honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, September 14, 2002

Vegas becoming market research mecca

By Desiree Hunter
Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — Linda Pulido visited Las Vegas last month never expecting she'd help decide who'd be the next anchor on a morning television news show.

Researcher Maria Marino waits for passers-by at CBS' Television City facility in Las Vegas, where market researchers gather data on consumer views on products.

Associated Press

But in true Siskel and Ebert style, Pulido gave her opinion about who was hot and who was not during a screening at CBS' Television City facility at the MGM Grand hotel-casino.

"I thought it was pretty cool. I'd do it again," said the Laredo, Texas, resident. "It makes you feel like maybe your little opinion might mean something and might count to some big corporation somewhere."

With an estimated 36 million tourists a year, Las Vegas is becoming the city of choice for market researchers to gather consumer opinions on products from pizza to diapers, and on media offerings from television shows to advertising commercials.

"That's what drives this industry," said Lee Medick, president and owner of MRCGroup Research Institute. "Companies make million-dollar decisions based on what people think."

Finding out what people are thinking is a booming industry that generates an estimated $6.1 billion annually. Dollars spent on market research have grown steadily since 1991 except for dips in 1996 and 2001, said Larry Gold, editor and publisher of Inside Research, a Chicago-based industry newsletter.

When Medick and her husband, Jim, who is MRCGroup's chief executive officer and managing director, moved their 10-year-old company to Las Vegas in 1996, others in the industry were shocked, Jim Medick said.

But the Medicks found only a few similar companies in Las Vegas, and a virtually untapped source of consumer opinion.

Las Vegas as a haven for market research makes sense, said Nancy Costopulos of the Chicago-based American Marketing Association.

"People go to Las Vegas for a reason, and that's usually to be entertained," she said. "So by testing people who are there seeking entertainment, you have a steady stream of consumers who are right for your test market."

With its fast-growing population in addition to tourists from across the nation, Las Vegas also brings an instant cross-section of the country to one location.

Analysts say it also provides a fresh test market in which consumers haven't been surveyed as much as those in Los Angeles or New York.

Ten years ago, CBS set up a temporary test site in Las Vegas to supplement its other test cities and found a perfect match. Last year the network opened Television City, a permanent site in the MGM Grand in which consumer critics like Pulido can screen new television shows and movies and participate in focus groups.

The diversity found in Las Vegas was a big draw, said David Poltrack, CBS executive vice president of research and programming.

"It's something you can't do anywhere else but Vegas because of all the demographics," he said. "The MGM Grand is particularly good in that regard because its demographics are right in the middle of the spectrum."

In addition to coupons for 10 percent off CBS merchandise and other freebies, the experience gives viewers an opportunity to perhaps change television programming.

That attracted Paul Rudzinski of Austin, Texas, who like most TV viewers, has a few gripes about what's on the tube.

"If it's about cops, lawyers or doctors, I'm going to be automatically against it," Rudzinski said before going into a screening at Television City. "That's all there is on TV today."

Laugh tracks — when laughter is dubbed in — get a thumbs down from him, too.

NBC is looking to join the Las Vegas action and is negotiating with MRCGroup to open a site similar to Television City at another hotel on the Las Vegas Strip.

Consumers' conclusions about products, services and shows can be the deciding factor in whether companies pursue their projects or try something else.