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Kupferman.com is maintained by Mark Kupferman of Orlando, Florida (USA) and features reviews, news and trends in marketing research technology as well as other topics and subjects that interest Mark.
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- Senior SQL Analyst/Web Developer: http://t.co/1UqMoFSl 07:10:13 PM January 31, 2012 from LinkedIn ReplyRetweetFavorite
- Social Media Timing: Should You Tweet Morning, Noon or Night? http://t.co/06v17Yuc 04:52:27 AM January 30, 2012 from Reeder ReplyRetweetFavorite
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- Reading: "Google Algorithm Update Favors User Experience, frowns on too many ads above the fold."( http://t.co/tixgAkAd ) 06:46:26 AM January 22, 2012 from TwitThis ReplyRetweetFavorite
- How to encourage speeding in your surveys #MRX http://t.co/4mPbkNb3 01:56:41 PM January 13, 2012 from Reeder ReplyRetweetFavorite
- Majority of Shoppers Distrust Facebook Stores http://t.co/OmFatHTx via @marketingcharts 05:49:27 PM December 29, 2011 from Tweet Button ReplyRetweetFavorite
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Recent Posts

Research Dashboards
David Tebbut of IWRBlog (Information World Review) recently posted some interesting observations about Confirmit’s dashboard application, in which an online survey system is used to track customer attitudes in real time and report the results in an automatically updated "dashboard" application. The idea is to be able to provide useful research results instantly — as soon as they are relevant — instead of having to wait hours, weeks or days for results.
In my own experience, the greatest challenge to this type of a dashboard — which in some ways speaks to the potential to integrate customer satisfaction directly into a balanced scorecard type system in a meaningful way — is the ability to collect enough data on a regular basis to cause the "dials" on the dashboard to reflect something meaningful. 10 or 15 responses a day are simply not enough for a system that is meant to be continuously updated.
On the other hand, there are applications where such a system might be somewhat useful and relatively easy to "keep fed." For example, if on the way out of the store there was a single question that customers could answer — either as they walked out the door or as they checked out — and if there were enough registers in the store — it might be possible to collect enough data to make the dashboard meaningful. Or maybe if there were a way to ask the question on customer cell phones as they walk out of the store (perhaps a little less realistic).
Read more about this article at IWRBlog.