Our Halloween Treat: Another Month at #1

Posted by admin on Oct 24, 2016 9:00:49 AM

trophyno1

 

We at MFour are really looking forward to Halloween.

 

It isn’t just the candy, the costumes, and the spooky fun. It’s also the end of the month – and that means another opportunity to extend a winning streak of which we’re really proud.

 

Come Oct. 31, we expect our Surveys on the Go® app to be ranked yet again as the most downloaded market research app at Apple’s App Store. It would be our 32nd consecutive month at #1, going by end-of-month rankings compiled at AppAnnie.com.

 

It’s no accident. MFour pioneered all-mobile, app-based market research when it debuted Surveys on the Go® in 2011. Our software developers in Labs & Engineering have been adding new features and functionalities ever since, keeping us at the forefront and defining the state of the art in mobile research.

 

Because the technology is right, the app works beautifully, and our clients get to field sophisticated surveys that are simple for respondents to answer. This sets up an ongoing virtuous feedback loop, in which smooth, problem-free functionality creates satisfied and engaged survey takers. And satisfied, engaged survey-takers satisfy clients’ need for fast, reliable and insight-laden data.

 

The Surveys on the Go® panel has grown to more than a million active members, all by word of mouth. It continues to grow by more than 2,000 new members each day, making the panel ever more efficient when it comes to putting clients in touch with representative numbers of the Millennials, African Americans, Hispanics and parents of young children they can’t reach by any other means.

 

Obviously this is an instance in which quality has led to quantity – which is just how a business ought to grow.

 

Our nearly three years at #1 in downloads is compelling on its own, but there’s another number we’re extremely proud of: our average rating of 4.5 stars out of a possible five at the App Store, generated by nearly 14,000 users who have posted unsolicited, public ratings and reviews of Surveys on the Go.®

 

So come Oct. 31, chances are we won’t need candy to experience something very sweet.

 

A very happy Halloween to all.

 

And to researchers who haven’t yet experienced what MFour’s advanced, state-of-the-art mobile research can do, remember that we’re on a big winning streak. It’s no trick, and you can get in on the treat.

 

pumpkin

Topics: News, MFour Blog

3 Friday Insights Into Mobile Research

Posted by admin on Oct 21, 2016 10:15:56 AM
Here's your Friday roundup of 3 items from our blog to keep you up to speed on mobile research as you head into the weekend.
 
Whatever else you do, don't forget to check at the bottom for something to mobilize your spirits.
 
 
And here's a Friday tune to get you bouncing into your weekend.

Topics: mobile targeting, MFour Blog, mobile market research, mrx

MFour in the News- MR Web

Posted by admin on Oct 20, 2016 11:36:20 AM

We made it into MR Web this morning for our press release on App Tracking & Mobile Device Targeting.

Check it out below:

Topics: MFour Mobile Research, max, mr web, MFour Blog

Why Online Survey Data is Like a Ball & Chain

Posted by admin on Oct 19, 2016 9:00:31 AM

ball_and_chain

 

Remember the Beatles refrain that goes "Boy, you're gonna carry that weight a long time?"

 

One of the big risks in market research is having to pile too much weight on too few respondents. When a study requires a certain number of responses from a given demographic, but just can't get enough valid completes, the data will distort reality instead of illuminating it. Data from too few qualified panelists gets too heavily weighted -- sending the study down the long and winding road to unreliability. 

 

A recent article in the New York Times tells a cautionary tale of what can happen when a thin sample becomes too heavily weighted.

 

A respected national online political poll was unable to reach enough African American Millennials as it tracked the presidential race. The pollsters found themselves forced to put a drastic amount of weight on the single African American respondent they were able to reach in the 18- 21-year-old age group. He happened to be a Donald Trump supporter -- and therefore highly unrepresentative of African Americans overall, who overwhelmingly favor Hillary Clinton. The poll fell out of sync with other national election surveys -- and, it appears, with the facts on the ground.

 

Consumer surveys that can't access the right respondents face the same burden, and inevitably will fail to reflect reality. It happens all the time, and the problem has become especially troublesome for tracking studies. But it doesn't have to be that way.

 

Online surveys designed for desktop and laptop computers and relying on email notifications are faltering because the public they need to reach has embraced today's technology, the smartphone, over yesterday's -- the personal computer. The solution for researchers is simple: they can go where the public has gone and embrace the smartphone, too.

