Insight Diagnostic
A fixed-scope diagnostic that maps the decisions on the table against the data the business actually has — and the gaps worth filling.
For businesses tired of betting on instinct in markets that no longer reward it.
A capability brief from Bespoke Business Development — diagnostic-led, senior-run, and built to operate inside the business, not pitch around it.
Markets shift faster than annual research cycles can keep up with. The businesses making the right calls aren't the ones with the thickest decks — they're the ones reading the signal continuously and acting before it becomes consensus.
Research was a project — commissioned occasionally, delivered as a PDF, referenced in board meetings, and quietly forgotten by the time the next quarter started.
Insight lived with a vendor. The business borrowed it for six weeks, then went back to instinct.
Insight is an operating capability. Continuous, mixed-method, and wired into the decisions the business actually makes — pricing, positioning, product roadmap, channel mix.
Without an insight system, every other function is making expensive decisions on stale data — and finding out they were wrong from the P&L.
Decisions made on current data, not last year's report.
Conviction to commit budget when the signal is clear — and pause when it isn't.
An insight system that gets smarter every quarter, not a research cycle that resets to zero.
The gap between research that drives revenue and research that decorates slides has nothing to do with sample size. It's about whether the question was framed against a real decision.
Beautiful charts, abstract recommendations, and a deck that gets cited in pitches but never moves a roadmap.
The cost is invisible — until a competitor moves on the same data and the gap shows up in market share.
One workshop, three loud voices, and a strategic pivot. No statistical weight, no triangulation, no segmentation that holds.
The cost is visible — within a quarter, when the pivot misses the actual market.
BBD treats research the same way every engagement is treated — by reverse-engineering from the decision the business actually has to make.
Pin the decision the research has to inform — pricing, positioning, audience, channel, product. No decision, no project.
Choose the mix — qualitative, quantitative, behavioral, secondary — calibrated to the decision and the timeline.
Run the work. Triangulate findings across methods so a single anecdote can't bend the conclusion.
Translate findings into decisions, deploy, and monitor. Insight that doesn't change behavior is theatre.
A 90-page deck with twelve recommendations and zero priorities. A focus group of six people called a finding. A vendor that disappears the day the file is delivered.
A decision-grade answer to the actual question — with the method, sample, and confidence shown — followed by the activation plan that turns insight into pipeline, pricing, or product change.
Applied research extends across the customer, the market, and the brand itself. The scope below maps where the work creates measurable leverage.
The behavioral and attitudinal read on current and target customers — what they buy, why, when, and what would make them switch.
The category-level read — competitor positioning, white space, demand trajectory, and the structural shifts that decide who wins.
Perception, awareness, and equity tracking — what the market believes, how that's changing, and where the brand's narrative is leaking.
Each practice stands on its own or chains with the others. Most engagements begin with the diagnostic and move outward from there.
A fixed-scope diagnostic that maps the decisions on the table against the data the business actually has — and the gaps worth filling.
When the business needs numbers it can defend in a board meeting — segment sizes, price elasticity, brand equity scores — quantitative work supplies them.
When the question is 'why' — qualitative work answers it. Done well, it produces hypotheses worth testing at scale, not anecdotes mistaken for trends.
What competitors ship, price, hire for, and message — captured as a continuous signal, not a quarterly screenshot.
Forecasting that sits between guesswork and false precision. Triangulated from multiple sources and presented with confidence intervals the business can act on.
A research project ends. An insight system runs. Operationalizing the work means findings get refreshed, dashboards stay live, and decisions stay current.
From decision framing to defensible findings — sized to the call the business has to make.
Quantitative, qualitative, and behavioral — so a single anecdote can't bend the conclusion.
Tracking studies that refresh on schedule, so decisions stay current as the market moves.
Every study tied to a specific business decision — no research without a question worth answering.
The stack is built around getting decision-grade answers fast — and keeping the insight signal continuous after the project ends.
Enterprise survey design and analytics.
Lightweight studies and concept tests.
Vetted respondent access at scale.
Recruiting for one-to-one and ethnographic work.
Tagging, theming, and synthesis at scale.
Audience and category trend signal.
Where audiences spend time and attention.
Competitive intelligence automation.
Sentiment, share of voice, brand health.
Conjoint, MaxDiff, and pricing studies.
Behavioral analytics inside product.
Synthesis acceleration on qual data — with humans in the loop.
Nine patterns that show up across most engagements — grouped by customer, market, and brand work.
Choice modeling reveals the price the market will actually pay — and the bundle that wins. Pricing changes ship within the quarter.
Statistical segmentation replaces five made-up personas with three real ones — and the highest-LTV segment gets prioritized.
Why customers leave a competitor — and what would make them switch — captured in language sales can use directly.
Category map exposes a positioning gap no current player owns — and the business moves to claim it before consensus catches up.
TAM/SAM/SOM modeling backed by behavioral signal — defensible enough to anchor a board deck and a hiring plan.
Always-on read on competitor pricing, hiring, and product moves — leadership stops reacting to surprises in earnings calls.
Three campaign directions tested against target audience before production. The winner ships; the other two never burn budget.
Quarterly perception study catches narrative drift early — before it shows up in growth metrics.
Continuous customer feedback wired into product, marketing, and support — so the roadmap reflects what users actually want.
Research is a layer inside the three engagement models — not a separate vendor relationship. The right entry depends on the decisions the business is facing.
Insight built in from day one. Audience research, category sizing, and pricing studies included in the 30-day foundation — so the launch isn't betting on instinct.
For businesses already running. A scoped study tied to a specific decision — pricing, positioning, audience, channel — with method, sample, and timeline matched to the call.
Continuous insight after the build. Tracking studies, voice-of-customer programs, competitive intelligence, and a quarterly read — so the business stays current.
Plain answers to the questions that come up on most first calls.
A scoped study tied to one decision — typically two to four weeks. Anything smaller usually doesn't have the sample to be defensible. Anything larger needs to chain into multiple decisions to justify the investment.
An agency runs studies. BBD frames the decisions, runs the right method against each, and translates findings into action inside the broader engagement. The insight isn't delivered as a deck and forgotten — it's wired into pricing, positioning, and roadmap.
Yes. Most engagements start with an audit of what the business already has — analytics, CRM, support tickets, sales notes. Often a third of the gap is closed with data that's already in the building.
It depends on the decision. A pricing pivot defensible to a board needs hundreds of respondents per segment. A directional read on positioning can come from twelve well-recruited interviews. Sample is sized to the call.
Discussion guides, multiple moderators, structured synthesis, and triangulation against quantitative or behavioral data. A finding that only shows up in qual gets flagged as a hypothesis until it's tested at scale.
Yes — inside the Launch Retainer. Quarterly brand and category tracking, always-on competitive intelligence, and continuous voice-of-customer feedback are common components.
By the decisions made. The retro on a study isn't the deck — it's whether the call the research informed turned out to be right. That gets tracked over time inside the retainer.