Qualitative and Quantitative Research Designed Around the Decision, Not the Method
Most research briefs start with a method: “We need a survey” or “We need focus groups.” The right starting point is the decision the research needs to inform. SIS International designs qualitative and quantitative studies around specific leadership decisions, then selects and sequences the methods that produce the evidence required. B2B expert interviews, ethnographic fieldwork, conjoint analysis, segmentation, and Voice of the Customer programs across 135+ countries.

Six Core Methodologies for Strategic Decisions
B2B Expert Interviews
SIS conducts structured expert interviews with senior decision-makers who are difficult to reach through panel surveys: C-suite executives, procurement directors, regulatory specialists, and technical buyers. We typically run 15-30 interviews per study, each lasting 45-60 minutes, using a semi-structured discussion guide that combines open-ended exploration with targeted probing. Samsung, Pfizer, and JPMorgan have used SIS expert interviews to inform pricing strategy, market entry decisions, and competitive positioning. The method works where surveys fail: complex B2B decisions where sample sizes are small and the insight requires depth, not breadth.
Focus Groups and Online Qualitative
SIS moderates in-person focus groups at facilities in New York, Los Angeles, and partner locations worldwide, and runs online qualitative sessions for geographically dispersed audiences. Groups are recruited by specific screening criteria: category usage, purchase authority, brand awareness, and demographic profile. We use projective techniques, concept sorting, and stimulus rotation to move past stated preference into underlying motivation. But focus groups answer “why” and “how.” They do not answer “how many.” SIS designs qualitative phases to generate hypotheses that the quantitative phase tests at scale.
Ethnographic and Observational Research
SIS researchers observe consumers and professionals in their natural environments: homes, offices, retail stores, clinical settings, and factory floors. Ethnographic research captures behaviors that respondents cannot self-report because they are habitual, unconscious, or socially influenced. Procter & Gamble built its Swiffer product line on ethnographic insights about how consumers actually clean floors versus how they describe cleaning floors. SIS designs ethnographic studies with structured observation protocols, video documentation, and behavioral coding frameworks that translate field observations into actionable product and service design recommendations.
Conjoint Analysis and Choice Modeling
Conjoint analysis forces respondents to make trade-offs between product attributes, revealing which features drive purchase decisions and how much consumers will pay for each. SIS designs choice-based conjoint (CBC) studies, adaptive conjoint (ACA) for complex product categories, and MaxDiff exercises for feature prioritization. The output is a utility model that predicts market share under different product configurations and price points. BMW used conjoint analysis to determine that heated seats drove more purchase intent than a premium sound system at equivalent cost. The method replaces opinion-based product decisions with trade-off data.
Segmentation and Cluster Analysis
SIS designs attitudinal and behavioral segmentation studies that go beyond demographics. We use latent class analysis, k-means clustering, and discriminant analysis to identify segments based on needs, motivations, usage patterns, and value sensitivity. Each segment is profiled with demographic overlays, media consumption data, and channel preference to make it targetable. A financial services client discovered through SIS segmentation that their fastest-growing customer cohort was not defined by age or income but by a specific attitude toward financial risk that cut across all demographic categories.
Voice of the Customer (VOC) Programs
SIS designs ongoing VOC programs that combine quantitative tracking surveys with periodic qualitative deep-dives. Unlike one-time satisfaction studies, VOC programs monitor changes in customer needs, competitive perception, and service gaps over time. We build structured interview guides for key account reviews, design NPS and CES measurement frameworks, and conduct win/loss analysis interviews with prospects who chose a competitor. The output is a quarterly intelligence package that product, sales, and service teams use to adjust strategy based on what customers are actually saying, not what internal dashboards suggest.
What SIS Delivers to Research and Strategy Teams
Every engagement starts by defining the leadership decision, the evidence gap, and the minimum viable research design. We select and sequence qualitative and quantitative methods around the specific decision being made, not around a preferred methodology. The output is a research architecture document before any fieldwork begins.
15-30 structured expert interviews per study with C-suite executives, procurement directors, and technical buyers. Semi-structured discussion guides that combine open exploration with targeted probing. Transcribed, coded, and analyzed to produce pattern-level findings, not anecdote collections.
Choice-based conjoint for pricing and feature trade-off analysis. Latent class and k-means segmentation with demographic, behavioral, and attitudinal overlays. MaxDiff for feature prioritization. Each deliverable includes a utility model or segment profile that product and marketing teams can act on directly.
Recurring quantitative tracking combined with periodic qualitative deep-dives. NPS and CES measurement, win/loss analysis, and key account review interviews. Delivered as a quarterly intelligence package that product, sales, and service teams use to track shifts in customer needs, competitive perception, and satisfaction drivers over time.
THE SIS DIFFERENCE
Nasza oferta usług obejmuje:

































