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Interview – Infosurv President Jared Heyman


According to a speaker at a CASRO® (Council of American Survey Research Organizations®) conference this past fall, online surveys surpassed telephone in terms of overall market research survey volume in 2005.


I recently learned about a company in this sector called InfoSurv (a full service market resrarch company) and I also had an opportunity to speak with its President Jared Heyman:

Please tell me a little bit about yoruself (and your company) and your background

I’m a fourth generation entrepreneur. I’ve known since I was a child that I wanted to own my own business, and plan to start several businesses in my lifetime. In the late 1990s, the online boom was changing several industries – including market research. Through my internships at Bain & Company and a small tech firm called Collective Technologies while I was studying marketing at the University of Texas (Austin), I saw how using the Internet could leverage and empower market research at a level never before possible.

In 1998, I started Infosurv as one of the first providers of online, Web-based surveys. Now Infosurv is a leading global marketing research firm based in Atlanta. We help our clients execute the most accurate, most actionable survey research possible with a combination of talent and technology that’s simply unmatched in our industry.

What is your product (also talk about various versions if applicable)

Research, marketing, and human resource professionals turn to Infosurv for:
- Customer surveys (http://www.infosurv.com/customer_surveys.htm)
- Employee surveys (http://www.infosurv.com/employee_surveys.htm)
- Market surveys (http://www.infosurv.com/market_research_surveys.htm) and in general,
- Online surveys (http://www.infosurv.com/online-surveys.htm)

What target market is the product geared for?

We serve four main markets:
- Corporations and large companies that need to efficiently survey their employees or customers
- Communications firms, including advertising, public relations, and marketing agencies, that need to get a quantified understanding of a situation – for example, researching new product development directions or new advertising concepts
- Associations that need to survey their members
- Government and non profits

What user pains does your product solve?

When it comes to survey research, there’s traditionally been a trade off between gathering data in a timely and cost effective manner while at the same time gathering complete information.

In the past, the broader your respondent sample, the more time it takes to collect a statistically valid number of surveys, and with that greater time comes greater cost. By leveraging proprietary technologies and processes, Infosurv’s team of research specialists – any of whom have advanced degrees – are able to help our clients actually experience better, faster, AND more affordable research.

We help them design the tool, focus the audience that needs to respond, incent response, and then, of course, synthesize the results into actionable knowledge.
In short, we help our clients make more informed decisions through better, more affordable research.

What is the cost of your service?

I’m so glad you asked! We’re one of the only survey firms that actually publishes our pricing. Our clients, like Harvard University, MasterCard, and Merck, demand the best, but that doesn’t mean they have to pay “an arm and a leg” for it.

You’ve probably noticed that many research firms have what I call a “black box” pricing method- they price by the project, and you can’t tell where the number comes from. We’re extremely transparent with our pricing, and we’re quite proud that we provide details. Our current price sheet can be downloaded at http://www.infosurv.com/brochure.html.

To push this point a bit further, we’ve developed an extensive buyer’s guide for professionals shopping for research services. It really helps you understand how research pricing is structured. Whether you go with Infosurv or not – and I hope you do of course – you’ll gain a better understanding of the metrics underlying the pricing of outsourcing your survey research. You can see our detailed competitive buyer’s guide for market research at http://www.infosurv.com/buyers-guide.html.

Along those lines, I’d also like to share a specific case study with you that hasn’t been previously published. Although each of our clients is unique, the experience of National Safety Council (NSC) serves to illustrate what our clients tend to appreciate about the Infosurv experience.

Compass Internet Systems and VisiStat

Compass Internet Systems and VisiStat have formed a strategic alliance in order to offer search engine optimization and placement services to the real estate marketing industry. VisiStat has also been offering their free analytics tool (www.webreportertool.com) along with every hosting subscription generated by Compass Internet Systems.

I have written about VisiStat in the past and have even demoed their analytics software. I compared VisiStat to Google Analytics and was surprised how well VisiStat matched up against Google Analytics.

