- Join the AMA
- Find learning by topic
- Free learning resources for members
- Credentialed Learning
- Training for teams
- Why learn with the AMA?
- Marketing News
- Academic Journals
- Guides & eBooks
- Marketing Job Board
- Academic Job Board
- AMA Foundation
- Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
- Collegiate Resources
- Awards and Scholarships
- Sponsorship Opportunities
- Strategic Partnerships
We noticed that you are using Internet Explorer 11 or older that is not support any longer. Please consider using an alternative such as Microsoft Edge, Chrome, or Firefox.
Market Research Report Template
A formal report template that will help you communicate findings from a market research project.
- Estimated time required: 4 hours
- Skills required: Research writing
Get Full Access to This Resource With AMA Membership
Market Research Playbook
This tool can be used alone, but it’s also part of the comprehensive Market Research Playbook. It provides step-by-step planning guidance while also helping you utilize more than 25 downloadable tools from the popular AMA Marketer’s Toolkit library.
This tool is powered by Demand Metric .
By continuing to use this site, you accept the use of cookies, pixels and other technology that allows us to understand our users better and offer you tailored content. You can learn more about our privacy policy here
The Ultimate Guide to Market Research [+Free Templates]
A comprehensive guide on Market Research with tools, examples of brands winning with research, and templates for surveys, focus groups + presentation template.
Rakefet is the CMO at Mayple. She manages all things marketing and leads our community of experts through live events, workshops, and expert interviews. MBA, 1 dog + 2 cats, and has an extensive collection of Chinese teas.
Learn about our
Natalie is a content writer and manager who is passionate about using her craft to empower others. She thrives on team dynamic, great coffee, and excellent content. One of these days, she might even get to her own content ideas.
Updated November 7, 2024.
Before you do anything in business you have to have a good grasp of the market. What’s the market like? Who are your competitors? And what are the pain points and challenges of your ideal customer? And how can you solve them? Once you have the answers to those questions then you are ready to move forward with a marketing plan and/or hire a digital marketing agency to execute it.
In this guide we break down what market research is, the different types of market research, and provide you with some of the best templates, tools, and examples, to help you execute it on your own.
Excited to learn?
Let’s dive in.
Hire the best advertising agencies
Find a reliable partner to help you enhance your marketing efforts and promote your business the right way.
What is market research?
Market research is the process of gathering information about your target market and customers to determine the success of your product or service, make changes to your existing product, or understand the perception of your brand in the market.
“Research is formalized curiosity, it is poking and prying with a purpose.” - Zora Neale Hurston
We hear the phrase "product-market fit" all the time and that just means that a product solves a customer's need in the market. And it's very hard to get there without proper market research. Now, I know what you're going to say. Why not get actionable insights from your existing customers? Why not do some customer research?
The problem with customer research is two-fold:
- You have a very limited amount of data as your current customers don't represent the entire market.
- Customer research can introduce a lot of bias into the process.
So the real way to solve these issues is by going broader and conducting some market research.
Why do market research?
There are many benefits of doing market research for your company. Here are a few of them:
- Understand how much demand exists in the market, the market size
- Discover who your competitors are and where they are falling short.
- Better understand the needs of your target customers and the problems and pain points your product solves.
- Learn what your potential customers feel about your brand.
- Identify potential partners and new markets and opportunities.
- Determine which product features you should develop next.
- Find out what your ideal customer is thinking and feeling.
- Use these findings to improve your brand strategy and marketing campaigns.
“The goal is to transform data into information, and information into insight.” - Carly Fiorina
Market research allows you to make better business decisions at every stage of your business and helps you launch better products and services for your customers.
Primary vs secondary research
There are two main types of market research - primary and secondary research.
Primary research
Primary market research is when researchers collect information directly, instead of relying on outside sources of information. It could be done through interviews, online surveys, or focus groups and the advantage here is that the company owns that information. The disadvantage of using primary sources of information is that it's usually more expensive and time-consuming than secondary market research.
Secondary research
Secondary market research involves using existing data that is summarized and collected by third parties. Secondary sources could be commercial sources or public sources like libraries, other websites, blogs , government agencies, and existing surveys. It's data that's more readily available and it's usually much cheaper than conducting primary research.
Qualitative vs quantitative research
Qualitative research is about gathering qualitative data like the market sentiment about the products currently available on the market (read: words and meanings). Quantitative research deals with numbers and statistics. It's data that is numbers-based, countable, and measurable.
Types of market research
1. competitive analysis.
Every business needs to know its own strengths and weaknesses and how they compare with its largest competitors in the market. It helps brands identify gaps in the market, develop new products and services, uncover market trends, improve brand positioning , and increase their market share. A SWOT analysis is a good framework to use for this type of research.
2. Consumer insights
It's also equally important to know what consumers are thinking, what the most common problems are and what products they are purchasing. Consumer research can be done through social listening which involves tracking consumer conversations on social media. It could also include analyzing audiences of brands , online communities, and influencers, and analyzing trends in the market.
3. Brand awareness research
Brand awareness is a super important metric for understanding how well your target audience knows your brand. It's used to assess brand performance and the marketing effectiveness of a brand. It tells you about the associations consumers make when they think of your brand and what they believe you're all about.
4. Customer satisfaction research
Customer satisfaction and loyalty are two really important levers for any business and you don't have to conduct in-depth interviews to get that information. There is a wide range of automated methods to get that kind of data including customer surveys such as NPS surveys, customer effort score (CES) surveys, and regularly asking your customers about their experience with your brand.
5. Customer segmentation research
Customer segmentation research involves figuring out what buckets consumers fall into based on common characteristics such as - demographics, interests, purchasing behavior, and more. Market segmentation is super helpful for advertising campaigns, product launches, and customer journey mapping.
6. Interviews
Customer interviews are one of the most effective market research methods out there. It's a great way for business owners to get first-party data from their customers and get insights into how they are doing in real time.
7. Focus groups
Focus groups are a great way to get data on a specific demographic. It's one of the most well-known data collection methods and it involves taking a sample size of people and asking them some open-ended questions. It's a great way to get actionable insights from your target market.
