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TOPICS
…types of market research
…process of market research
…
WHAT?
Gathering information on (for example)...
…finding new markets
…evaluating public opinion
…gaining insight into customers’ decisions
TEXTBOOK DEF.
“The systematic and objective process of
generating information for aid in making
marketing decisions”
RESEARCH ON AGATHA CHRISTIE
•HarperCollins found sales of Agatha Christie novels declining
in 1985
•Quantitative & qualitative research commissioned
•Readers liked “niceness” of the crimes,
but covers were gruesome and bloody
•Result: new cover designs
commissioned and in the first year
sales rose 40%!!
RESEARCH AT N.BROWN
• High rate of returns in 1993
• Manchester University paid
£100k to research women’s sizes
• 50,000 measurements taken
• Women have “thicker
waists, lower busts and conical
figures”
• Shape of clothes was changed
• Returns down to 27% (vs industry
average of 35%)
SPENDING ON MARKET RESEARCH BY SECTOR
IN THE UK
44%
21%
13%
9%
4%
4% 5%
Manufacturing
Companies
Service companies
Retailers and
wholesalers
Ad. agencies
Public sector
Non-ad. research
agencies
Other
TOP 10 MARKET RESEARCH
ACTIVITIES
Market Measurement 18%
New Product development/concept testing 14%
Ad or brand awareness monitoring/tracking 13%
Customer Satisfaction (inc Mystery Shopping) 10%
Usage and Attitude Studies 7%
Media Research & evaluation 6%
Advertising developing and pre-testing 5%
Social Surveys for central/local government 4%
Brand/corporate reputation 4%
Omnibus Studies 3%
Source: BMRA
MARKET RESEARCH BUDGETS
1 - 2% of company sales = total budget
of this:
50% - 80%
in-house
20% - 50%
externally
85% of Fortune 500
companies have
internal departments
1. Syndicated - service
research firms
2. Custom research firms
3. Specialty research firms
WHY CONDUCT MARKET RESEARCH
IN NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT?
...The product must appeal to the customer
(however widely defined)
...Timely market research can help you mould
the product to the consumer‟s need/wants
...Market research tend to point out successes
and failures before products are launched “for
real”
...As a result, it can save you money and time
WARNING!
Market Research is about understanding consumer reactions
to the product. Marketing may understand the consumer best
but R&D may well (early on) understand the product best
Don‟t simply
hand M.R.
over to
marketing!
TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH
By Source
- Primary
- Secondary
By Objectives
- Exploratory
- Descriptive
- Causal
(or experimental)
By Methodology
- Qualitative
- Quantitative
TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH: BY SOURCE
Primary Collection of data specifically for the
problem or project in hand
Secondary Based on data previously collected for
purposes other than the research in hand
(e.g. Published articles, government stats)
TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH: BY
METHODOLOGY
Qualitative Quantitative
Type of Question Probing Simple
Sample Size Small Large
Information per respondent High Low(ish)
Questioner‟s skill High Low(ish)
Analyst‟s skill High High
Type of analysis Subjective, Objective,
Interpretative Statistical
Ability to replicate Low High
Areas probed Attitudes Choices
Feelings Frequency
Motivations Demographics
BENEFITS OF QUALITATIVE MARKET RESEARCH
VS QUANTITATIVE
Benefit Comment/Example
Cheaper
Probes in-depth motivations
and feelings
Often useful precursor to
quantitative research
Smaller sample size
Allows managers to observe (through one
way mirror) „real‟ consumer reaction to
the issue - e.g. comments and
associations (e.g. Levis) regarding a new
product fresh from the labs
Gives the research department a low
cost and timely sense of which issues
to probe in quantitative research
MARKET RESEARCH
• Quantitative and Qualitative Information:
• Quantitative – based on numbers – 56% of 18
year olds drink alcohol at least four times a
week - doesn’t tell you why, when, how
• Qualitative – more detail – tells you
why, when and how!
TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH: BY OBJECTIVE
• Exploratory Preliminary data needed to develop an idea
further. Eg outline concepts, gather insights,
formulate hypotheses
• Descriptive Describe an element of an ideas precisely. Eg
who is the target market, how large is it, how
will it develop
• Causal Test a cause and effect relationship, e.g. price
elasticity. Done through experiment
MARKET RESEARCH : PROCESS
1. Define the Problem
2. Develop an Approach to the Problem
Type of Study? Exploratory, Descriptive, Causal?