Source: http://www.rismedia.com/wp/2007-01-28/compass-internet-systems-and-visistat-incform-strategic-alliance/

Blogger, Mandatory Upgrade

Blogger has started forcing users to upgrade to its latest version (in fact I had to update mine just minutes ago). The process was quite painless however I noticed the Blogger Navigation bar was covering up a portion of my header. I know that many people will find the following code, which removes the navigation bar, quite useful (simply copy and paste within the style tags):

#navbar-iframe {
height: 0px;
visibility: hidden;
display: none;
}

The Macification of Windows: Vista vs. OSX

UseTube.net compares Vista vs. OSX. This is right after Microsoft released 100 reasons why users should select Windows Vista. However many of these so called “new features” have been available on OSX for over 2 years.

read more | digg story

Interview – Bill Slawski, President SEO by the Sea

Last week I had a great chat over the phone with SEO by the Sea President, Bill Slawski. Bill Slawski has been in involved with Internet Marketing since 1996 and is also a correspondent to SearchEngineLand related to search patents and research. Below are a few of the topics we discussed:

- Bill’s thoughts on SEM in 2006 (specifically Social Media Optimization and Social Bookmarking)
- What we can expect in SEM in 2007
- New patents by Google and what we can expect from Google in the future
- Bill’s thoughts on Google’s steady Growth and Google’s competitors
- The future of Yahoo, MSN and how they can make up ground on Google
- Danny Sullivan’s Search Marketing Expo

Have a listen…

Bill Slawski Interview (approx 18 minutes)



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Web Analytics in Europe

I caught up with Lars Johansson earlier this week to discuss Web Analytics in Europe. Lars was able to provide me with some great information, read below for the entire conversation…

Please tell me a little bit about yourself (and your company) and your background.

I am coordinator for Web Analytics Association in Sweden and work for one of Europe’s largest energy companies that also offers services such as district heating, telephony and high-speed Internet connections. My background is in working with offline campaigns but have been working with both online and offline campaigns for some time. I have worked with all channels: Internet, e-mail, direct marketing mail-outs, inbound calls and telemarketing. I have also done survey work and I even spent several months talking directly with the most displeased customers. Bringing all of that together I think I have a pretty good idea about what’s going on on our customers’ minds. I am currently busy optimizing various campaigns on the Internet and making certain our new website will be fully measurable.

How do you think Web Analytics differs in Europe vs. the North American Market?

Neil Mason has written a couple of ClickZ columns on that topic that describes the situation quite well. Europe has been behind the U.S. for some time but is starting to catch up. Looking at Sweden, where I am, things are really starting to move. It used to be rare to see companies hire full-time web analysts but it seems like they have woken up the last six months. There is an increasing number of job openings for dedicated web analysts. Maybe that can in part be attributed to the attention created by Web Analytics Wednesdays.

How does the recent purchase of Instadia by Omniture effect Instadia?

My understanding is that it’s business as usual for Instadia’s customers. They can continue to use ClientStep at the same time as they can take advantage of SiteCatalyst and the other tools and services offered by Omniture.

Where do you see Web Analytics (KPIs and measurement of them) going in 2007?

I don’t think the page view will die in 2007, but it will be really, really, sick. It will be interesting to see what its illness will do to vendor pricing.

Either way, bloated page views as a means of tricking advertisers will hopefully die a painful death in 2007. Cost per impression will hopefully once and for all have to give way to cost per unique visitor and cost per action, though I wouldn’t count on it.
I also think discussions about engagement metrics will grow in importance since the buzz about social media will continue.

I hope that measurement of SEO will focus on whether that new top position on Google leads to a higher conversion rate than your old position and whether it will produce a lower CPA than can be achieved through PPC. Being number one shouldn’t be the goal in itself, the goal should be getting the right visitors who do the right things. Web analysts will have to revise the work of SEO firms and educate ad networks and advertisers.

All web design agencies should have to employ web analysts.

What do you think are the biggest client pains in regards to Web Analytics (KPIs + measurement) in Europe?

A major pain point is web design agencies creating “cool” Flash movies based on someone’s personal preference rather than solid analysis. Especially in large organizations there will always be a number of people who don’t understand the value of web analytics since people leave and join all of the time. You have to continually educate people in all business units on the importance of data-driven decisions.

Other pain points include excessive obsessing over data quality. That is, not finding a level of confidence with the data, moving on and start focusing on trends rather than arguing about raw numbers down to the last digit.

And, as I mentioned previously, advertising agencies only talking about page views, impressions and CPM is tiring when you’re wanting to measure success in sales and not based on long-term branding goals.

I don’t know whether your situation differs, but over here advertising networks and web design agencies seriously need to learn web analytics and be held accountable much more than is the case today.

For more information please visit: http://www.webanalysts.info

Interview – SEMPO President Dana Todd

Yesterday I had the opportunity to interview SEMPO President/Chairperson of the SEMPO Educational Committee, Dana Todd. Our topic of conversation revolved entirely on the new SEMPO Institute. Over the course of the interview I asked Dana questions regarding:

- The Institutes’ Target Market
- The Grading Scale of Courses
- Benefits of the courses
- The Advanced curriculum offered in March

- The strategies behind keeping the course content up to date
- How SEMPO plans on working with post secondary institutions

Have a listen below (approx 13 minutes long)…

Dana Todd Interview

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