8. Pricing research
Pricing strategy has a huge influence on business growth and it's critical for any business to know how they compare with the leading brands in their niche. It can help you understand what your target customer is willing to pay for your product and at what price you should be selling it.
To start, get automated software to track your competitors' pricing . Then, summarize your research into a report and group the results based on product attributes and other factors. You can use quadrants to make it easier to read visually.
9. Campaign research
It's also important for a brand to research its past marketing campaigns to determine the results and analyze their success. It takes a lot of experimentation to nail the various aspects of a campaign and it's crucial for business leaders to continuously analyze and iterate.
10. Product/service use research
Product or user research gives you an idea of why and how an audience uses a product and gives you data about specific features. Studies show that usability testing is ranked among the most useful ways to discover user insights (8.7 out of 10), above digital analytics and user surveys. So it's a very effective way to measure the usability of a product.
Now that you know the different types of market research let's go through a step-by-step process of setting up your study.
How to conduct a market research study
Looking for your next business idea? Want to check which niche markets are going to be best for it? if it's going to Here's a pretty simple process for conducting
1. Define your buyer persona
The first step in market research is to understand who your buyers are. For that, you need a buyer persona (sometimes called a marketing persona) which is a fictional generalized description of your target customer. You could (and should) have several buyer personas to work with.
Key characteristics to include in your buyer personas are:
- Job title(s)
- Family size
- Major challenges
Now that you've got your customer personas it's time to decide who to work with for your research.
2. Identify the right people to engage with
It's critical that you pick the right group of people to research. This could make or break your market research study. It's important to pick a representative sample that most closely resembles your target customer. That way you'll be able to identify their actual characteristics, challenges, pain points, and buying behavior.
Here are a few strategies that will help you pick the right people:
- Select people who have recently interacted with you
- Pull a list of participants who made a recent purchase
- Call for participants on social media
- Leverage your own network
- Gather a mix of participants
- Offer an incentive (gift card, product access, content upgrades)
3. Pick your data collection method(s)
Here's a quick breakdown of all the different ways you could collect data for your market research study.
Surveys are by far the fastest method of gathering data. You could launch them on your site or send them in an email and automate the whole process. Regular surveys can also help brands improve their customer service so they help kill two birds with one stone.
Interviews take a little longer and require a detailed set of interview questions. Never go into an interview without a clear idea of what you're going to be asking. It's also a little more difficult to schedule time and to get your potential or current customers on the phone or on Zoom.
Focus group
Focus groups are controlled interviews with groups of people led by facilitators. Participants in focus groups are selected based on a set of predetermined criteria such as location, age, social status, income, and more.
Online tracking
Online tracking is done through digital analytics tools like HotJar or Google Analytics. Tracking user behavior on your site gets you an accurate analysis of who your demographic is and what are the types of products or content that they engage with.
The problem here is that you never get to find out the 'why' - the reason behind their behavior - and that's why you need to combine digital analytics with other data collection methods like surveys and usability/product testing.
Marketing analysis
Another great way to collect data is to analyze your marketing campaigns which gives you a great idea of who clicked on your ads, how often, and which device they used. It's a more focused way of using tracking to zero in on a specific marketing campaign.
Social media monitoring
We've talked about this one before. Social monitoring or listening is when you track online conversations on social media platforms. You can use a simple social listening tool to get all the data you need by searching for specific keywords, hashtags, or topics.
Subscription and registration data
Another great way to collect data is to look at your existing audience. That might include your email list, rewards program, or existing customers. Depending on the size of your list, it could give you some broad insights into the type of customers/users you have and what they are most interested in.
Monitoring in-store traffic
Conduct a customer observation session to monitor your actual customers and how they behave in your store (physically or online). Observation is a market research technique where highly-trained market researchers observe how people or consumers interact with products/services in a natural setting.
4. Prepare your research questions
Write down your research questions before you conduct the research. Make sure you cover all the topics that you are trying to gain clarity on and include open-ended questions. The type of questions you use will vary depending on your data collection approach from the last step.
If you're doing a survey or an in-person interview then here are some of the best questions to ask.
The awareness stage
- How did you know that something in this product category could help you?
- Think back to the time you first realized you needed [product category]. What was your challenge?
- How familiar were you with different options on the market?
The consideration stage
- Where did you go to find out the information?
- What was the first thing you did to research potential solutions?
- Did you search on Google? What specifically did you search for? Which keywords did you use?
- Which vendor sites did you visit?
- What did you find helpful? What turned you off?
The decision stage
- Which criteria did you use to compare different vendors?
- What vendors made it to the shortlist and what were the pros/cons of each?
- Who else was involved in the final decision?
- Allow time for further questions on their end.
- Don't forget to thank them for their time and confirm their email/address to receive the incentive you offered
If you noticed, the progression of these questions follows the stages of the buyer's journey which helps you to gain actionable insights into the entire customer experience.
5. List your primary competitors
There are two kinds of competitors - industry competitors and content competitors. Industry competitors compete with you on the actual product or service they sell. Content competitors compete with you in terms of the content they publish - whether that's on specific keywords or they rank higher on topics that you want to be ranked for.
It's important to write a list of all of your competitors and compare their strengths, weaknesses, competitive advantages, and the type of content they publish.
There are different ways to find your competitors. You can look on sites like G2 Crowd and check their industry quadrants.
You could also download a market report from Forrester or Gartner . And you could also search on social media or market research tools like SimilarWeb .
6. Summarize your findings
Now that you've done your research it's time to summarize your findings. Look for common themes in your research and try to present them in the simplest way possible. Use your favorite presentation software to document it and add it to your company database.
Here's a quick research outline you could use:
Background - your goals and why you conducted this study
Participants - who you've talked to. Break down the type of personas and/or customers you've spoken with.
Executive summary - what was the most interesting stuff you've learned? What do you plan to do about it?
Customer journey map - map out the specific motivations and behavioral insights you've gained from each stage of the customer journey (awareness, consideration, and decision).
Action plan - describe what action steps you're going to take to address the issues you've uncovered in your research and how you are going to promote your product/service to your target audience more effectively.