Mgmt & Research Questions, Hypotheses
3. Formulate a Research Design
Methodology
Questionnaire Design
4. Fieldwork
5. Prepare & Analyze the Data
6. Prepare & Present the Report
THE MARKET RESEARCH PROCESS
1. Defining the
problem and
objectives
2. Developing
the research
plan
3. Collecting the
information
4. Analysing the
information
5. Presenting the
findings
Steps
Comments
Distinguish between
the research type
needed e.g.
- exploratory
- descriptive
- causal
Decide on
- budget
- data sources
- research
approaches
- research
instruments
- sampling plan
- contact methods
Information is
collected
according to the
plan (N.B. it is
often done by
external firms)
Statistical
manipulation of the
data collected (e.g.
regression) or
subjective analysis
of focus groups
Overall conclusions
to be presented
rather than
overwhelming
statistical
methodologies
If a problem is
vaguely
defined, the
results can have
little bearing on
the key issues
The plan needs to
be decided
upfront but
flexible enough to
incorporate
changes/
iterations
This phase is the
most costly and
the most liable to
error
Significant
difference in type
of analysis
according to
whether market
research is
quantitative or
qualitative
Can take various forms:
- oral presentation
- written conclusions
supported by analysis
- data tables
POTENTIAL PROBLEMS WITH MARKET
RESEARCH
1. When and how not to do it
2. Problems with research buyers vs suppliers
3. Frequent technical pitfalls
4. Problems with traditional market research
WHEN AND HOW NOT TO CONDUCT MARKET
RESEARCH
Occasion Comments/Example
Lack of resources
Research results not
actionable
Closed mindset
Late timing re:
process
Poor timing re:
marketplace
Vague objectives
Cost outweighs
benefit
If quantitative research is needed, it is not worth doing
unless a statistically significant sample can be used
Where psychographic data (for example) is used which
won‟t help the company form firm actions
When research is used only as a rubber stamp of a
preconceived idea
When research results come too late to influence
the decision
If a product is in the „decline‟ phase (e.g. records) there‟s
little point in researching new product varieties
Market research cannot be helpful unless it is
probing a particular issue
The expected value of the information should outweigh the
cost of gathering the data
ISSUES TO CONSIDER IN
QUESTIONNAIRE DESIGN
• Sensitivity of question
• Bias in formulation
• Cultural issues
• Repetition
• Respondent motivation
• Questioner training
• Pre-testing
• Comprehensiveness
• Realism
• Ease of completion
SAMPLE AIRLINE QUESTIONNAIRE
1. What is your total income to the nearest hundred pounds?
2. Are you an occasional or frequent flyer?
3. Do you like this airline?
4. How many airline ads did you see last spring compared to
this spring?
5. What are the most salient and determinant attributes in
your evaluation of airlines?
6. Do you think it is right for the government to tax air tickets
and deprive a lot of people of the chance to fly?
DODGY QUESTIONS: AIRLINE EXAMPLE
Questions Objections
1. What is your total income to
the nearest hundred pounds?
2. Are you an occasional or
frequent flyer?
3. Do you like this airline?
- the respondent probably doesn‟t know
the answer with this degree of accuracy
- the firm doesn‟t need to know the
answer with this degree of accuracy
- people are not keen to reveal income
that accurately
- a questionnaire should never begin
with such a personal question
- how do you define occasional versus
frequent: everyone will define it
differently
- „like‟ is a relative term
- will people answer it honestly when
phrased so blatantly?
DODGY QUESTIONS: AIRLINE EXAMPLE - CONT’D
Questions Objections
4. How many airline ads did you
see last spring compared to this
spring?
5. What are the most salient and
determinant attributes in your
evaluation of airlines?
6. Do you think it is right for the
government to tax air tickets and
deprive a lot of people of the
chance to fly?
- Who can remember?
- What do you call „spring‟?
- What is an ad? Is it
TV, magazine, poster or what?
- What‟s meant by „salient‟ and
„determinant‟?
