Friday’s fresh blood…


I’m spent.

It was more than I expected. I’m drained yet pumped.

As an alumna of SUNY Oswego, I offered to participate in their Education Based Experience program. I have a few ideas for Catosphere and while I’ve got a great network of professional consultants that I could engage, I wanted to try a new approach.

And what better place but on a pulsing, beating, living campus can you find some new ideas — some real fresh views, fresh blood? After thinking about the responsibility of being a dedicated guide to interns, I decided that I would try to tap into the college. I wanted to find passionate, eager, smart partners who could help me plan and execute an idea I’ve been mulling over for some time. (This is no “fetch my coffee” internship/project.) While I was hoping to get a few takers, I was honored that so many expressed interest in the business and the project.

I had the privilege of speaking with Dr. Ian Cuthills’s Market Research class in the Business School. “Speaking” is probably not the right word. I felt like I spewed incoherent tidbits of information that I have gathered over the last seventeen years. How does one describe what market research is in 55 minutes?

Yeah, you are collecting data to make a decision, but it’s so much more than that when it’s done with an eye on the big prize, the big picture.

Each industry has its own history, its own jargon. It takes awhile to feel at home in your own skin when you are introduced to something new. I loved the whole one to one communication you get with real radio — my first love. But slowly over time, I’ve been steeped in the world of data and now it practically oozes from my pores. Each technique I discuss is intricately linked to others in my brain. Primary research, geocoding, segmentation, pattern-recognition, file scoring, thematic mapping… there’s so much to learn.

And that’s not even the half of it. Privacy laws, balancing out the needs of a corporation against the rights of the consumer, benefits of certain methodologies over others, and the increasingly difficult time market researches have getting busy people to stop and give them the answers they seek…. there’s so much to cover.

How will I pass on this information without overloading them? More importantly, how to you awaken a passion in someone for something you feel compelled to do? How can I explain that once you learn the basics, you can make anything you want. You don’t have to stay between the lines?

One day at a time, I guess. It took me a long time to learn this stuff, and yet, sometimes, I am surprised as how excited I am about the prospect of learning something new — I feel like I’m 19, still, with my whole life ahead of me, and a whole world to explore.

New cool tool of the day: Clusty — this is organization (and segmentation) of the web at its best. I remember seeing this site ages ago, and somehow or another I lost the bookmark and forgot about it. But type in anything in the search, and watch how quickly and consistently it groups together like sites/pages and how much more meaningful research becomes when you are using it.

Yawn…. no more for me tonight.

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