Market research template
Not sure where to begin? Need some templates to help you get started? We got them for you.
1. Market survey template
First and foremost, you need a template to run your market survey. In this template, you will find all the types of questions you should be asking - demographic, product, pricing, and brand questions. They can be used for market surveys, individual interviews, and focus groups.
We also present a variety of question formats for you to use:
- true/false questions
- multiple choice questions
- open response questions
2. SWOT analysis template
A strength, weakness, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis is one of the best ways to do competitor research. It's a really simple analysis. There are four squares and you write down all four of these attributes for each of your competitors.
3. Focus group template
Not sure how to conduct focus groups? Here is a comprehensive template that will help you to take better notes and record your findings during the focus group meeting.
4. Marketing strategy template
The plan of action from your market research should become a vital part of your marketing strategy. We've actually created a marketing strategy template that you could download and use to update your marketing personas, your SWOT analysis, and your marketing channel strategies.
Market research examples
Here are some examples of the good, the bad, and the ugly in market research. Some brands thrive on research and some ignore it completely. Take a look.
McDonald's
McDonald’s sells its food in 97 countries around the world. Their secret? They do a lot of market research before they launch anything. The company uses four key questions in their research process:
- Which products are performing well?
- What prices are most affordable to customers?
- What are consumers reading and watching?
- What content do they consume?
- Which restaurants are most attended, and why?
They also extensively use customer feedback to improve their products. They even put some products up for a vote to see which ones are most loved by their customers.
The iconic coffee brand is valued at almost $30 billion and has over 30,000 coffee shops around the world and part of that success comes from their obsession with customer service. They launched a brilliant idea called “My Starbucks Idea” to try and make the customer feel a part of the journey.
It was an open innovation platform where customers could post their idea for a new coffee drink or food item and if it was good a company representative would actually reach out to them. It had a leaderboard and every year the company would develop some of these ideas.
In 2012, Starbucks launched 73 coffee products from ideas they received from customers. Cake pops and pumpkin spice lattes were born out of this platform, all thanks to market research. Can you imagine a world without pumpkin spice lattes?
For all its innovation Facebook had an epic market research failure. In 2013, Facebook partnered with HTC to launch a smartphone called First. It had Facebook’s interface on its home screen and that was a really jarring change for most people. Instead of taking you to a home screen with your favorite apps, Facebook really took center stage.
To be fair, you could turn it off and get a regular Android home window but that would be missing the entire reason you bought the phone in the first place. So it was a complete mismatch to consumers’ wants and the phone flopped.
Turns out, that nobody wanted to see Facebook when they first opened their phone 😅.
Bloom & Wild
Bloom & Wild is a UK flower delivery brand that was looking for their next campaign. They did some research and found out that people think red roses are cliche and prefer to buy something else as a gift on Valentine’s Day. So the brand chose not to sell roses for Valentine’s Day 2021 and made it into a “No Roses Campaign”.
The results - they saw a 51% increase in press coverage year after year.
Top tools used for market research
Here are some of the top market research and digital analytics tools you should try out for your next research project.
Answer the Public
Answer the public is a free market research tool that helps marketers figure out what questions people ask online. It's really easy to use. You put in a keyword or topic and it spits out a whole variety of questions and subtopics.
Spyfu is a search engine analytics platform that gives you data on where your competitors get their traffic from. It provides info on the kind of both organic traffic and PPC channels down to the specific keywords people used to find each site. It's a great tool to use to map the competitive landscape.
Think with Google
This is an online publication from Google's team where they publish consumer insights from real-time data and their own insights. It uses Google Analytics but presents it to you as a library of information. You can find industry data on a whole array of businesses from educational institutions to counseling services.
Want to do the most extensive market research possible? Use SimilarWeb. It's a competitive analysis and data tool that provides you with literally everything you need.
It has data on:
- Digital marketing data - SEO, traffic, advertising
- Economic trends - economic indicators like annual growth rate, audience, benchmarking
- eCommerce, investing, and even sales data
BuzzSumo is a great tool to use to get actionable insights from social media and content marketing. It aggregates data from various social media channels and shows you the type of content that users engage with and share on their pages.
Typeform is a survey tool that can help you make surveys and fun interactive forms. It's a great tool to use to make your forms more engaging for your audience. The tool has a bunch of easy templates and a ton of integrations to help you visualize that data and share it with your team.
Latana is a brand research tool that helps you understand consumer perception of your brand over time. It helps you answer some key questions about the type of values your customers have, and the type of audiences your competitors are targeting and helps you to focus your campaigns on the right audience for your business.
Statista is one of the most popular consumer data platforms around. It has a wealth of information about consumer markets, business conditions, and industry trends around the world. It's easier to use than most business publications because it aggregates all the data you need in one place. The downside is that it's a little pricy but perfect for teams that have the budget for it.
Dimensions.ai
Dimensions is a search engine for academic publications. It is a great resource if you're looking for deeper insights into things like psychology, micro and macroeconomics, and business trends. A lot of the articles are free to view just make sure you select the " All OA " option which stands for Open Access research.
Otter is an AI-powered transcription software for interviews and meetings. It sits in the background and transcribes your meeting for you and then provides you with a digitized conversation that can be stored, search for specific keywords, and analyzed. It's a great tool to use for doing interviews.
Yelp is a search engine for reviews of local businesses. It's one of the best sources of opinions about a whole variety of products and services. It's a great place to get ideas about the kind of interview questions you want to ask, to find out the pain points of your ideal customer, and to find deeper insights into your target audience.
You have to conduct your market research regularly if you want to see significant results. Try the different methods that we’ve outlined, see what works for you, and remember to keep your team’s focus on the customer. The more knowledgeable they are of your target customer’s needs and wants the better your targeting and marketing strategy will be.
Related Articles
Rakefet Yacoby From
7 Finger-Licking Reasons to Hire a Marketing Agency On Mayple
Omer Farkash
Uncover the Hidden Truth Behind Hiring: Are Interview Pitches Enough?
Fiverr vs. Mayple - The Ultimate Comparison
Cook Feed & Outdoor 2X in Sales - Case Study
Octavia Drexler
SEO vs PPC: Which Is Best For Your Business?
