
I
love my job...
As an Aussie
Researcher
The real
reasons we
love being
Aussie researchers
are that we
have the opportunity
to work with
a diverse
population who generally
will give
you a go and
will listen
briefly. If
you are fair
dinkum, they’ll
participate
in your survey
and if they
think you’re
a person of
dubious practice,
they will
instruct you
succinctly
with your
next steps.
Standards of professionalism are
very high in Australia, which is
great. The money is good and the
hours reasonable. Also, the fact
that the industry is small enough
to have a real sense of community,
despite intense competition.
Australians differ ethnically, in
education and increasingly in
income as the rich really become
richer and, of course, in class.
There are also some religious or
ethical differences, but crossover
between groups is such that it is
unwise to assume and the smart
marketers research their customers
and their opportunities
thoroughly. Giving work to the
research suppliers and ensuring
more successful products,
launches and companies - some
of which then take on the world...
2 in 3 Aussies can access the
Internet and so can be researched
over the vast distances with speed,
succinctness and economy.
There is also a benefit when
working with UK or European
companies - an Aussie can finish
the day with a help request and
have an answering email waiting
for him the next morning - with
some new research programs, that
is a major advantage!
Some more of the key benefits
and excitements are:
- clients generally respond and
engage in the research process.
They use the findings to
develop their marketing
responses, so you have a
greater involvement in strategy
development than you would in
the UK.
- it’s a much more laid back
culture. People are more direct
with each other. They say what’s
on their mind and there is less
political game playing.
- consumers are still pretty keen
to tell their stories to
researchers - people like doing
groups as the novelty hasn’t
worn off (like you may find in
the UK). There is not so much
cynicism over here about
marketing and research.
- we get to go to sunny places to
do groups. Not Manchester!
On the downside, while we speak
more or less the same language
the cultures are really different
and the risk is to believe what
works in Wolverhampton will work
in Wollongong. New approaches
need to be tested and adapted to
Australian culture, Australian
behaviour and personal
presentation - as we noted above,
if you are the genuine 2 bob,
you’ll get a hearing and if not,
you’ll be told where to put it.
I
hate my job...
As an Aussie
Researcher
Ah the carefree life of an
Australian MR professional.
Starting when dawn is just
breaking over the hilly horizon,
serenaded by the chirping of
the crickets as you leave
several hours after dusk. If you
angle your blinds just so, an
Aussie researcher can stare at
the screen all day and night
and never be distracted by the
sun!
But there’s also surf - I know
because I can see the waves
crash on Bondi Beach from
the window of the
plane as it circles
Sydney airport
again - a white line
on the horizon. Then I
get to see it again, as the plane
circles again, and again, and I start
to worry about the 10am client
meeting, cursing the decision to
fly in on the 7am Virgin flight
rather than the cautious 6am with
its requisite 4am rising! While
Sydney is only an hour from
civilisation, the delicate ears of the
airport neighbourhood’s residents
keep it in curfew from dark till
dawn, while the wise burghers of
Melbourne let aircraft land day
and night.
As well as ‘planes, I spend a
lot of time in cabs. More’s
the pity. Every Aussie
taxi driver knows
exactly the
community mood,
their community attitudes and
why you are so out of touch with
community sentiment (and you
think you’re a researcher!) when
you think you can get away
offering an insignificant coin as a
tip at the end of the trip!
Cabbies aside, the level of people
you work with in client companies
can be very varied. Some have a
limited knowledge of marketing
which can make the job a
challenge. There are fewer
fieldwork options than the UK
which means a limited methodological
choice. And there are so
many Brits here - you can end
up working with nothing else -
particularly bad at the moment.
Many of them qual refugees from
London who think that they are
entering a provincial backwater
populated by people without so
much as a fraction of their expertise.
Then, the Aussie researchers love
the balmy breezes that blow just as
you step into the client’s building to
remind you that with just a little
more work at school, you too could
have been a doctor and been
walking off the golf course to sit in
the bar basking in 70 degrees F mild
sun...
And the last thing I hate about
being an Aussie researcher? Jonny
Wilkinson.
[Ed’s note: that’s not exactly a
‘thing about being an Aussie
researcher’ is it? But we’ll let it go,
as it must be very galling for you].
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