- This sounds pompous and
arrogant even if people do
understand
- All objectivity is out of the window
- Why ask if you‟ve already made
your mind up of the effects?
PROBLEMS WITH TRADITIONAL MARKET RESEARCH
1. Market research has allowed prominent product
failures, and wrong predictions
2. Markets are increasingly becoming micro-segmented
(e.g. sports shoes aimed at affluent fashion conscious
women specifically for aerobics), so mass market
research becomes correspondingly irrelevant
3. It is helpful for improvements, but less so for radical
innovations
4. For more accurate targeting it may be advantageous to
work with leading customers within the target group
CAREFUL HOW YOU ASK THE
QUESTION
Q. Do you approve of smoking whilst
praying?
A: No
Q. Do you approve of praying whilst
smoking?
A:Yes 
COCA COLA FAILURE: CHRONOLOGY
May 1985 Old Coke withdrawn
New Coke introduced
July 1985 Old Coke reintroduced as Coke Classic
COCA COLA FAILURE: BACKGROUND AND
RESEARCH
- Early 80s, share losses to Pepsi
- New Product research carried out
• $4m cost
• 200,000 taste tests
• 60% of consumers preferred it in blind tests
- BUT research was narrowly defined
• considered taste not emotions
• dropping Old Coke not mentioned
U.S. REACTION TO OLD COKE’S RETURN
Senator David Prior of Arkansas on the
Senate Floor:
“A very meaningful moment in the history of
America, this shows that some national
institutions cannot be changed”
ABC interrupted its soap opera, General
Hospital on Wednesday afternoon to break
the news
Coca Cola‟s share price rose to its highest
level in 12 years
Political
Media
Economic
APPLIED RESEARCH ?
Should McDonalds add Italian pasta dinners to its
menu?
…Marketing research told McDonald’s it should not
• Conducted when a decision must be made
about a specific real-life problem
APPLIED RESEARCH
• Should Procter & Gamble add a high-priced
home teeth bleaching kit to its product
line?
–Research showed Crest Whitestrips would sell
well at a retail price of $44
APPLIED RESEARCH
• Price: Safeway does a competitive pricing analysis
• Distribution: Caterpillar Tractor Co. investigates dealer
service program.
• Product: Oreo conducts taste test, Oreo cookie vs. Chips
Ahoy
• Promotion: How many consumers recall the “Life Tastes
Good. Coca Cola!” slogan?
PLAN AND IMPLEMENT
A MARKETING MIX
DETERMINING WHEN TO CONDUCT
MARKETING RESEARCH
•Time constraints
• Availability of data
•Nature of the decision
•Benefits versus costs
Is sufficient
time
available?
Information
already on
hand
inadequate?
Is the
decision of
strategic
or tactical
importance?
Does the
information
value
exceed the
research cost?
Conduct
Marketing
Research
Do Not Conduct Marketing Research
Time Constraints Availability of Data Nature of the Decision Benefits vs. Costs
Yes YesYesYes
No No No No
DETERMINING WHEN TO CONDUCT
MARKETING RESEARCH
Value
Decreased uncertainty
Increased likelihood of
correct decision
Improved marketing
performance and resulting
higher profits
Costs
Research expenditures
Delay of marketing
decision and possible
disclosure of information to
rivals
Possible erroneous
research results
POTENTIAL VALUE OF A MARKETING RESEARCH
EFFORT SHOULD EXCEED ITS ESTIMATED COSTS
MARKET RESEARCH
• Advantages of Market Research
– Helps focus attention on objectives
– Aids forecasting, planning and strategic
development
– May help to reduce risk of new product
development
– Communicates image, vision, etc.
– Globalisation makes market information valuable
(HSBC adverts!!)
MARKET RESEARCH
• Disadvantages of Market Research
– Information only as good
as the methodology used
– Can be inaccurate or unreliable
– Results may not be what the business wants to hear!
– May stifle initiative and ‘gut feeling’
– Always a problem that we may never know enough to be
sure!
MARKET RESEARCH: SUMMARY
...Market Research is usually an integral part
of understanding innovations - you ignore it
at your peril....
...But it must be timely, objective and
relevant, otherwise it is worse than useless,
leading you down the wrong path
...So, be involved as far as you can be,
especially up front and don‟t let the jargon
deter you!