6 Free Market Research Templates to Help Win Your Market
Free Website Traffic Checker
Discover your competitors' strengths and leverage them to achieve your own success
Market research templates save time and give clarity about what should and shouldn’t be included in any type of market research .
These days, doing regular market research is key. Particularly given how quickly consumer behaviors shift and companies change tactics to keep up with the ever-growing number of competitors in their industry.
In this post, I’m sharing six market research report templates to give you a head start and help steer your analysis in the right direction from the onset.
What is a market research template?
Market research templates provide questions and specific fields to fill out – relevant to specified market research objectives. You can add or remove fields according to what’s relevant to your market and research goal. It provides a framework to develop your own research methodology if you don’t want to go full-scale with a research firm.
What are the advantages of using market research templates?
There are many ways market research templates benefit organizations of any size.
- It costs less than hiring an external market research firm.
- Completion is often quicker because pre-set fields guide your research.
- Little to no professional training is required to complete a template.
- Templates can be easily shared with other business units.
- Files can be easily updated internally in the future.
- Research Intelligence tools like Similarweb make it much easier to access market research data than ever before.
- Using a template enables you to stay focused and organized.
Doing market research with a template can help you generate results faster than any agency can deliver. You set your priorities and start collecting information without untimely back-and-forth correspondence. This is particularly valuable for online companies in markets that develop and change quickly. You need real-time data to improve your results, so time is always of the essence.
In addition to time, you also save costs. Comprehensive market research usually demands additional financial resources. By using shareable templates, you can involve relevant internal business units at minimal extra cost.
This presents another advantage: You own your information. You can come back to the files, reuse, update, and compare whenever it’s relevant. This is particularly useful in the dynamic world of online business because you’ll want to research the market repeatedly to detect and adapt to changes.
What are market research templates used for?
Most types of market research templates provide a robust framework that steers market research efforts in the right direction. When we consider the “journeys” a market research report template can help with – most use cases aren’t merely one-time research projects but should include periodic monitoring and analysis.
- Assess your brand’s strength and influential power. Evaluate your market share , and measure which percentage of the market you reach and sell to.
- Launch a new product or enter a new market . Get to know the territory and the key players to avoid unnecessary risks and recognize new opportunities.
- Identify and keep tabs on your top competitors. Be aware of your competitor’s strengths and weaknesses to align your strategic planning.
- Understand your target audience. If you truly want people to resonate with your product or service, you need to take the time to get to know them, their interests, pain points, likes, and dislikes.
- Innovate your business model. Before applying changes to products or business strategies, understand user demand and need shifts.
- Drive more sales. Optimize product placement by identifying your product’s uniqueness and the specific value to boost your marketing campaigns.
- Fine-tune your digital advertising and analytics. Find and optimize the marketing channels and keywords with the highest potential and lowest competition .
- Find and follow emerging trends. Detect changes in the market development early and use them to your advantage.
Five things to do before using a market research analysis template
As you’ll soon discover, there are lots of tools and resources at your disposal – and you won’t need all of them to reach your goal. Your choices should depend on the goal of your research, something you’ll need to clarify before you start to use any type of market research report template.
Take a little time to do the following pre-planning steps 1-3 before you use any template in your research.
- Define the reason for your research and its goals.
- Identify the most suitable research types and methods.
- Prepare the materials you need to conduct the research, i.e., templates, tools, and market research questions ; then delegate responsibilities if applicable.
- Identify your market’s characteristics.
- Define your target audience and segments.
- Consider both qualitative and quantitative data points.
- Decide whether to use primary research, secondary research , or a mixture of both.
- Google Analytics vs. Similarweb
- Free online sources and tools
- Advanced competitor analysis
- Summarize your findings in a template and start to analyze.
Get a step-by-step roadmap for easy and comprehensive market research in our guide – Market Research: What It Is, Why It Matters, and How To Get It Right .
Types of market research templates
In this next section, I’m sharing the most important types of market research templates you need to fulfil your research goals. I’ll cover what each is and how a template can help with the research. In the final section of this post, I’ll share the quickest way to find the data you need to complete your template.
SWOT analysis template
Many of you will have heard of or used a SWOT analysis framework before. It’s a tried and trusted tool that helps organizations and individuals uncover the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of their business and the competition. A template gives you pre-set fields to consider and complete, helping you know the essential metrics. Once complete, it shows a range of factors relevant to your business and market that can help you adapt for growth.
Use this type of market research analysis template to review your business, along with each of your competitors – analysis of the top four rivals is enough, but you might want to extend this up to eight. This market analysis template provides key questions to answer in each section to help guide your responses.
Market sizing template
Using a market analysis template shows you exactly how to do market sizing correctly. What’s more, it can ensure others within your organization are clear about how the figures have been calculated and provide a consistent and transparent framework for repeating the process in the future.
Use this simple market research template to get the formulas for the total addressable market (TAM), serviceable addressable market (SAM), and serviceable obtainable market (SOM).
Competitive analysis framework template
Pick between 2-4 direct and indirect competitors , then compile the same data and information about each. Start with company research, then customer research, and add information about products and marketing strategies to build the ultimate competitive framework. Collecting the same data points gives you a straightforward comparison and clear picture of the competitive landscape .
This market analysis template covers both B2C and B2B markets. It gives you a detailed framework that helps you map company, customer, product, go-to-market, and marketing channels for your business, and that of your rivals.
Further reading: this post covers seven different types of Competitive Analysis Frameworks that can be used for this form of market research.
Use this market research template for a business plan or as a base document to do regular checks on the state of the competitive landscape.
Trend analysis template
Completing regular market trend analysis is vital – particularly given how fast consumer behavior and markets change. Sure, you can set up news alerts and keep an ear close to the ground, but this is not necessarily the most effective way to future-proof a business and stay ahead of the curve. Rather, it’s a slow and unreliable way to access the intel you need, not just to survive but to flourish.
Early detection of fluctuations, shifts, and changes is key; and a trend analysis template, when done periodically, can help you quickly identify and prepare your business to react.
