NewsAbout UsContactWebsiteBizcommunity
Make smarter campaign decisions with an agile survey tool designed to help you optimise in-market advertising performance.
Read more
Your guide to boosting digital media effectiveness and developing rapid understanding of which creatives are performing best, in context.
Read more
Screen, test and validate your innovations with a suite of agile market research solutions that deliver rapid insights at the speed of your business.
Read more
How the right consumer feedback tool can accelerate your insights career - if you choose wisely.
Read more

TNS makes a clean sweep of the SAMRA 2010 prizes

At the Southern African Marketing Research Association's (SAMRA) annual conference held last week at Mt Grace in the Magaliesberg, executives at two TNS companies in South Africa made a clean sweep of all five awards on offer for the papers they presented.

The most prestigious award, for the overall best paper (gold), went to Kyle Finlay and Alice Louw of the TNS Global Equity Company in Cape Town for their paper entitled "Negative publicity: how do customers process it and how should brands manage it". This paper, via both a literature review and primary research, looked at how negative publicity is interpreted and spread, putting these findings into the context of the human mind. The same pair also won the silver award for the first runner-up with their paper entitled "Branding in the nth dimension: measuring brand equity in a digital world" which looked at the strengths and weaknesses of traditional metrics before making a case for multi-dimensional inputs as the best approach as a paradigm shift occurs in what people consider a brand to be. The second-runner up (bronze) award went to Kirsty Alberts, Joanne Campbell and Alice Louw, also of the TNS Global equity Company, for their paper entitled "Crowdsourcing: the end of marketing research?", a paper which looked at the crowdsourcing phenomenon (via both primary and secondary research) and, hence, the need for research agencies to embrace the concept in order to remain viable.

The paper for the best first-time presenter was won by Elisha Basson of TNS Research Surveys in Johannesburg. Her paper, "To punt or be blunt", looked at consumer response to branding in different categories via a segmentation that examined individuals' inclinations towards brand internalisation and what this means for the roles of "brand" across different categories.

Finally, the "Voice of the Audience" award for the presenter who most excited her or his audience on the day went to Sarah Macdonald's paper "Influentials or accidentals? Investigating interpersonal influence in the telecommunication market". This paper found that the influentials hypothesis is an over-simplified view of how trends spread as interpersonal influence does not simply cascade through a social group. Sarah is based at TNS Research Surveys' Cape Town office.

Copies of the papers, which went through a rigorous judging process that involved over 40 judges who examined both the written and presented version of papers, can be obtained from Neil Higgs (az.oc.labolg-snt@sggiH.lieN) and Lesley van der Walt (moc.oc-ytiuqermeotsuc@tlawrednav.yelsel).

About TNS

TNS is the world's largest custom research agency delivering actionable insights and research-based business advice to its clients so they can make more effective business decisions. TNS offers comprehensive industry knowledge within the Consumer, Technology, Finance, Automotive and Political & Social sectors, supported by a unique product offering that stretches across the entire range of marketing and business issues, specialising in product development & innovation, brand & communication, stakeholder management, retail & shopper, and qualitative research. Delivering best-in-class service across more than 70 countries, TNS is part of Kantar, the world's largest research, insight and consultancy network. Please visit www.tnsglobal.com for more information.

About Kantar

Kantar is one of the world's largest insight, information and consultancy networks. By uniting the diverse talents of its 13 specialist companies, the group aims to become the pre-eminent provider of compelling and inspirational insights for the global business community. Its 26,500 employees work across 95 countries and across the whole spectrum of research and consultancy disciplines, enabling the group to offer clients business insights at each and every point of the consumer cycle. The group's services are employed by over half of the Fortune Top 500 companies. For further information, please visit us at www.kantar.com.

11 Jun 2010 12:24

<<Back