Effective marketing strategy is all about balance: short-term gains and long-term planning, adhering to brand identity and adapting to change, evidence-based insights and intuition, and lastly, qualitative and quantitative data.
Some marketers often focus exclusively on numerical data (quantitative). However, incorporating qualitative insights is necessary to recognize the nuanced human elements of consumer behavior and not miss valuable deeper understandings needed to innovate and grow.
Let us explore data collection and how to effectively blend qualitative data and quantitative insights to create a richer narrative and make data-driven marketing decisions.
Quantitative research data is based on numbers and can be counted, measured, and interpreted through statistical analysis. Examples of quantitative data in digital marketing include website traffic metrics, conversion rates, ad performance statistics, sales data, and more.
Qualitative data is expressed in words (text, audio) and helps gather more profound insights into subjective aspects such as customers' emotional triggers, behaviors, and purchase motivators. Examples of qualitative data include reviews, interviews, surveys, customer support tickets, feedback, demo recordings, live chat transcripts, and sales call recordings.
Quantitative data tells you what is happening, focusing on who/what/when, and how many/how often, while qualitative data tells you why and how.
Like quantitative data, qualitative insights are only valuable if you can transform your findings into actionable and clear steps for improvement and growth.
While quantitative data is typically faster to gather, analyze, and act on, qualitative data is where you find the gold.
Analyzing qualitative data often comes with challenges—if not done strategically, it can be slower and more expensive to gather, difficult to scale, and harder to base objective marketing decisions on. However, qualitative data allows you to understand customers’ true wants and needs, generate ideas for improving services, and provide actionable insights that may not necessarily be found in numerical data.
A common misconception is that collecting and analyzing qualitative data is inherently slow and costly. Blending the traditional methodologies for data collection with innovative techniques helps overcome this challenge. Here are some proven methods:
Instead of traditional focus groups, common in market research, we recommend using an improved research method we call observational group interviews. This method still involves a small number of predefined participants but transforms the typical focus group into a more interactive workshop-style activity. It combines elements of focus groups and one-on-one interviews allowing participants to share their opinions both individually and as part of a group.
This approach helps reduce the attitudinal bias often present in traditional focus groups and provides a more comprehensive understanding of user experiences.
Additionally, these observational group interview sessions can be conducted online to speed up and improve the organization of qualitative data collection.
The observational group interview is a candid conversation with target audience members about their impressions and experiences. Unlike traditional focus groups that often gather opinions in a controlled group setting, this process is dynamic and flexible. You can use observational interviews when:
Individual customer interviews are one of the most effective qualitative data-gathering methods. When setting up customer interviews, we suggest including different customer types, such as:
Follow these best practices for your customer interview to be effective:
Below are sample questions to conduct an insightful customer interview that you can pick and customize depending on the goals/objective of your research:
Including forms on your website that ask open-ended questions such as “Why are you canceling your subscription?” or “How did you hear about us?” can also yield valuable insights. A/B tests different versions to identify which questions provide the most useful insights.
Customer interactions from demos/sales calls, onboarding, and customer support conversations are also invaluable sources of qualitative data. They can provide insights into customer satisfaction, demographics, preferences, and more.
It is important to ensure that mechanisms are in place to capture feedback from the methodologies you employ, such as call recording and transcribing via Otter.ai or similar tools. It’s best practice to always obtain consent before recording meetings or using third-party tools for automatic transcription and note-taking.
If processed and analyzed effectively, customer interactions can provide enough data and standard patterns to determine ideas for converting copy, new ads, compelling emails, updated website structure, content, and more.
Creating a safe and welcoming space for the testers to honestly share feedback and take it as an opportunity to improve the pain points of your product is crucial for successful product testing. Try to encourage all feedback—it is better to hear negative comments and address them during testing than after the feature or product launches. Remember that negative feedback can be far more valuable in qualitative research than positive.
We recommend utilizing tools such as Userlytics for remote research and testing, particularly for website and application UX and usability testing. This tool helps compare websites and applications and gather feedback on user interactions, providing a comprehensive view of usability and user experience issues and areas of improvement.
Hotjar is another platform we recommend for user behavior and sentiment testing. It helps capture user feedback through forms and tracks interactions through heatmaps. Use Hotjar to review user behavior in real-time and gather sentiments about different aspects of a new product, website, or application. With Hotjar you can identify trends and areas needing attention, allowing for rapid iterations and improvements.
When preparing for usability testing and UX evaluation, the best route is to break down your approach conceptually to ensure thorough and effective data collection. We suggest the following breakdown.
1. User Research InterviewsWe recommend beginning with user research interviews, which can be conducted individually or in groups. These interviews aim to gather insights about the target audience, including their past experiences, common pain points, motivations, and needs. This information is crucial for creating detailed personas that represent the various segments of your audience.
2. Observational/Contextual InterviewsNext, focus on observational and contextual interviews. Here, the attention shifts from what users say to what they do. Observe participants as they interact with a website or app, verbalizing their thoughts and actions and look for patterns. Additionally, for some niche apps or digital tools, contextual observations can involve shadowing users in their real environments while they use the product.
By combining these methods, you can gain comprehensive insights: user research interviews help understand personas and their backgrounds, while observational interviews reveal user behaviors in real-time.
Customers engaging with you through your help desk is a goldmine of data that can help inform your customer experience and support agents’ performance.
To effectively use the data provided by customer tickets:
Here are some practical ways to analyze social media for qualitative insights:
When analyzing your online reviews, do not forget to check what your competitors’ customers say through their own (negative and positive) reviews, also checking social media and online forums or discussions. Look for patterns and trends in the complaints and use that information to bolster your own strengths in the areas where the competitors are underperforming.
Actively communicate any improvements or changes made in response to industry feedback through social media, your website, and direct communication.
We recommend experimenting with a combination of the methods discussed to effectively gather and analyze qualitative data. This approach can help derive deep insights that advance your business and marketing strategy. By blending these techniques, you ensure that qualitative research is efficient, impactful, and delivers the best possible outcomes.
To properly analyze and integrate qualitative data, you must aggregate your findings and identify the patterns and trends that align with what you see in the numerical (quantitative) data. Relying solely on one or another can result in a limited understanding of your situation.
Remember to dig beyond surface data to find the “why” behind it. For instance, your analytics may show users abandoning their shopping carts on the payment method page. While this may be valuable information, it does not tell the story of “why.” Maybe the answer waits for you in the customer feedback, session recordings, or other qualitative data you have gathered. Armed with a comprehensive understanding of your data, you can strategize to implement targeted improvements.
There are multiple options for effectively reviewing and quantifying the qualitative data you have collected to determine recurring themes, patterns, and suggestions and combining it with quantitative data for a comprehensive understanding of the business question. Thematic analysis is key!
When it comes to analyzing qualitative data, there are several methods available, each with its own advantages and challenges. Below are some key approaches to categorizing and analyzing text data:
To summarize, this simple process for integrating qualitative and quantitative data can help you make the most of them.
Important note: Unlike quantitative data, qualitative data does not require absolute stats, just enough data to make informed decisions. As marketers say, if you are not going to do something about it, it is not worth measuring. So, always make sure you translate your findings into actionable steps for improvement and growth.
Happy analyzing!