Tag Archive: client

Marketing Surveys – Cost Savings Ideas

By Marc Tillman

In this economic environment, many companies are looking for ways to save on the cost of conducting marketing surveys. Difficult choices often need to be made. This research is critical to business operations, but the budget just isn’t there for a full-scale project covering all of the nuances that need to be addressed. And budgetary restraints are often a circular issue where the results from a marketing survey might directly influence the company’s bottom line and provide an avenue for improved cash flow.

One option is to delay the marketing survey until additional dollars become available. But, if a company is flexible and can accept a scaled back approach, the project might still move forward at a reduced cost. This can be a challenging decision for a client since market research firms typically administer marketing surveys with the goal of achieving as close to a “perfect” solution as possible. Therefore, when discussions turn from how best to conduct a marketing survey to what services or deliverable can be eliminated to reduce the project fees, both the client and market research firm must “get over” the fact that the best solution is not possible within the project budget.

Our belief is that clients should not scrimp on survey design or engage in self-service design unless the person drafting the questionnaire is qualified and experienced in marketing surveys and questionnaire writing. However, many clients seem to believe that this is the first option to save on costs. Unfortunately, in-house familiarity with a company’s product or service, or a professional degree in engineering or finance, does not qualify someone to write marketing surveys. Survey design fees should generally be a low cost item for market research firms. If you don’t have the budget for a high quality survey instrument, consider not doing the project.

Before turning to the costs of data collection and what options might be available, it is often helpful for a client to focus next on reporting needs. When reporting costs are combined with survey design fees, and subtracted from the overall project budget, the end result is the amount available for data collection.

Reporting is one of those areas where a client needs to carefully consider the scope of the project and must often make difficult choices. Where marketing surveys are limited in length and/or encompass a smaller number of survey respondents, they can often be tabulated and reported in top-line format as the sole deliverable (plus the underlying data file). This allows a client to view bar charts of frequencies of responses for each question along with relevant statistics such as means, medians, and standard deviations. Most top-line reports are generated by market research firms using automated software and are a low cost item.

On the other hand, if one of the goals of the marketing survey is to compare responses of different sub-groups (such as age brackets, income levels, regions of the country, etc.), this can be a more expensive deliverable, often referred to as “banner tabulations” or “banners”. Banners allow a client to view side-by-side columns of sub-groups with notations of whether differences between banner points are statistically significant i.e., are meaningful. Fees charged by market research firms for banner tabulations are often slightly more expensive than the cost of designing marketing surveys, and can be similar in cost to the combined price of survey design and top-line reporting.

A key consideration is whether a client is comfortable working with banners or has a statistical background. For first time users, banners can be confusing and therefore a wasted expense if the client cannot fully understand the results. In these cases, an executive summary report of key statistical findings can produce a higher return on investment and can be similar to the cost of banners if there is a limited length or number of respondents. Full statistical reports are the best option if the budget allows for it.

This concludes Part 1 of our discussion on cost saving ideas for marketing surveys. The next article will address the subject of data collection and the different options that market research firms can provide. Keep in mind that the cost of survey design and reporting should be identified first, with additional price adjustments coming in other areas.

About the Author: Amplitude Research, Inc. is an independent market research firm that specializes in aa href=”http://www.amplituderesearch.com/marketing-survey.shtml” rel=’nofollow’>marketing surveys.

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IT Networking: Cost-Savings, Productivity And Security

By Joshua Feinberg

By engaging small business decision makers in discussions about their IT networking needs, you can highlight how automating services like faxing will save your prospect’s or client’s company on manual labor, which indirectly translates into substantial salary savings over the course of the year.

At the very least, network-based faxing will free up staff to focus on higher-level activities, rather than “babysitting” an archaic fax machine.

Listen for Other IT Networking Opportunities

As you get to know more about the prospect’s or client’s business, keep your antenna up for additional solution opportunity areas, such as centrally-managed Internet access for each desktop.

Besides faxing and Internet access, a client/server network makes sharing, protecting and securing information much easier. Through permissions and auditing, small business owners can ensure that only those authorized have access to sensitive information.

By centralizing the storage of data, small businesses can also more easily protect data with a tape backup drive, antivirus software, firewall software and an uninterruptible power supply (UPS).

Who Are You Promoting IT Networking To?

