Why have you been so quiet, dear blog?

It’s been a quiet winter around the GameHex halls. (This can be irrefutably, painfully proven through my weblog stats.) It’s a consequence of my own self-imposed gag order, as much has been in flux over the past six months. But the dust has finally settled, and it finally feels like a good time to share what exactly has been going on.

When I started blogging on GameHex, I was looking for kindred spirits in the narrow field of video game research. There aren’t very many game developers and publishers with enough success to sustain a long-term investment in consumer or market research, which made it difficult to exchange best practices. Or war stories. But in my efforts at outreach, I was inadvertently sucked into the broader market research “MRX” social cloud. I met many great people, had many inspiring conversations, dreamed some crazy ideas, and brought all of that energy back to my client-side role.

For many reasons, some professional but mostly personal, I’ve been in the process of flipping back to the vendor side of the bench. My new agency, Insights Meta, is now up and running and we’re doing some cool work with many of my favorite topics: Google Consumer Surveys, survey gamification, and creative data-driven storytelling. I’m very excited about all of these things, and hope to find ways of sharing some of these activities with the broader research community.

The first stop on that tour is the Insights Innovation Exchange conference in Sao Paulo, Brazil. I’ll be speaking there about [insert top secret topic here], and hope to meet up with old and new friends. (PRO TIP: USE DISCOUNT CODE SPEAKERS TO SAVE 20%)

I’d also like to encourage you to check out the Insight Innovation Competition Idea Board, which has some interesting ideas for new methodologies and services. (Be sure to click over and vote for my submission while you’re there!)

Most of my energy is now focused on getting Insights Meta off to a healthy start, which means unfortunately that my GameHex blogging time will remain diminished. I’ll be continuing to blog and post, but most of the content will be channeled through the Insights Meta blog – so change your links.

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Looking for web developers for contract work

A quick note: a couple of contacts have an immediate need for (1) casual game developers and (2) web application developers. Familiarity with phrases like JavaScript, HTML5, CSS3, AJAX, and JSON are good signs that you’re a potential fit. These are contract positions, with projects in the 3 to 6 month range (but with some potential longer-term needs).

If you’re interested, just send me a note via the “I’m interested” form below:

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Garbage In Garbage Out Part Deux (aka Panels Suck)

In my role as a client-side researcher, I am blessed with an unbelievably large global customer database in the tens of millions of people. Not email addresses, but real people that I know exist in the real world by virtue of their purchase histories, credit card information, and behavioral metrics on our various online services. Because of this blessing, over 90% of the survey work I field is CRM-driven. Continue reading

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Garbage In, Garbage Out

Been way too serious around here lately.

The Market Research eXperience

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Transparency is dead. Long live transparency!

Reg Baker clarified some of his earlier musings on Reg’s Law this morning — in particular, he highlighted the cultural conflict between traditional market research methodologies and the Silicon Valley-style technology-driven competitive environment. Having worked in both, I felt these observations were spot on: traditional research is more closely aligned with academia, and technology companies are more aligned with the applied sciences. This should not be surprising.

The implications are more subtle, but rather significant:

  • Competitive advantage in traditional research is driven by professional relationships, because there are no fundamentally large barriers to entry for new participants. There are no industry standard boards to conform with, no multi-million-dollar investments necessary to get started. Salesmanship is driven by the experience and quality of the people offering services.
  • Competitive advantage in technology comes from establishing an official or de facto standard or platform. Establishing these platforms requires capital, relatively large engineering teams, and intellectual property protection.

Jumping forward 10 years: if you believe that technology companies will become major participants in the research economy, then you must also believe that transparency in how these companies do things will be much less than you are accustomed to.

Nowhere is this more obvious than comparing the conferences and trade shows that dominate each respective sector:

  • In traditional research, we have venues like TMRE or ESOMAR or TMRTE or MRMW which are run by independent organizations. They attract a broad spectrum of industry participants, both client and vendor side, where there is no clear “top dog” on the show floor. The content spectrum is broad, with a fair amount of “selling”.
  • In technology industries, these venues are predominantly platform or company-specific. IBM hosts developer events for their platforms. Oracle hosts developer events for their platforms. Apple hosts developer events. Microsoft hosts developer events. Every attendee understands quite well who the top dog is; the content is more narrowly defined and is generally intended to provide companies that rely on those technologies to remain informed and competitive.

There is no incentive for a platform provider to disclose how they are creating their platform. And that is exactly what Google, Microsoft, IBM, Apple, and others will be trying to do as they experiment with and expand into the research sector. Transparency will still be demanded by their customers, however, and so instead you will see an increasing amount of transparency in the data…just not in how it’s being collected.

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