• Marketing Research is a tool
• It assists marketing managers in
their decision making
• IT IS NOT A REPLACEMENT FOR
MANAGERIAL JUDGEMENT!!
ALWAYS REMEMBER
La Fin

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Market Research

  • 1.
  • 2. TOPICS …types of market research …process of market research …
  • 3. WHAT? Gathering information on (for example)... …finding new markets …evaluating public opinion …gaining insight into customers’ decisions
  • 4. TEXTBOOK DEF. “The systematic and objective process of generating information for aid in making marketing decisions”
  • 5. RESEARCH ON AGATHA CHRISTIE •HarperCollins found sales of Agatha Christie novels declining in 1985 •Quantitative & qualitative research commissioned •Readers liked “niceness” of the crimes, but covers were gruesome and bloody •Result: new cover designs commissioned and in the first year sales rose 40%!!
  • 6. RESEARCH AT N.BROWN • High rate of returns in 1993 • Manchester University paid £100k to research women’s sizes • 50,000 measurements taken • Women have “thicker waists, lower busts and conical figures” • Shape of clothes was changed • Returns down to 27% (vs industry average of 35%)
  • 7. SPENDING ON MARKET RESEARCH BY SECTOR IN THE UK 44% 21% 13% 9% 4% 4% 5% Manufacturing Companies Service companies Retailers and wholesalers Ad. agencies Public sector Non-ad. research agencies Other
  • 8. TOP 10 MARKET RESEARCH ACTIVITIES Market Measurement 18% New Product development/concept testing 14% Ad or brand awareness monitoring/tracking 13% Customer Satisfaction (inc Mystery Shopping) 10% Usage and Attitude Studies 7% Media Research & evaluation 6% Advertising developing and pre-testing 5% Social Surveys for central/local government 4% Brand/corporate reputation 4% Omnibus Studies 3% Source: BMRA
  • 9. MARKET RESEARCH BUDGETS 1 - 2% of company sales = total budget of this: 50% - 80% in-house 20% - 50% externally 85% of Fortune 500 companies have internal departments 1. Syndicated - service research firms 2. Custom research firms 3. Specialty research firms
  • 10. WHY CONDUCT MARKET RESEARCH IN NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT? ...The product must appeal to the customer (however widely defined) ...Timely market research can help you mould the product to the consumer‟s need/wants ...Market research tend to point out successes and failures before products are launched “for real” ...As a result, it can save you money and time
  • 11. WARNING! Market Research is about understanding consumer reactions to the product. Marketing may understand the consumer best but R&D may well (early on) understand the product best Don‟t simply hand M.R. over to marketing!
  • 12. TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH By Source - Primary - Secondary By Objectives - Exploratory - Descriptive - Causal (or experimental) By Methodology - Qualitative - Quantitative
  • 13. TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH: BY SOURCE Primary Collection of data specifically for the problem or project in hand Secondary Based on data previously collected for purposes other than the research in hand (e.g. Published articles, government stats)
  • 14. TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH: BY METHODOLOGY Qualitative Quantitative Type of Question Probing Simple Sample Size Small Large Information per respondent High Low(ish) Questioner‟s skill High Low(ish) Analyst‟s skill High High Type of analysis Subjective, Objective, Interpretative Statistical Ability to replicate Low High Areas probed Attitudes Choices Feelings Frequency Motivations Demographics
  • 15. BENEFITS OF QUALITATIVE MARKET RESEARCH VS QUANTITATIVE Benefit Comment/Example Cheaper Probes in-depth motivations and feelings Often useful precursor to quantitative research Smaller sample size Allows managers to observe (through one way mirror) „real‟ consumer reaction to the issue - e.g. comments and associations (e.g. Levis) regarding a new product fresh from the labs Gives the research department a low cost and timely sense of which issues to probe in quantitative research
  • 16. MARKET RESEARCH • Quantitative and Qualitative Information: • Quantitative – based on numbers – 56% of 18 year olds drink alcohol at least four times a week - doesn’t tell you why, when, how • Qualitative – more detail – tells you why, when and how!
