Advertising budgets are significant. There needs to be a way to know if the ads resonate with the target audience. This is where advertising research enters to study what people relate to. This is no longer about spray and pray. Advertising market research is a strategic process of assessing the ROI of ad spends.
What Is Advertising Research?
Advertising research is the systematic process of collecting, analyzing and applying data about your target audience, ad creatives and campaign performance. This is conducted before, during and after a campaign runs to eliminate guesswork and maximize return on ad spend.
Think of it as the foundation of every smart marketing decision. Without it, you’re spending money on assumptions. With it, you’re making moves based on evidence.
The three core problems advertising research solves are:
- Wasted spend — Running ads to the wrong audience, with the wrong message, on the wrong channel.
- Creative blindness — Not knowing if your copy or visuals are resonating or falling flat.
- Post-campaign fog — Having no idea what actually moved the needle after a campaign ends.
4 reasons to do advertising market research
- Proper allocation of ad expenditure: pre-campaign research can prevent you from spending $50,000 promoting a message your audience doesn’t connect with.
- Improves creative quality: Testing reveals which headlines, visuals, and CTAs resonate and why. Every creative decision is grounded in data.
- Ascertain ROI through strategy: Each campaign builds on the last. The more research you do, the smarter your strategy becomes over time.
- Build brand perception: Ads that genuinely connect with audiences don’t just convert. They build the positive brand perception that drives long-term growth.
The 4 Stages of Advertising Research
Advertising research is a collection of research activities that happen at different stages of your campaign lifecycle. Here’s the breakdown:
Stage 1: the pre-campaign market research
Everything you do before an ad goes live. This includes concept testing, creative testing, and competitive analysis. It helps you decide what message to deliver, which visuals to use, what tone to strike and on what medium should your ads appear.
For pre-campaign research, you can use strategies such as
Digital surveys and polls, focus group discussions and audience profiling.
However, assess your brand during the pre-campaign research, depending on what you need to measure:
- Brand positioning
- Brand awareness
- Brand loyalty
- Brand reputation
- Brand perception
Your creatives will be dictated by what you are measuring. This also determines the effectiveness of the ad creative layout. You will want to compare it against other options to see which stands out during the stipulated time.
Stage 2: in-campaign ad monitoring
Real-time tracking of live campaign KPIs including impressions, click-through rates, cost-per-click, conversions. You can optimize spend while the campaign is still running.
Stage 3: the post-campaign ad analysis
The full performance debrief after a campaign ends. What was the actual ROI? What did consumers remember? What shifted in brand perception? This is your playbook for the next campaign.
Most useful analysis contains: social media engagement, website engagement, survey responses, brand recall studies and customer feedback. Merren’s MAYA AI perfectly enables brands to collect post-campaign feedback:
- Did the video strike a chord with the audience?
- Did the logo relate to what the brand tried to showcase?
- Was the messaging clear?
For the most part, advertising market analysis can change their future creatives by detecting themes, anomalies and public feedback. This saves brands $1000+ expenditure in the future.
Stage 4: consumer / audience research
Ongoing research into who your buyers are: their demographics, psychographics, pain points, motivations and media habits. This informs every other type of advertising research.
Primary vs. Secondary Advertising Research
Beyond the campaign stages, advertising research also divides into two fundamental categories by where the data comes from:
TYPE | WHAT IT IS | EXAMPLES | BEST FOR |
Primary Research | Data you collect directly from your audience | Surveys, focus groups, A/B tests, interviews | Specific questions about your brand or campaign |
Secondary Research | Data collected by others that you analyze | Industry reports, competitor data, platform analytics | Market-level trends, benchmarking |
Qualitative Research | Non-numerical insights about attitudes and perceptions | Focus groups, in-depth interviews, social listening | Understanding the “why” behind consumer behavior |
Quantitative Research | Numerical data you can measure and compare | Surveys with scale ratings, analytics dashboards, A/B testing | Measuring the “how much” and “how many” |
The smartest campaigns combine all four. You need quantitative data to know what is happening, and qualitative data to understand why.
A 6-Step Framework to Conduct Advertising Research
Good market research starts with a purpose. Here are the basic steps to follow in order:
1. Assess the market research objective
Is the brand looking to spread awareness, will the outcome provide transactional ROI, are you testing a creative concept or assessing crowd reaction? Ideally, go for a single objective per campaign to avoid confusion. This will determine creative and budget allocation.
2. Identify and profile target audience
Define your audience by demographics, psychographics, purchase behavior, and media consumption habits. Here, you can create a customer persona which is a fictional character who will be your ideal target audience. This step alone can save you enormous testing budget by eliminating irrelevant segments early.
3. Choose the advertising research method
The team could go for a focus group discussion or online surveys. Measuring real-world campaign performance? Use platform analytics and brand lift studies. Trying to understand emotional reactions? Use qualitative interviews. A single method cannot carry the weight of answers.
4. Collect tangible data
Execute your research with rigor. Use statistically significant sample sizes for quantitative work (typically n=200+ for surveys). For qualitative, aim for thematic saturation usually 6–10 in-depth interviews or 2–3 focus groups. Bad data is worse than no data; it creates confident wrong decisions.
5. Assess patterns and numbers, both
Look for patterns, anomalies and gaps. Ask “so what?” after every finding. If a focus group shows that the tagline confuses 7 out of 10 people, the insight is to “rewrite the tagline before launch.”
6. Apply insights and re-test campaigns
Make your changes, update your creative, adjust your targeting, reallocate your budget, then measure the impact. Advertising research is a continuous loop, not a one-time event.
Understand What Advertising Research Is Not
Advertising market research can be related to terms such as brand research, product research but they are not the same thing.
Advertising Research IS | Advertising Research IS NOT |
Focused on ad content, messaging, and placement | Product development research |
Measuring consumer reactions to specific ads | Pricing or distribution strategy research |
Evaluating campaign reach, recall, and conversion | General brand equity studies (though they overlap) |
Improving communication and creative strategy | Customer service or product satisfaction research |
Frequently Asked Questions: Advertising Research
1. What is the difference between advertising research and market research?
Market research is broader and covers everything from product development to pricing to distribution. Advertising research is a subset of market research specifically focused on ad content, messaging, placement, and campaign effectiveness. They overlap, but advertising research has a narrower, campaign-specific focus.
2. How much does advertising research cost?
Basic survey research can cost $500–$5,000. Professional focus groups typically run $3,000–$15,000 per group. Platform analytics tools are often free or low-cost. Brand lift studies run by third-party firms can cost $20,000+. Start with what you can afford, even lightweight research beats no research.
3. How often should you conduct advertising research?
Before every major campaign (pre-launch), at regular intervals during active campaigns (weekly or bi-weekly KPI reviews), and after every campaign ends (post-mortem analysis). Audience research should be refreshed at least annually. Think of it as a continuous intelligence operation, not a one-time project.
4. What is A/B testing in advertising research?
A/B testing (also called split testing) is a controlled experiment where you show two variations of an ad (Version A vs. Version B) to different audience segments simultaneously, then measure which performs better against a defined KPI. It’s one of the most powerful and cost-effective forms of in-campaign advertising research available to digital marketers.
Conclusion: Conduct Advertising Research with Maya AI
Merren’s Maya AI conducts ad research at scale without any technical difficulties. Create a campaign, assign research objectives and you get a ready made discussion guide to edit. Choose your conversational AI-moderator and watch Maya do the work for you.
You can instant transcripts, summaries and a ready-made report to download.
Maya’s complex capabilities to conduct a complete market research starts with a single click. Explore Merren’s Maya here today.