**Business Book Awards 2024: Highly Commended**Stop guessing and start using market research to build what customers actually want. If you run a small business, it’s easy to waste time and money on ideas that don’t land.Do Penguins Eat Peaches? shows founders, freelancers and small-business owners how to use simple market research tools to understand your audience and build what sells. From customer interviews and surveys to real-world testing, including how emerging AI tools can help you research faster and smarter, this book will help you find clarity and confidence in your next business move.From sending smart surveys and asking quality questions to desk research and the rise of social listening, this book teaches you how to discover what your customers want.Katie Tucker is an inspirational product leader with over twelve years’ experience leading teams and delivering stand-out products and services. In 2020 she founded Product Jungle, helping hundreds of businesses understand customers better. She is also a mentor, speaker and the pen behind the popular newsletter Jungle Juice.
Produktinformation
Utgivningsdatum2023-10-17
Mått140 x 216 x 14 mm
Vikt450 g
FormatInbunden
SpråkEngelska
Antal sidor256
FörlagPractical Inspiration Publishing
ISBN9781788605618
UtmärkelserCommended for Business Book Awards 2024
Katie Tucker is an inspirational product leader with over twelve years’ experience in leading teams and delivering stand-out products and services. In 2020 she founded Product Jungle, helping hundreds of businesses understand customers better. She is also a writer, speaker and the pen behind the popular newsletter Jungle Juice.
List of stretch tasksPrefaceJungle JuiceForewordIntroductionWho is this book for?Democratizing skills for smaller businessesWhat is market research and why do we need it?Good enough researchHow well do you know your customers?Make small your superpowerHow to read this bookWhat you’ll learnWhy me?Chapter 1: I made the front page of The Sunday Times and failed, and seven ways market research will improve your businessYou are not your customerAssumptions kill dreamsThe sunk cost fallacyKnowing your customer is a practiceSeven ways market research will improve your businessStretch task #1Stretch task #2Chapter 2: Ego, excuses and the fear of failure: what’s holding you back?Market research excusesFear of failureEgoStretch task #3Chapter 3: The explorer’s toolkit: curiosity, empathy and courageCuriosityEmpathyCourageChapter 4: I met Alcatraz prisoner 1259, talking to customers and how to just askWhat is a customer interview?When to use customer interviews?Where to find people?Stretch task #4How to askIncentivesGetting over yourselfCreating a discussion guideDuring the interviewAfter the interviewChapter 5: The mother of all theories and there is such a thing as a stupid questionJobs to be done (JTBD) theoryWhat are your customers trying to get done?Five golden rules for asking quality questionsChapter 6: The art and science of sensemakingWhat is sensemaking?Why do we need it?When to do it?What you needHow to do itOutliersChapter 7: Stop sending shitty surveysWhat is a survey?When should you use a survey?Build surveys people fill inWork backwardsMake something happenSample sizes and response ratesWhich platforms to use?Chapter 8: Learn about customers in your pyjamas and how to win at desk researchWhat is desk research?Where to look?Keeping one eye on the competitionGet startedStretch task #5Chapter 9: Can I pick my friend’s nose? And how to be a digital spyBeing a digital spyWhere should you look?Search listening toolsScared of robots?Chapter 10: Stop asking for five-star feedbackWhat is customer feedback?Feedback formatsHow to ask for itHow to take itHow to use itTestimonials and reviewsHow to give itChapter 11: Small business testingQuick and dirty testingWhat’s your skateboard?Testing priceChapter 12: When not to listen to customersReason 1: The customer is not aligned with your business valuesStretch task #6Reason 2: When the rewards are teeny-weenyReason 3: Someone else is doing it (much) betterReason 4: You just don’t want to do itReason 5: You don’t have the bandwidthChapter 13: Three ways to make it happen and staying on the right side of the lawOption 1: The stoneOption 2: The peachOption 3: The penguinStaying on the right side of the lawWhen to hire the prosConclusionDo penguins eat peaches?Question BankThemes to explore with customersUseful linksContributor biosAcknowledgements
If you run a small business, are a freelancer, need to do any sort of marketing or customer research, then you NEED this book! - LinkedIn