  • 17. TYPES OF MARKET RESEARCH: BY OBJECTIVE • Exploratory Preliminary data needed to develop an idea further. Eg outline concepts, gather insights, formulate hypotheses • Descriptive Describe an element of an ideas precisely. Eg who is the target market, how large is it, how will it develop • Causal Test a cause and effect relationship, e.g. price elasticity. Done through experiment
  • 18. MARKET RESEARCH : PROCESS 1. Define the Problem 2. Develop an Approach to the Problem Type of Study? Exploratory, Descriptive, Causal? Mgmt & Research Questions, Hypotheses 3. Formulate a Research Design Methodology Questionnaire Design 4. Fieldwork 5. Prepare & Analyze the Data 6. Prepare & Present the Report
  • 19. THE MARKET RESEARCH PROCESS 1. Defining the problem and objectives 2. Developing the research plan 3. Collecting the information 4. Analysing the information 5. Presenting the findings Steps Comments Distinguish between the research type needed e.g. - exploratory - descriptive - causal Decide on - budget - data sources - research approaches - research instruments - sampling plan - contact methods Information is collected according to the plan (N.B. it is often done by external firms) Statistical manipulation of the data collected (e.g. regression) or subjective analysis of focus groups Overall conclusions to be presented rather than overwhelming statistical methodologies If a problem is vaguely defined, the results can have little bearing on the key issues The plan needs to be decided upfront but flexible enough to incorporate changes/ iterations This phase is the most costly and the most liable to error Significant difference in type of analysis according to whether market research is quantitative or qualitative Can take various forms: - oral presentation - written conclusions supported by analysis - data tables
  • 20. POTENTIAL PROBLEMS WITH MARKET RESEARCH 1. When and how not to do it 2. Problems with research buyers vs suppliers 3. Frequent technical pitfalls 4. Problems with traditional market research
  • 21. WHEN AND HOW NOT TO CONDUCT MARKET RESEARCH Occasion Comments/Example Lack of resources Research results not actionable Closed mindset Late timing re: process Poor timing re: marketplace Vague objectives Cost outweighs benefit If quantitative research is needed, it is not worth doing unless a statistically significant sample can be used Where psychographic data (for example) is used which won‟t help the company form firm actions When research is used only as a rubber stamp of a preconceived idea When research results come too late to influence the decision If a product is in the „decline‟ phase (e.g. records) there‟s little point in researching new product varieties Market research cannot be helpful unless it is probing a particular issue The expected value of the information should outweigh the cost of gathering the data
  • 22. ISSUES TO CONSIDER IN QUESTIONNAIRE DESIGN • Sensitivity of question • Bias in formulation • Cultural issues • Repetition • Respondent motivation • Questioner training • Pre-testing • Comprehensiveness • Realism • Ease of completion
  • 23. SAMPLE AIRLINE QUESTIONNAIRE 1. What is your total income to the nearest hundred pounds? 2. Are you an occasional or frequent flyer? 3. Do you like this airline? 4. How many airline ads did you see last spring compared to this spring? 5. What are the most salient and determinant attributes in your evaluation of airlines? 6. Do you think it is right for the government to tax air tickets and deprive a lot of people of the chance to fly?
  • 24. DODGY QUESTIONS: AIRLINE EXAMPLE Questions Objections 1. What is your total income to the nearest hundred pounds? 2. Are you an occasional or frequent flyer? 3. Do you like this airline? - the respondent probably doesn‟t know the answer with this degree of accuracy - the firm doesn‟t need to know the answer with this degree of accuracy - people are not keen to reveal income that accurately - a questionnaire should never begin with such a personal question - how do you define occasional versus frequent: everyone will define it differently - „like‟ is a relative term - will people answer it honestly when phrased so blatantly?
  • 25. DODGY QUESTIONS: AIRLINE EXAMPLE - CONT’D Questions Objections 4. How many airline ads did you see last spring compared to this spring? 5. What are the most salient and determinant attributes in your evaluation of airlines? 6. Do you think it is right for the government to tax air tickets and deprive a lot of people of the chance to fly? - Who can remember? - What do you call „spring‟? - What is an ad? Is it TV, magazine, poster or what? - What‟s meant by „salient‟ and „determinant‟? - This sounds pompous and arrogant even if people do understand - All objectivity is out of the window - Why ask if you‟ve already made your mind up of the effects?
