Research types
Research types
Purpose | Methods | Key outcomes | Example | |
Quantitative Research: The ‘what’ | Define voter demographics, segmentation, and the election framework. | Large-scale polling, surveys, data analysis. | Identify target voter groups and understand their priorities. | Polling reveals that 60% of voters prioritise healthcare, but your target undecided voters rank the economy even higher at 70%. |
Qualitative Research: The ‘why’ | Dig deeper into the motivations, concerns, and perceptions of your target voters. | Focus groups and in-depth interviews. | Understand why voters think the way they do and uncover emotional drivers. | Focus groups might reveal that while voters care about the economy, they also need reassurance that your candidate has the expertise to manage it effectively. |
Message testing | Test and refine how your message resonates with target voters. | A/B testing, dial testing, controlled message exposure. Techniques like A/B testing or dial testing help evaluate immediate reactions to campaign ads or slogans. | Determine which messages move voters toward your candidate and away from opponents. | In dial testing, participants rate their approval or disapproval of a message in real-time, highlighting which parts of an ad resonate most. |
Voter Segmentation
Segmentation works alongside the research arc to ensure the insights from each phase are tailored to specific voter groups.
Example: If 80% of undecided voters care about the economy, you might focus on testing economic messaging during the message testing phase.