Tailoring your message for different audiences and interests is also key. If you’re discussing IT networking with the president or owner of the company, the hot buttons might include costs, the value of proactive technology investments, industry trends, competitive factors and lower labor costs through more automation.

The Bottom Line about IT Networking

If you’re discussing IT networking with middle management or employees in the trenches, make sure to shift gears. Staff and the internal guru will likely want to talk about ease of use and administration, how the network will make their job easier and the amount of training required to become proficient.

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About the Author: Joshua Feinberg has helped thousands of computer consultants get more steady, high-paying clients. Learn how you can too. Sign-up now for Joshua’s free Computer Consultants Secrets audio training at aa href=”http://www.ComputerConsultantsSecrets.com/blog/” title=”http://www.ComputerConsultantsSecrets.com/blog/” target=”_blank” rel=’nofollow’>http://www.ComputerConsultantsSecrets.com/blog/

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Architectural Area Lighting

By R. Neal

Architectural area lights feature an aesthetic component that differentiates them from the purely functional fixtures used in typical site lighting. Although the lamps used in both architectural area lighting and site lighting are often similar–if not identical– light sources, architectural area lights are made with a noticeably higher level of decorative design and ornamentation. As such, purchasing costs can be rather high, and this can deter municipalities, academic institutions, and even small corporations from making an investment that would otherwise serve their outdoor lighting needs on a number of levels ranging from public appeal to commercial branding. When commercial site developers, architects, and contractors encounter this type of resistance, they can turn to RLLD Commercial Lighting for adjunct lighting design support that will enable them to propose cost-effective, energy saving light sourcing that offers both tangible benefits and ROI on multiple levels.

Contractors frequently encounter office buildings, churches, museums, civic centers, municipal headquarters, universities, restaurants, resorts, and country clubs that require a highly customized, often very sophisticated architectural area lighting system that will contribute certain key elements to their property, building architecture, and public image. The fixtures and lamps that will ultimately be used to build these systems must completely accommodate the multiple demands of dark sky laws, increasingly strict LPW efficiency codes, minimum foot candle requirements, and bring the client measurable ROI through reduced power requirements and minimized ongoing maintenance.

If you are a commercial developer or sole proprietor working as a DIY electrical contractor, you can quickly and accurately accommodate these many demands in an expeditious manner is to work with a vendor like RLLD Commercial Lighting that offers complimentary, adjunct design services with a systematic approach. Before we suggest any specific lamps or fixtures, we first want to learn more specifics from you regarding your client’s site. When we understand architectural area lighting to actually be a combination of four separate elements– parking lot lighting, parking garage lighting, building architectural lighting, and security lighting– the right questions to ask become readily apparent. Does your client have a parking lot, a parking garage, or both? What is the total number of buildings located on the property? Are there public park areas, open landscapes, recreational areas, or walkways that require special lighting? How many people work or visit the facility at night? What is the total acreage of the property if it is located on a considerably large piece of land? How much light will the entire system output, what it will cost, and what will be the expected return on investment for your client?

The data gathered from this dialogue is now inputted into sophisticated lighting design software that enables us to calculate on a point by point level the exact photometric requirements needed to determine which specific fixtures will best provide building accent light, perimeter and walkway security, glare free, well-lit parking areas, and aesthetic, shadow-free landscape, and an energy savings package that offers a measurable ROI by means of energy and maintenance cost savings. By eliminating the guesswork from architectural area lighting, RLLD Commercial Lighting helps contractors first determine exactly what lighting levels and power requirements are optimal to propose, and second, which actual products will most effectively and affordably offer clients lasting solutions that are affordable, reliable, and aesthetically superior. By giving smaller design firms and individual lighting design consultants access to software normally affordable only to larger firms, RLLD Commercial Lighting also helps level the lighting design playing field, arming small companies and consultants with competitive advantages that can rival even the largest firms in photometric accuracy, specification grade quality, and multiple benefits at the line item level.

RLLD Commercial Lighting maintains a full selection of architectural area lighting fixtures, lamping options, commercial lighting poles, and mounting accessories that allow the contractor to offer more options to the client at the line item level. As a representative of a number of reputable, domestic, and established manufacturers, we can offer any commercial developer, architect, or lighting designer impeccable lead time on products made here in the United States and drop shipped anywhere in the country to expedite time to market delivery of products and services.

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