  • 26. PROBLEMS WITH TRADITIONAL MARKET RESEARCH 1. Market research has allowed prominent product failures, and wrong predictions 2. Markets are increasingly becoming micro-segmented (e.g. sports shoes aimed at affluent fashion conscious women specifically for aerobics), so mass market research becomes correspondingly irrelevant 3. It is helpful for improvements, but less so for radical innovations 4. For more accurate targeting it may be advantageous to work with leading customers within the target group
  • 27. CAREFUL HOW YOU ASK THE QUESTION Q. Do you approve of smoking whilst praying? A: No Q. Do you approve of praying whilst smoking? A:Yes 
  • 28. COCA COLA FAILURE: CHRONOLOGY May 1985 Old Coke withdrawn New Coke introduced July 1985 Old Coke reintroduced as Coke Classic
  • 29. COCA COLA FAILURE: BACKGROUND AND RESEARCH - Early 80s, share losses to Pepsi - New Product research carried out • $4m cost • 200,000 taste tests • 60% of consumers preferred it in blind tests - BUT research was narrowly defined • considered taste not emotions • dropping Old Coke not mentioned
  • 30. U.S. REACTION TO OLD COKE’S RETURN Senator David Prior of Arkansas on the Senate Floor: “A very meaningful moment in the history of America, this shows that some national institutions cannot be changed” ABC interrupted its soap opera, General Hospital on Wednesday afternoon to break the news Coca Cola‟s share price rose to its highest level in 12 years Political Media Economic
  • 31. APPLIED RESEARCH ? Should McDonalds add Italian pasta dinners to its menu? …Marketing research told McDonald’s it should not
  • 32. • Conducted when a decision must be made about a specific real-life problem APPLIED RESEARCH
  • 33. • Should Procter & Gamble add a high-priced home teeth bleaching kit to its product line? –Research showed Crest Whitestrips would sell well at a retail price of $44 APPLIED RESEARCH
  • 34. • Price: Safeway does a competitive pricing analysis • Distribution: Caterpillar Tractor Co. investigates dealer service program. • Product: Oreo conducts taste test, Oreo cookie vs. Chips Ahoy • Promotion: How many consumers recall the “Life Tastes Good. Coca Cola!” slogan? PLAN AND IMPLEMENT A MARKETING MIX
  • 35. DETERMINING WHEN TO CONDUCT MARKETING RESEARCH •Time constraints • Availability of data •Nature of the decision •Benefits versus costs
  • 36. Is sufficient time available? Information already on hand inadequate? Is the decision of strategic or tactical importance? Does the information value exceed the research cost? Conduct Marketing Research Do Not Conduct Marketing Research Time Constraints Availability of Data Nature of the Decision Benefits vs. Costs Yes YesYesYes No No No No DETERMINING WHEN TO CONDUCT MARKETING RESEARCH
  • 37. Value Decreased uncertainty Increased likelihood of correct decision Improved marketing performance and resulting higher profits Costs Research expenditures Delay of marketing decision and possible disclosure of information to rivals Possible erroneous research results POTENTIAL VALUE OF A MARKETING RESEARCH EFFORT SHOULD EXCEED ITS ESTIMATED COSTS
  • 38. MARKET RESEARCH • Advantages of Market Research – Helps focus attention on objectives – Aids forecasting, planning and strategic development – May help to reduce risk of new product development – Communicates image, vision, etc. – Globalisation makes market information valuable (HSBC adverts!!)
  • 39. MARKET RESEARCH • Disadvantages of Market Research – Information only as good as the methodology used – Can be inaccurate or unreliable – Results may not be what the business wants to hear! – May stifle initiative and ‘gut feeling’ – Always a problem that we may never know enough to be sure!
  • 40. MARKET RESEARCH: SUMMARY ...Market Research is usually an integral part of understanding innovations - you ignore it at your peril.... ...But it must be timely, objective and relevant, otherwise it is worse than useless, leading you down the wrong path ...So, be involved as far as you can be, especially up front and don‟t let the jargon deter you!
  • 41. • Marketing Research is a tool • It assists marketing managers in their decision making • IT IS NOT A REPLACEMENT FOR MANAGERIAL JUDGEMENT!! ALWAYS REMEMBER