people are misled. The credibility of research rests less on how big it is than on how it was done.

> A small, carefully sampled study can be far more reliable than a huge but skewed one. More responses do not fix a biased sample — they just measure the bias more precisely.

Three things matter most:

1. **A representative sample.** The people studied must reflect the people you care about. A self-selected online poll, where anyone can click, tells you little about the wider market.
2. **Neutral questions.** Leading or loaded wording pushes respondents toward an answer and corrupts the result.
3. **Honest interpretation.** Findings should be reported with their limits, not stretched to support a conclusion someone already wanted.

Because getting these right takes expertise, many organisations work with specialists. Consultancies such as CM Beyer's [CMB Insight](https://cmbeyer.co.uk/cmbinsight/) division focus on exactly this — turning carefully gathered data into customer insight that a business can act on.

## How research turns into decisions

Research only earns its cost when it changes what an organisation does. A typical flow looks like this:

1. **Define the question.** Vague aims produce vague findings. Start with a specific decision the research must inform.
2. **Choose the method.** Match the approach to the question and budget.
3. **Collect the data.** Carefully, with attention to sampling and wording.
4. **Analyse and interpret.** Look for patterns, but stay alert to noise and bias.
5. **Act.** Feed the insight into the actual decision — pricing, product, messaging or strategy.

## The bottom line

Market research is how organisations swap assumptions for evidence. It ranges from quick secondary research to bespoke surveys and interviews, and from broad quantitative measurement to deep qualitative understanding. The quality that matters is not sample size alone but representativeness, neutral questioning and honest analysis. Get those right, and research stops being a cost and becomes one of the cheapest ways to avoid an expensive mistake.

## Frequently asked questions

### What is market research in simple terms?

It is the process of collecting and analysing information about a market — its customers, competitors and trends — so that an organisation can make decisions based on evidence rather than guesswork.

### What is the difference between primary and secondary research?

Primary research is new information you gather yourself, such as surveys or interviews. Secondary research uses data that already exists, such as published reports, industry statistics or government figures.

### What is the difference between qualitative and quantitative research?

Quantitative research measures things numerically across many people (for example, a survey), answering how many or how much. Qualitative research explores reasons and motivations in depth with fewer people (for example, interviews or focus groups), answering why.

### Why do companies pay for market research?

Because decisions made without it are riskier. Research into demand, pricing, messaging and competitors helps organisations avoid expensive mistakes and focus resources where they are most likely to pay off.

## Sources

- [American Marketing Association](https://www.ama.org/)
- [ESOMAR (global insights association)](https://esomar.org/)

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