7 Essential Categories of Facts and How You Should Be Using Them

Many kinds of stats can be revealing, but it’s good to understand what each is telling you and when to use them. Understanding what kind of a fact you have helps in interpreting the implications of it.  For example, just because 31% of smartphone owners say they plan to make more purchases on their devices in the future (@eDRtweet), doesn’t mean you they will.  They might, but there’s a difference between attitude, which is what that stat represents, and behavior.   Below you’ll find the seven most essential categories of facts and statistics and some hints on when to use each one.

Stats about consumers

  • Demographics tell you who belongs to a particular population or customer segment. They focus on characteristics like age, gender, income, education level, and background. Consider using demographic data to explain who belongs to the population you’re describing and highlight distinctions between different segments.
  • Attitudes are values, beliefs, or expectations that a consumer holds. Attitudes can give you a sense of what a group of consumers thinks (or would like to think), but they don’t always reflect the reality of how they’ll actually behave. When responding to surveys, people often respond as they want to be seen—not as they are.  You might use attitudinal data to make points about how people feel about a topic, what they expect to happen, or what values and beliefs are important to them.
  • Behavioral data clarifies how a population is actually acting. Instead of answering “Would you?” questions, behavioral data answers “Have you” and “Do you?” questions. “Observational” data gleaned from methods like tracking sales or online behavior is often more reliable than self-reported data.

Stats about industries, markets, and companies

  • Market structure data explains how big a market is, how fast it’s growing or projected to grow, and which companies (or types of companies) have what market share. Use it to make points about how large or fast-growing a market is or how consolidated or fragmented it is.
  • Business model data explains details about how a company’s business is structured. What business units or product lines account for what share of the company’s revenue or earnings? Use it to describe the relative importance of different parts of a company’s business.

 

Stats about technologies and marketing channels 

  • Reach or penetration rate is one of the fundamental types of stats about technologies and marketing channels. How many people (or what percentage of the population) own and use the technology? Use these stats to show how widely adopted a channel is.
  • Strategy stats explain what companies and leaders are doing with technologies or marketing channels (as opposed to consumers). Use them to benchmark how different companies are investing in or executing in different areas.

When you’re looking for a stat to support your argument, first take a look at what you’re trying to build a commentary.  Is it about the business, a given technology, or the consumers (current or future).  Then figure out what you’re trying to say about that focus area.  Is it about growth or adoption possibilities or the current state of affairs?  Make sure that the research you choose speaks to those focus areas and traits.  The good news is: Factbrowser has established categories for each of these types of statistics, so you’ll always know if you’re using the right stat for your argument.  Just look under topic, then format.   Happy browsing!

The 2-Minute Guide to Factbrowser – Your New Secret Weapon

Our Factbrowser readership has been growing steadily since we launched a month or so back.  So we thought it’d be helpful to deconstruct the site a bit and provide some ideas on how to use it for fast research.  We want you to have the information you need at the drop of a hat. In short, we want you to be the MacGyver of market research and useful stats.

Search

One of the easiest way to find a fact you need it to search for it using the search box in the upper right.  The best way to search is to use one or two defining terms, for example:  social media and china.

Browse

Here is the anatomy of a basic fact on Factbrowser. Each fact links to an original source page, the original report, similarly tagged facts and social sharing options.

A Factbrowser Fact

Click to enlarge

Tags

Clicking on a tag will bring you to a topic page.  Topic  pages aggregate all of the facts we have on a given subject, for example – mobile, millenials, or France.  Here’s an example of a topic page on teens.  Once on the page, you can narrow down to more specific topics within the tag group – like “teens and mobile”.

Original Source Page:

Clicking on the name of the source will bring you to a page of all facts Factbrowser has from that source.  These facts could be on any topic but all share the same source-author.

Source PAge

The header on a source page shows you their contact information, twitter account, and the topics they tend to report on. Click on a topic tag to narrow in on a source’s areas of expertise.

Original Source Report

Clicking on the original source report will take you away from Factbrowser and to the website of the original source.  IMPORTANT NOTE:  When you’re using facts that you find on Factbrowser, it’s important to link back to the original report and not to the Factbrowser page so that the researcher who conducted the study gets properly credited.

Share

Use the social sharing buttons on the right side of each post to easily post the fact to your Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin accounts. Factbrowser will automatically add the original source report and include their twitter handle if you’re sharing on Twitter.

Subscribe

There are two ways to keep you informed about the latest research and statistics. You can subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest facts delivered straight to your inbox or you can subscribe to the RSS feed of a particular topic or page. Our newsletter brings you all of the facts and none of the fluff. Here’s what it looks like:

Newsletter

That’s your user’s guide to Factbrowser.  As the site grows, we’ll be incorporating more of your ideas and pieces of feedback.  We’ll try to keep you updated to all of the changes here on this blog. We love feedback, so keep it coming in the comments section below.

15 Facebook Facts for the IPO

All signs point to Facebook positioning for its initial public offering (IPO) this month.  In anticipation of what is sure to dominate  discussion topics for weeks after its announcement, Factbrowser has pulled together some of our most recent and interesting facts about Facebook into the following powerpoint presentation.  We encourage you to download the powerpoint and use it for your own presentations.  The images are all creative commons, so just be sure to carry over the citations for both the stats and images. We’d love it if you’d help spread the word about Factbrowser too.