This market trend analysis template is designed specifically for those operating in the B2B space. It clearly guides you through industry research, historical competitive data, desktop vs. mobile trends , and seasonal keyword research ; each of which can help you discover market-specific trends effectively.
Further reading: Trendspotting: Why All the Market Leaders Are Doing It
Buyer persona template
Define the customer who would benefit most from your product or service. Based on what you’ve learned about consumers and your target market , characterize your ideal customer. Who are they, what are their pain points, and how can you help them?
This template shows you exactly what kind of data to include when you build a new buyer person. We’ve completed an example for you as a guide; but also given you empty slides you can fill-in yourself for your own business and market.
Further reading: How to Create Buyer Personas That Boost Conversions
Audience analysis template
An Audience analysis looks at a group of people in much the same way you examine your current customers. It can help you discover how to turn more of your audience into paying customers by segmenting visitor and behavioral characteristics.
This market analysis template will guide you through the different types of data you should collect from both your own and your rival’s channels. It takes into account various characteristics of company, product, purchase, consumers, interests, and more to help you form a clear and comprehensive view of your target audience.
It’s split into three tabs, each covering B2B, transactional, and informative businesses separately.
Further reading: If this is your first time doing audience analysis, read this guide to understand what a target audience is and how to analyze it .
Get started with all the free market research templates you need to succeed!
How to use Similarweb to help with market research templates
Similarweb Digital Research Intelligence can help you complete almost any market research project quickly and effectively. One of the most-cited reasons people choose tools like Similarweb is due to the accuracy and timeliness of data. Unlike other forms of market research, like secondary research; Similarweb’s information is always the most up-to-date there is.
- Benchmarking tool : Accelerate your new digital strategy and learn how you stack up against the competition and market leaders.
- Market research tool : Analyze market trends in near-real time so that you can take action when it matters most, not a quarter later.
- Company research : Take a closer look at any company’s digital performance and expose your competitor’s digital strategies.
- Audience analysis tool : Engage more deeply with your audience, explore new audience segments and expand your reach.
- Customer journey analytics : Understand your customers and explore bottom-of-the-funnel metrics to discover what makes them convert.
- Mobile app intelligence : See the impact of mobile apps in your market: spot trends and emerging players.
Wrapping up…..
Good market research shouldn’t have to take an age; but as a task that requires careful planning, meticulous attention, and focus – even with the best tools, you’ve got to know the right questions to ask, and the best places to uncover the best intel.
Using market research templates will save significant time in the market research process while providing a clear and comprehensive set of guidelines that can be easily replicated or revisited in the future.
Market analysis templates allow for consistency and provide a clear framework that allows the inexperienced market researcher to do the task with ease.
Use these templates to jumpstart your research efforts and make strategic decisions more effectively, and in a more informed way.
Boost Your Market Research with Similarweb
Enjoy 360° visibility into your industry and instantly adapt to market changes
What is the importance of market research?
Market research is important because you can’t succeed if you’re not aware of market conditions, potential obstacles, purported budget, and how to market your products effectively.
How do you write a market research document?
The simplest way to write a market research document is to obtain a free market research template to guide your content. It can prompt you with the right questions to ask, and shape research efforts and outcomes effectively.
Which type of market research should I use?
To employ a highly effective market research strategy, you should combine the two methods. We advise you to use secondary research as a preparation for your primary research.
by Liz March
Digital Research Specialist
Liz March has 15 years of experience in content creation. She enjoys the outdoors, F1, and reading, and is pursuing a BSc in Environmental Science.
Related Posts
Building a Winning Market Entry Strategy: 12 Routes to Success
13 Market Research Tools: Best in Class for 2025
Market Research vs. Market Analysis: What are the Main Differences?
20 Mobile App Metrics To Track In 2025
2025 Market Research Industry Statistics, Facts, and Trends
7 Common Types of Website Traffic Sources Explained
Track your digital metrics and grow market share.
Contact us to set up a call with a market research specialist
- Paragraph Generator
- Cover Letter
- Authorization Letter
- Application Letter
- Letter of Intent
- Letter of Recommendation
- Business Plan
- Incident Report
- Reference Letter
- Minutes of Meeting
- Letter of Resignation
- Excuse Letter
- Research Proposal
- Job Application
- Acknowledgement
- Employment Letter
- Promissory Note
- Business Proposal
- Statement of Purpose
- Offer Letter
- Deed of Sale
- Letter of Interest
- Power of Attorney
- Solicitation Letter
17+ SAMPLE Market Research Report in PDF | MS Word | Google Docs | Apple Pages
Market research report | ms word | google docs | apple pages, 17+ sample market research report , what is a market research report, benefits of market research report, basic methods of market research, how to create a market research report, what is the format of a report, what exactly is primary research, and how do i begin, what is the difference between primary and secondary data.
Market Research Report Template
Market Research Report of Traditional Medicine Conference
Global Market Research Report
Market Research Final Report
Market Research Survey Report
Basic Market Research Report
Sample Innovation Market Research Report
Market Research Report and Analysis
Market Research Report in PDF
Application Services Market Research Report
Industry Market Research Report
Standard Market Research Report
Market Research Report Format
Marketplace Research Report
Market Research Progress Report
Market Research Report in DOC
Marketing Annual Research Activity Report
- One-on-one interviews- These are conducted in high-traffic areas such as shopping malls during in-person surveys. They allow you to hand out product samples, packaging, or advertising to consumers and get rapid feedback. In-person surveys can provide response rates of over 90%, but they are expensive. An in-person survey might cost up to $100 per interview due to the time and work needed.
- Telephone surveys- This is cheaper than in-person surveys, but they are more costly than surveys sent by mail. However, consumers’ aversion to constant telemarketing and persuading consumers to engage in phone polls has become more challenging. Response rates to telephone surveys are typically in the 50 %to 60 % range.
- Mail surveys- This is a low-cost technique to reach a large number of people. They’re a lot less expensive than in-person or phone surveys, but they only get 3 to 15% of people to respond. Mail surveys, despite their low return, are still a cost-effective option for small enterprises.
Share This Post on Your Network
You may also like these articles, construction site visit report.