 

Recognize that the U.S. public has migrated to mobile, and that it responds faster and more reliably to in-app survey alerts than to email notifications. Seek respondents on their ever-present smartphones and you'll quickly and efficiently find exactly who you need.

 

Our panelists include fully representative, reliably accessible numbers of all the supposedly "hard to reach" groups -- African Americans, Hispanics, Millennials and parents of young children -- who are especially engaged with their phones. When they are present and accounted for, there's no need for distorting weighting.

 

Here's some (unweighted) data that tells the story:

  • Among Millennials, majorities of African Americans (57.1%) and Hispanics  (51.6%)  spend five hours or more per day on their smartphones. 
  • 92.3% of Millennials use their phones at least several times a day, compared to 32.1% for laptops.
  • Only one-third of Millennials (33.1%) say they use a desktop computer at least once a day.

 

(These are findings from MFour's Millennial Insights Project, a demographically representative recent survey of 1,000 U.S. Millennials.)

 

A 2015 study by the Pew Research Center found that “smartphone ownership is nearing the saturation point with some groups: 86% of those ages 18-29 have a smartphone, as do 83% of those ages 30-49."

 

Is there any good reason for market research, whose job is to understand what people think and feel, not to reach out to the public on the device it has chosen overwhelmingly for expressing thoughts and feelings?

 

Granted, older demographics have not gravitated quite so thoroughly to mobile. But even among them the numbers are growing.

 

In tracking studies that need to encompass all age groups, it can still make sense to continue using online surveys for the older demographics that remain more comfortable with them. Researchers can then blend those results with mobile data from the mobile-oriented  majority.  

 

Through integration and calibration, the validity of past online tracking can be preserved through a gradual transition to mobile research. Continuity with historic tracking data need not be broken.

 

Yes, this is weighting. But it's judicious weighting that increases tracking studies' reliability while helping them move gradually into the mobile era.

 

Change is never easy, but the rewards of all-mobile, app-based research are too great, and the consequences of remaining behind the times with online surveys and email notifications are too drastic. Soon, political pollsters and consumer researchers alike will be happily mobile and relieved to work with data that's not burdened by a lot of unhealthy weight.

 

To get a personal demo of how app-driven mobile works, and how it will work for you, please click here

 

 

Topics: News, MFour Blog

When it Comes to Panel Demographics, `Diversify or Else’

Posted by admin on Oct 18, 2016 9:00:57 AM

 

screen-shot-2016-10-14-at-4-31-35-pm

 

 

Here’s a headline worth pondering: “Brands to Ad Agencies: Diversify or Else.”

 

It tops a New York Times article that relates how some big clients “have publicly put pressure on the agencies they work with to hire more women and minorities.”

 

Market research also faces a work force diversity challenge.

 

We’re not talking about whether the staff members at MR firms and brands’ research departments sufficiently mirror the public they’re trying to understand. We wouldn’t presume to claim any insights about that.

 

We’re talking about the vast work force that provides market research with the raw material the industry’s professional staffs need to do their jobs. It’s a work force of millions of survey respondents, and it’s absolutely imperative that they mirror our nation in all its diversity. They produce the raw material on which our industry thrives: data about what they do, think and feel as consumers. From the data they give us we mine insights into how American business can satisfy the wants and needs of the American marketplace.

 

When it comes to survey respondents, “diversify or else" is just common sense. 

 

It’s MFour’s contention – actually it’s MFour’s entire premise – that the only path to understanding American consumers in all their diversity is to approach them in a way that’s familiar, comfortable, engaging and convenient. It means reaching out on the smartphones that are in almost every hand, pocket or handbag.

 

The smartphone is our society’s great common denominator. It serves multitudes in myriad ways, and is embraced by nearly all. This is the fact of how information is exchanged in the 21st century. Now, more and more professionals in the market research industry are starting to come to grips with this reality. 

 

It’s sinking in that online research is no longer a reliable pipeline for rich, representative data. Reaching Millennials, Hispanics, African Americans, and, increasingly, any other consumer demographic, means finding and engaging them on the devices that are instrumental to their day-by-day, hour-by-hour existence.

 

It's also important to note the public's growing indifference to (and frustration over) stuffed email inboxes, where invitations to take online surveys land, then are readily deleted or ignored.

