Ask YC: What resources do you use for your market research?
I need data in regards to our market. A sampling of 1,000 people to various niche questions. I was wondering what creative ways others have used to gather data to present to angels and VCs? We are looking to do this on the cheap, as Google and libraries have failed us!
Things we have done or planning to do is...
1. We used a twitter search... summize.com, but Twitter's API only goes back 200 Tweets. It says total 2,000 tweets on topic, but only shows 200 :(
2. Ask friends who are pastors or teachers to ask a question here or there and do a head count.
14 comments
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Do you really care what 1,000 idiots on facebook (or 1,000 yahoos from anywhere on earth) with nothing to do but answer your shitty poll think?
Do you really want to work with a firm for whom a poll of a bunch of yahoos, a quarter of whom were statistically likely to be watching porn as they filled out your poll, was the thing that got you over?
Twitter is market research? There isn't a better way?
http://twist.flaptor.com http://twittersearch.flaptor.com
And please let us know if you have any feature suggestions. We are trying to build a useful tool so we are all ears.
I assumed this is due to Twitter's API? If that is not the case can you code it to show all results on a topic from day one?
Though Im not sure what VCs or angels will think when I present my data being from Twitter. But to me its a cheap and solid way of gleaming demographics on topics; albeit the demographic is skewed for now.
The entire analyst industry is basically built to do this. Of course, they tend to be ridiculously biased because they are getting paid so much for their opinions. Finding friends who work at places that already have the reports is one way to get them. :-)
In terms of actually useful data... Look for information about the users' and customers' actual behavior -- i.e., where the user/customer actually had to do something real like visit repeatedly, pay money, recommend you to other people, etc. As a number of folks mentioned at SUS, if you don't have information directly relevant to your play then look for various proxies and triangulate.
Also, certain techniques (randomizing the order of the poll questions for each visitor) and statistical functions can be used to get more accurate information from those polled.
But you're right, if done improperly you can get wildly inaccurate data (just look at past or current presidential election polls)
I.e., polls are a form of proxy for what you really want to learn but can't get directly. Your example of voting polls is a great example of this... Until the actual election, we can't know and so polling is about as good as we can get. (But I won't even bother to mention all of the games that are played with the polling to manipulate the outcomes. :-( )