A Construction Site Visit Report is a structured document that captures observations, findings, and insights gathered during an on-site assessment of a construction project. It serves as an essential…
Safety Observation Report
A Safety Observation Report (SOR) is a structured document used to identify, record, and analyze safety practices or unsafe conditions in a workplace. By observing and documenting real-time behaviors,…
browse by categories
- Questionnaire
- Description
- Reconciliation
- Certificate
- Spreadsheet
Information
- privacy policy
- Terms & Conditions
8 Templates to Plan & Organize Your Market Research
Market research (or marketing research) helps you deeply understand your customers and target market. It's a group of activities that will uncover insights you can use to create better products and improve your marketing. These templates will help you organize every part of your market research project in one collaborative place.
Market Research Brief Template
The goal of any marketing research brief is to define the objectives in a way that a researcher can confidently build an appropriate study. This clarity will then lead to the 'right' research method used and consequent insights uncovered.
Brand Positioning Map Template
The Brand Positioning Map template (or Competitive Landscape) is perfect for identifying your opportunity in the market. It's a simple way to ensure your brand will stand out against your competitors.
Customer Persona Template
It's crucial to have a crystal clear picture of your ideal customer. Building a customer persona helps your team understand the people they're designing for. Use this template to map out your customer's goals, background and pain-points so you can design a brand or product that naturally appeals to them.
Market Research Template
How well do you understand the market you're designing for? The Market Research template is the perfect way build a complete picture of your industry and audience. Use it to collect insights about the competitors, links, customer research, trends, stats and more in one visual place.
SWOT Analysis Template
The SWOT framework helps you uncover your internal Strengths and Weaknesses plus external Opportunities and Threats. You can use it to assess your entire company, brand, marketing or an individual product. It is traditionally used by management teams but is also a great tool for brand strategy and marketing projects.
Moodboard Template
Before you begin designing your new brand or campaign, it's important that everyone involved agrees on the visual style. A moodboard lets you explore different directions in minutes. This template contains placeholders for images, video, color swatches and notes.
Diary Study Template
Understand a user's experiences, behaviour, and activities over time using the Diary Study research method.
Day in the Life of Template
The Day in the Life research technique lets you create a visually engaging timeline of a customer's day. The template allows you to create notes for research, lists of questions, and add images and videos to bring someone's habits and behaviours to life.
Try Milanote today
Sign up for free (no time limit)
Market Research Template in Word
Print our Free Guide to Researching, Analyzing, and Interpreting Data Related to the Market or an Industry. These Can Include Surveys, Questionnaires, Focus Group Studies, and Other Tests to Help Identify Customer Needs, Preferences, and Trends. Below, You Will Find Market Research Plans, Market Research Flowcharts, Market Research White Papers, and Many More.
Construction Market Research 2023
Marketing Consumer Insight Template
Market Research Plan Template
Market Research Flowchart Template
Market Research White Paper Template
Restaurant Market Research Survey Template
Market Research Report Template
Cost Analysis of Restaurant Market Research Method Template
Cost Analysis of Market Research Methods Template
Market Research Proposal Template
Download unlimited Graphic Template Templates!
Root out friction in every digital experience, super-charge conversion rates, and optimize digital self-service
Uncover insights from any interaction, deliver AI-powered agent coaching, and reduce cost to serve
Increase revenue and loyalty with real-time insights and recommendations delivered to teams on the ground
Know how your people feel and empower managers to improve employee engagement, productivity, and retention
Take action in the moments that matter most along the employee journey and drive bottom line growth
Whatever they’re saying, wherever they’re saying it, know exactly what’s going on with your people
Get faster, richer insights with qual and quant tools that make powerful market research available to everyone
Run concept tests, pricing studies, prototyping + more with fast, powerful studies designed by UX research experts
Track your brand performance 24/7 and act quickly to respond to opportunities and challenges in your market
Explore the platform powering Experience Management
- Free Account
- Product Demos
- For Digital
- For Customer Care
- For Human Resources
- For Researchers
- Financial Services
- All Industries
Popular Use Cases
- Customer Experience
- Employee Experience
- Net Promoter Score
- Voice of Customer
- Customer Success Hub
- Product Documentation
- Training & Certification
- XM Institute
- Popular Resources
- Customer Stories
- Artificial Intelligence
Market Research
- Partnerships
- Marketplace
The annual gathering of the experience leaders at the world’s iconic brands building breakthrough business results, live in Salt Lake City.
- English/AU & NZ
- Español/Europa
- Español/América Latina
- Português Brasileiro
- REQUEST DEMO
- Experience Management
- Market Research Templates
Try Qualtrics for free
Market research templates: what they are and how to use them.
18 min read Interested in market research but need some templates to start with? In this guide, we unpack market research, survey planning best practice and share some of our best templates for brand, customer, product and employee research.
What is a market research template?
While you’re no doubt familiar with the concept of market research and how it can help you to reach your target audiences and improve your product or service , the real challenge is designing a market research plan that is conducive to excellent results.
All of this starts with the right market research template(s) to help you analyze specific target audiences, collect the right data and uncover insights that can drive actionable change.
In this article, we’re going to:
- talk about market research and its use cases,
- provide you with a standard template that allows you to plan your research,
- and share several other templates to help you with specific types of market research
But first, let’s revisit market research.
Watch our XM for Strategy & Research Demo
What is market research?
Market research is the process of determining the viability of a new service or product through surveys and questionnaires with prospects and/or customers. It involves gathering information about market needs and prospect/customer preferences .
Through market research, you can discover and/or refine your target market, get opinions and feedback on what you provide to them and uncover further prospect/customer pain points and expectations of your service or product .
Market research can be conducted in-house, either by you and your research team, or through a third-party company that specializes in it (they will typically have their own research panels or be capable of creating a research panel to suit your requirements).
The four common types of market research
There are lots of different ways to conduct market research to collect customer data and feedback , test product concepts , and do brand research, but the four most common are:
The most commonly used form of market research, surveys are a form of qualitative research that asks respondents a series of open or closed-ended questions , delivered either as an on-screen questionnaire or email.
Surveys are incredibly popular because they’re cheap, easy to produce, and can capture data very quickly, leading to faster insights.