 

Online panelists are expected to open an email, then click on a link to access a survey housed on the web. It's cumbersome and inefficient -- in contrast to all-mobile "native" apps that simplify the process to a single step: answer a push prompt that sounds on the phone,  then take the survey. The app is integral to the phone, and therefore appreciated. Each panelist has chosen to download and use MFour's Surveys on the Go® app. Each is free to sound off about it with public ratings and comments at the App Store and Google Play. SOTG's rating at both sites is more than four stars out of five.

 

Survey apps align with the ethic of transparency and accountability that Americans cherish. And in strictly practical terms, they harmonize with Americans' preferences in information and communications technology.

 

 

So when it comes to market research,  “diversify or else” is just another way of saying "app-based mobile or else."

 

 

The best way to get there is to click here.

 

Topics: News, MFour Blog

Are You at TMRE?

Posted by admin on Oct 17, 2016 11:01:35 AM

MFour is there in (hopefully) sunny Boca Raton, Florida at TMRE this  week. Make sure to find us at booth #420 and we'll talk mobile.

Topics: Uncategorized

MFour in the News: RFL Communications

Posted by admin on Oct 17, 2016 10:53:49 AM

MFour was featured in RFL Communications  for our use of fingerprint validation. Check it out below!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sPePnRLp60

 

 

Topics: MFour Mobile Research, fingerprint validation, MFour Blog, research business daily, rfl communications

App Tracking & Mobile Device Targeting

Posted by admin on Oct 17, 2016 10:16:29 AM
We’ve added advanced Mobile Targeting tools to MFourDIY™, empowering users to reach respondents based on the apps they use, and through other characteristics inherent in their smartphones.
 
These features previously were available only to clients of our custom-designed surveys. Mobile Targeting uses passively-gathered information from our panelists’ smartphones, providing valuable data pipelines.
App Tracking
Targets respondents who have Android phones by the apps they use; for example, researchers for hotel chains could survey customers who have the chain's app – or monitor competitors by surveying travelers who have their rival's app.
Mobile Device Targeting
Identify & survey respondents by the make and model of their smartphones (Samsung Galaxy 7, Apple iPhone 7, etc).
For an example of how the App Tracking feature works, check out our study of Pokemon Go users – who we identified by their use of the Pokemon Go app.

Topics: MFour Mobile Research, MFour Blog, mobile app targeting, mobile device tracking, smartphones

New Research Insights on What Millennials Want

Posted by admin on Oct 17, 2016 9:00:14 AM

 

millennial-mom

 

 

¡MILLENNIALS!

 

“What do Millennials Want?” is a question businesses and market researchers need to answer now and for many years to come. 

We take a particular interest in Millennials as consumers, and they make up a majority of our million-active-member U.S. survey panel. Consequently, we're ideally positioned for our ongoing Millennial Insights Project.

After publishing  the first three installments individually, we've gathered links to each one  in this post for easy reference, and for readers who may have missed them earlier. The project's first phase was  a survey of 1,000 Millennials fielded Sept. 10 and completed within two hours using MFourDIY™.  We reported findings about Millennials' preferences in Entertainment, Money and Finance, and Technology.

To see them, just click on the topic names below. Note that each segment gives a detailed account of the survey methodology; you also can follow a link from each report to access the survey's Project Tracker. We invite you to review  the questions we asked, explore the data we gathered, and get a sense of how we operate and what MFourDIY™can help you accomplish.  

Entertainment 

Money and Finance

Technology

Remember, MFour is unique in fielding surveys that respondents receive and answer solely on an app they’ve downloaded to their smartphones or tablets. Unlike flawed, quick-fix mobile methods, which simply repackage online surveys that require emails notifications and   web-based questionnaires, we engage today’s consumers where they live — on their phones and using apps.

Because we're uniquely positioned to reach Millennials, we'll continue to engage  them and report back on what we find. 

 

Topics: News, MFour Blog

3 Friday Insights Into Mobile Research

Posted by admin on Oct 14, 2016 11:23:52 AM

Here's your Friday roundup of 3 items from our blog to keep you up to speed on mobile research as you head into the weekend.

Whatever else you do, don't forget to check below for something to mobilize your spirits.
And here's a Friday tune to honor America's newest Nobel laureate and send you rocking into your weekend. 

Topics: MFour Mobile Research, blog, fingerprint validation, MFour Blog, roundup, touchdowns, tv

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