Primary research is data collected directly from the source. Think of it as asking your friends for their honest opinions about a new snack you’re planning to launch.
| Method | What It Involves | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Surveys | Questionnaires sent online or in person. | Large groups, quantitative data. |
| Interviews | One‑to‑one conversations. | Deep insights, qualitative data. |
| Focus Groups | Small group discussion guided by a moderator. | Exploring attitudes, brainstorming. |
| Observation | Watching behaviour in natural settings. | When actions matter more than words. |
| Experiments | Controlled tests to see cause and effect. | Testing product features, marketing messages. |
Pilot Test: Try your survey on a few people first.
| Aspect | Primary | Secondary |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Directly collected | Existing data (reports, articles) |
| Cost | Higher (time & resources) | Lower (often free) |
| Accuracy | High if well designed | Depends on source quality |
| Timeliness | Immediate after collection | May be outdated |
Imagine you’re part of a student club that wants to create a new energy drink. You decide to use primary research:
The data tells you that “berry” flavour and a sleek bottle design are top preferences, so you tailor your product accordingly. This is the power of primary research: you get the exact insights you need to make informed decisions.