
Market research agencies are increasingly being reduced to performing validation exercises rather than providing strategic direction, as companies commission studies only after critical business decisions have already been made, according to industry analysis.
The practice of finalising target audiences, product positioning, and success metrics before engaging external researchers creates a closed system where agencies can measure and refine within predetermined boundaries but cannot question whether the underlying assumptions are sound.
Brandspur Business News Desk understands that the trend is contributing to persistently high product failure rates, with industry estimates suggesting that between 70 and 90 per cent of new consumer packaged goods launches fail within their first year.
Research from the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute indicates that growth comes from penetration rather than persuasion, with light buyers mattering more than loyalists in driving scale, yet many briefs remain anchored to heavy users and assumptions of brand switching.
When research data surfaces a different reality, it often conflicts with how businesses believe growth should work, creating tension between diagnostic findings and internal alignment that has already been built around the original direction.
According to Bain & Company, fewer than one in 10 companies systematically revisit core assumptions once a strategic direction has been agreed internally, with alignment hardening into inertia as the cost of reopening questions is deemed too immediate.
The distinction between a research agency functioning as a provider versus a partner becomes critical when findings challenge the brief, with partners expected to influence direction while providers deliver insight within fixed constraints.
Analysts note that once a concept moves into validation, the range of acceptable answers narrows quickly, with methods selected to confirm rather than challenge, and audiences defined to fit propositions rather than test limits.
The pattern is particularly evident when products test well in concept but fail under real purchase conditions, with interest softening under price pressure and the strongest signals coming from lighter category users rather than core buyers.
NielsenIQ research consistently shows that products can achieve strong top-box scores while failing to generate repeat purchase, highlighting the gap between being liked and being chosen in categories built on habit rather than curiosity.
Industry observers argue that for research to genuinely reduce risk, it must enter the process at the point where audience, proposition, and success criteria remain in play, testing demand before positioning, behaviour before messaging, and substitution before stated intent.
Without that structural shift, research will continue to produce insight without impact, documenting decisions rather than shaping them, and the distinction between provider and partner will remain a matter of language rather than behaviour.