2) Focus groups
Why not bring together a carefully selected group of people in your target market using focus groups? Though more expensive and complex than surveys and interviews, focus groups can offer deeper insight into prospect and customer behavior – from how users experience your products and services to what marketing messages really resonate with them.
Of course, as a market research method that’s reliant on a moderator to steer conversation, it can be subject to bias (as different moderators might have preferred questions or be more forceful) and if you cut corners (not asking all the necessary questions or making assumptions based on responses), the data could get skewed.
3) Observation
As if you were a fly-on-the-wall, the observation market research method can be incredibly powerful. Rather than interviewing or surveying users, you simply take notes while someone from your target market/target audience engages with your product . How are they using it? What are they struggling with? Do they look as though they have concerns?
Observing your target audience/target market in this fashion is a great alternative to the other more traditional methods on this list. It’s less expensive and far more natural as it isn’t guided by a moderator or a predefined set of questions. The only issue is that you can’t get feedback directly from the mouth of the user, so it’s worth combining this type of research with interviews, surveys, and/or focus groups.
4) Interviews
Interviews allow for face-to-face discussions (both in-person and virtually), allowing for more natural conversations with participants.
For gleaning deeper insights (especially with non-verbal cues giving greater weight to opinions), there’s nothing better than face-to-face interviews. Any kind of interview will provide excellent information, helping you to better understand your prospects and target audience/target market.
Use cases for market research
When you want to understand your prospects and/or customers, but have no existing data to set a benchmark – or want to improve your products and services quickly – market research is often the go-to.
Market research (as mentioned above), helps you to discover how prospects and customers feel about your products and services, as well as what they would like to see .
But there are more use cases and benefits to market research than the above.
Reduce risk of product and business failure
With any new venture, there’s no guarantee that the new idea will be successful. As such, it’s up to you to establish the market’s appetite for your product or service. The easiest way to do this is through market research – you can understand the challenges prospects face and quickly identify where you can help. With the data from your market survey, you can then create a solution that addresses the needs and expectations of would-be customers.
Forecast future trends
Market research doesn’t just help you to understand the current market – it also helps you to forecast future needs. As you conduct your research and analyze the findings, you can identify trends – for example, how brands and businesses are adopting new technology to improve customer experiences or how sustainability is becoming a core focus for packaging. Whatever it is you’re looking to understand about the future of business in your market, comprehensive market research can help you to identify it.
Stay ahead of the competition
Understanding your market and what prospects and customers want from you will help to keep you ahead of the competition . The fact is that the top businesses frequently invest in market research to get an edge, and those that don’t tap into the insights of their audience are missing low-hanging fruit.
As well as helping you to stay in front, you can also use market research to identify gaps in the market, e.g. your competitors’ strengths and weaknesses . Just have participants answer questions about competitor products/services – or even use the products/services – and work out how you can refine your offerings to address these issues.
Plan more strategically
What’s the foundation of your business strategy? If it’s based on evidence, e.g. what people expect of your products and services, it’ll be much easier to deliver something that works. Rather than making assumptions about what you should do, market research gives you a clear, concrete understanding of what people want to see.
Check out our guide to market research for a more comprehensive breakdown.
How do you write a market research plan/template?
A market research plan is very similar to a brief in that it documents the most vital information and steps about your project. Consider it a blueprint that outlines your main objective (summary), key questions and outcomes, target audience and size, your timeline, budget, and other key variables.
Let’s talk about them in more detail.
Elements of a great market research plan
1) overview or summary.
Use the first section of your market research plan to outline the background to the problem that you are attempting to solve (this is usually your problem statement or problem question). Include background information on the study’s purpose and the business to provide context to those who would read the report, as well as the need for the research. Keep the overview simple and concise; focus on the most salient elements.
2) Objectives
What is it that you hope to achieve with this survey? Your objectives are the most important part of the survey. Make sure to list 3-5 of the decisions or initiatives that the research will influence.
For example:
Understand the most-used channels for customer engagement and purchasing to decide where to prioritize marketing and sales budget in Q1 2022. Determine what’s causing customer churn at the later stages of the buyer journey and implement a new retention and sales strategy to address it.
Your objectives should be smart, that is: Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Timely.
3) Deliverables (or outcomes)
This section should focus on what you expect to have at the end of the project. How many responses are you looking for? How will the data be presented? Who will the data be shared with? (Stakeholders, executives) What are your next steps? Make sure you state how you will collect and analyze the data once it’s available.
Products such as Qualtrics CoreXM make this process fast and incredibly easy to do, drastically reducing the time to insights so you can make more meaningful changes, faster.
4) Target audience
Not to be confused with your market research sample, your target audience represents who you want to research. Of course, your sample may include ideal buyers from your target audience. Here you want to define the main variables or factors of your audience: demographic , age, location , product interaction, experience, and so on. It’s worth building out your buyer personas (if you haven’t already) and including a quick breakdown of them here.
5) Sample plan
How many participants do you want to research and what kind of groups do you want to reach? Depending on these two variables, you may have to use qualitative, quantitative , or multi-method approaches.
6) Research methods
What methods will you use in your market research project? The insights (and the granularity of those insights) will depend on the methods and tools you choose. For example, and as mentioned earlier, surveys are often the go-to for many organizations as they’re affordable and straightforward, but if you want to get more personal views from your respondents, one-to-one interviews might be more applicable. You might even want to take a hands-off approach and simply observe participants as they use your products, or try a combination of research methods. Make sure to outline what methods you will use as part of your research plan.
7) Timeline
How long will your research project run? It’s worth putting together a Gantt chart to highlight key milestones in the project, along with dependencies, and to break down tasks as much as possible. Schedule in contingency time in case some tasks or research runs over – or you need more responses.
Set a budget for the overall program and list it in your plan. Though this might be the most difficult aspect of any research plan, it helps you to be more strategic about tasks and hold people accountable at each stage of the process. If costs go over, that’s good to know for future market research. If costs are lower than anticipated, you then have the opportunity to do further research or prop up other areas of the study.
