Primary research and secondary research are two fundamental approaches to collecting market intelligence. Understanding when to use each is critical to conducting efficient and effective market research.
Primary Research
Primary research involves collecting original data directly from first-hand sources. It is conducted specifically to address the research question at hand. It tends to be more expensive and time-consuming but provides data that is directly relevant, current and proprietary.
Secondary Research
Secondary research is a process of gathering data from already published or collected sources. It is faster and less expensive than primary research but may not address your specific research questions precisely.
When to use Primary vs Secondary Research
| Factor | Primary Research | Secondary Research |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | High | Low to Medium |
| Time | Weeks to Months | Days to Weeks |
| Data relevance | Very specific to your need | General — may not fit exactly |
| Data ownership | Proprietary — yours alone | Available to all |
| Best for | New product research, consumer behaviour | Market sizing, industry overview |
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