Major decisions regarding new products, pricing, organizational change or budgetary cuts benefit from first measuring the affected population’s reaction. This is the primary purpose of a survey. Advanced MR techniques have been developed to better address some common marketing issues. FMR uses these ‘best of breed’ industry advancements to increase data reliability and validity. The web medium is ideal for these techniques providing time savings, value, respondent comprehension and overall quality benefits. Some of the techniques we deploy include:
| Choice-Based Conjoint (Discrete Choice) | MaxDiff (Maximum Differential Scaling) |
is for measuring market preference at a range of potential price points for conceptual product or service formulations. Realistic purchase-scenario task questions (that include competitive brands) along wit h ‘what if’ software simulations for measuring price elasticity are major advantages of this technique. Conjoint is considered the best technique for New Product Design, Market Sizing and Brand Equity / Pricing studies. Please click here to view a short example. |
is an advanced technique for determining a population’s prioritization for a list of items. This widely applicable and scale-less technique delivers far greater between- and within-item (by segment/respondent) delineation than commonly deployed Likert scale questions. I mportant decisions for prioritizing budget items and determining preference for brands, features, services, products, etc. are common applications for this technique. Please click here to view a short example |
Forcing respondents to make trade-offs is a common trait among all of these advanced survey techniques.