9) Ethical concerns or conflicts of interest
One of the most important parts of your market research plan, you should highlight any ethical concerns. To begin with, it’s your duty to state whether or not responses will be kept confidential and anonymous as part of the study. It’s also important to allow participants to remain anonymous and ensure you protect their privacy at all times.
Another issue to consider is stereotyping. Any analysis of real populations needs to make approximations and place individuals into groups, but if conducted irresponsibly, stereotyping can lead to undesirable results.
Lastly, conflicts of interest – it may be that researchers have interests in the outcome of the project that lead to a personal advantage that might compromise the integrity of your market research project. You should clearly state in your market research report that any potential conflicts of interest are highlighted and addressed before continuing.
But I want a faster solution!
Well, there’s a quicker and far easier way to do all of the above and get the data you need – just use a market research survey template. In our next section, we’re going to share a whole list of templates that you can use.
Free market research survey templates
No matter what kind of research you want to conduct, we have templates that will remove the complexity of the task and empower you to get more from your data. Below we’ve compiled a list of templates for four key experience areas: Brand , Customer , Employee , and Product .
All of our research templates are free. All you need to do is sign up for a free Qualtrics account to access them.
Brand experience market research templates:
- Logo testing : Collect feedback to help you evaluate and iterate on your logo designs and concepts
- Brand awareness : Track the level of brand awareness in your target market, including current and potential future customers
- Ad testing : Evaluate your consumers’ reaction to an advertisement so you know which campaigns to deploy before you invest
- A/B testing : Quickly and easily compare to versions or options in a study, whether it’s a design, headline, color palette or a mock-up of your latest ad campaign
Customer experience market research templates
- Student satisfaction : Gather feedback on how your institution is delivering on the student experience
- Net promoter score (NPS) : Measure customer loyalty and understand how they feel about your product or service using one of the world’s best-recognized metrics
- Customer satisfaction : Evaluate how satisfied your customers are with your company, including the products and services you provide, and how they are treated when they buy from you
- Customer service : Gain insights into the contact center experience, so you can achieve and maintain optimum levels of customer experience (CX) performance
- Event feedback : Measure the effectiveness of your events and how well they meet attendee expectations so that you can continuously improve your offering
- IT help desk : Understand how satisfied your employees and customers are with your IT help desk experience
- Website suggestion box : Collect visitor feedback on how your website can be improved
- Website satisfaction : Find out how satisfied visitors are with your website’s design, usability, and performance
- Store purchase feedback : Capture customer experience data at the point of purchase to help you improve the in-store experience
- Online purchase feedback : Find out how well your online shopping experience performs against customer needs and expectations
Employee experience market research templates
- Employee satisfaction : Get an overview of your current employee experience
- Manager feedback : Improve your skills as a leader with valuable feedback from your team
- Employee engagement : Find out how employees find the current experience at your workplace with this entry-level engagement survey
- Employee exit interview : Understand why your employees are leaving and how they’ll speak about your company once they’re gone with this survey template
- Employee onboarding : Improve your onboarding program by understanding what’s working and what’s not
- Team event planning : Collect inputs from employees to plan a team event that works for everyone
- Meeting feedback : Check-in with team members after a meeting to see how well your company is running and what improvements can be made
- Interview feedback : Improve your candidate experience by gathering actionable insights about the interview process
- Employee suggestion box : Gather anonymous data to help address concerns and improve the employee experience in your organization
- Candidate experience : Improve your candidate experience to increase brand perception, offer acceptance rates, and hiring process efficiency with this single-touchpoint survey template
- Employee suggestion action : Take employee feedback a step further by working with your staff to quantify solutions based on their experience data
Product experience market research templates
- Product research : Evaluate your consumers’ reaction to a new product or product feature across every stage of the product development journey
- Pricing : Understand how to set the exact price point for your product or service, according to your target consumers
- Feature prioritization : Compare and contrast product features using conjoint analysis to find the optimal mix for your customers
- Product package testing : Collect feedback on your product packaging to see how well it meets the needs and expectations of your customers
Armed with the right market research templates, getting the information you need across brand, product, customer and employee disciplines — as well as beyond — is significantly easier.
Watch Demo: XM for Strategy & Research
Related resources
Mixed methods research 17 min read, market intelligence 10 min read, marketing insights 11 min read, ethnographic research 11 min read, qualitative vs quantitative research 13 min read, qualitative research questions 11 min read, qualitative research design 11 min read, request demo.
Ready to learn more about Qualtrics?
IMAGES
COMMENTS
Instantly Download Market Research Report Template, Sample & Example in Microsoft Word (DOC), Google Docs, Apple Pages Format. Available in (US) 8.5x11, (A4) 8.27x11.69 inches. Quickly Customize. Easily Editable & Printable.
A formal report template that will help you communicate findings from a market research project.
Nov 7, 2024 · A comprehensive guide on Market Research with tools, examples of brands winning with research, and templates for surveys, focus groups + presentation template.
Jan 24, 2021 · In this post, I’m sharing six market research report templates to give you a head start and help steer your analysis in the right direction from the onset. What is a market research template? Market research templates provide questions and specific fields to fill out – relevant to specified market research objectives.
Knowing how to exploit market research, audience research, and data research findings and insights is essential for getting ahead and staying ahead. Using brief and straightforward questions, you can evaluate a sample group that represents your target market.
Use these free templates to to organize your brand market research. The collection includes templates for customer research, positioning your brand, planning tasks and much more.
This editable template streamlines the creation of comprehensive market research reports, ensuring accurate data analysis and strategic insights. Tailor it to your industry specifics, providing a visually appealing and organized report for informed decision-making and market success.
Market Research Template in Word Print our Free Guide to Researching, Analyzing, and Interpreting Data Related to the Market or an Industry. These Can Include Surveys, Questionnaires, Focus Group Studies, and Other Tests to Help Identify Customer Needs, Preferences, and Trends.
Armed with the right market research templates, getting the information you need across brand, product, customer and employee disciplines — as well as beyond — is significantly easier.
Share groundbreaking market research with your audience with the help of Visme’s vibrant report template. Featuring a unique selection of high-res images, modern fonts and interactive data widgets, this template will help you showcase your market research in the best way possible.