OUR EXPERTISE
B2B Market Research
At Bixa, our B2B market research uncovers how real business decisions get made. Whether we’re interviewing buyers, running B2B surveys, or mapping complex buying journeys, we understand how companies evaluate solutions, compare providers, and ultimately choose who to work with—so you can grow with confidence.
Most B2B market research agencies stop at high-level insights. We go further—translating research into clear, actionable decisions. With Bixa, you get:
• A clear view of how B2B buyers evaluate products and services—and what truly drives selection
• Insight into the full buying group, including stakeholders across roles and levels
• Decision-ready recommendations for positioning, messaging, and go-to-market strategy
• A deeper understanding of your competitive landscape and where you truly stand out
• Real buyer language you can use across sales, marketing, and product
Decision-ready insights for complex buying cycles
Schedule a research strategy call
We talk through your goals and recommend an approach. No sales pitch. Just a smart, honest conversation with a senior researcher.
We don’t study customers—we study decisions. Both buyers’ decisions (how they choose what to buy and who to buy it from)… and your strategic decisions (about your products, positioning, marketing, pricing, and more). Every one of our B2B research projects is custom-designed to uncover how your specific buyers evaluate options, what influences their choices, and what ultimately drives their decision to buy from you (or not!). Our findings are centered around how you’ll use the data, and are uncovered in specific ways to help you make smarter decisions about your products and marketing.
What sets Bixa apart from other B2B market research agencies? We don’t study customers—we study decisions
| Most Companies' Research | Bixa's B2B Research |
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✕Focuses on a Single Role or Job Title
Many studies speak to just one audience, and miss how purchasing decisions are actually made across a larger buying group with mulitple buyers and stakeholders across different departments.
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✓Collects Data from the Complete B2B Buying Group
Bixa recruits buyers, users, influencers, budget owners, and decision-makers to collect holistic data on how B2B purchasing decisions happen in the real world.
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✕Relies on Stated Preferences
Buyers are often asked what matters to them, even though what people say and what drives actual decisions are often different.
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✓Uncovers Real Decision Drivers
We uncover the tradeoffs, priorities, risks, and motivations that truly influence purchasing decisions, through a combination of advanced qualitative and quantitative methods.
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✕Uses Templated Questions & Generic Rating Scales
When every feature is rated "important," it becomes difficult to determine what actually drives behavior.
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✓Uses Advanced Methods Like MaxDiff & Conjoint for
We force prioritization and model real-world decision making to identify what matters most.
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✕Treat Buyers as One Audience
Broad averages often hide important differences between customer groups.
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✓Segments Buyers Based on How They Think
We identify and call out data by distinct audience segments based on motivations, behaviors, needs, and decision-making styles, as well as important demographic or geographic sub-groups.
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✕Stops at High-level Themes
Research often ends with observations, but little guidance on why it matters or what the business should do next.
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✓Delivers Decision-Ready Recommendations
Every finding is tied to a business decision, ensuring that insights surface opportunities and clearly connect to actionable next steps.
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✕Studies Touchpoints in Isolation
Individual interactions are evaluated, but the larger customer journey often remains unclear.
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✓Maps the Complete Buyer Journey
Through journey mapping, our experienced researchers connect how buyers discover, evaluate, compare, and choose solutions to surface moments of truth and key opportunities.
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What that means for your business
Better B2B research means better decisions. When B2B market research reflects how decisions are made, the output changes. You get clearer positioning, stronger messaging, better alignment across teams, and a more effective path to winning business—not just a report that confirms what you already suspected.
Ready to work with a B2B market research agency that goes further? Let's talk.
Bixa’s B2B market research services
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Decision research - why buyers say yes (or no)
Most B2B purchases don’t come down to features or price alone.
By the time a B2B buyer signs a contract, they’ve often evaluated multiple options, consulted colleagues, weighed risks, navigated internal politics, secured budget approval, and considered what happens if they make the wrong decision… the list goes on. In many cases, several stakeholders influence the outcome. And in these (fairly common) cases, each stakeholder or department has their own priorities and concerns.
What’s a company to do, you ask? Well, it requires looking beyond surface-level feedback.
At Bixa, we conduct in-depth interviews with buyers, decision-makers, influencers, and stakeholders to uncover what actually drives purchasing decisions. We explore how buyers evaluate vendors, what criteria matter most, what concerns create hesitation, what alternatives are being considered, and what ultimately creates confidence in a purchase.
We also examine the emotional side of decision-making. While B2B purchases are often viewed as rational, buyers are still people. Concerns about risk, credibility, career impact, implementation challenges, and organizational change frequently influence decisions just as much as product capabilities.
Through buyer decision research, we help companies answer questions such as:
Why do customers choose us over competitors?
Why are opportunities stalling or being lost?
What factors build trust during the evaluation process?
Which objections are most difficult to overcome?
What motivates buyers to take action?
The result is a deeper understanding of what drives customer decisions, allowing marketing, sales, product, and leadership teams to make smarter decisions based on how buyers actually think—not how we assume they think.
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Journey mapping - how your audience actually buys
Understanding what buyers choose is only part of the picture—you also need to understand how they get there. What triggered their search journey? Which information sources shaped their perception? What concerns, frustrations, or internal pressures influenced the final decision?
Most B2B purchases unfold over weeks, months, or even years. Buyers rarely move through a perfectly linear process. They research independently, seek recommendations from peers, consume content, consult internal stakeholders, compare vendors, pause projects, revisit priorities, and gather information from multiple sources before making a final decision.
Journey mapping in a B2B process helps companies understand what that complex process actually looks like.
At Bixa, we map the B2B buyer journey from initial awareness through final decision (purchase or not). We tease out how real purchasing decisions unfold across the full customer journey — from initial awareness and problem recognition to vendor evaluation, internal buy-in, and final selection — identifying the touchpoints, information sources, stakeholders, questions, frustrations, uncertainties, and decision points that shape the buying experience.
In a nutshell, our team figures out what buyers are doing, thinking, and experiencing at every stage of the journey.
Through this research, companies often discover important gaps between their intended customer experience and the reality buyers encounter. Oftentimes, we uncover surprising moments where buyers struggle to find information, misunderstand value propositions, encounter internal roadblocks, or flat-out disengage and ghost you in the process.
Buyer journey research can help answer questions such as:
How do buyers first become aware of a problem or need?
What information sources influence their decisions?
Which content helps move buyers forward?
Where do prospects become stuck or lose momentum?
What role do different stakeholders play throughout the process?
The result is a clearer understanding of how customers actually navigate the path to purchase, allowing you to improve the buyer experience, strengthen conversion points, align marketing and sales efforts, optimize content strategy, and remove barriers that prevent buyers from moving forward.
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Audience segmentation and B2B personas - who your buyers really are
A risk-averse VP of Finance at a 200-person SaaS company has more in common with a risk-averse CISO at a 50,000-person bank than with the VP of Finance at the company down the street. Job title alone is rarely the right way to segment B2B buyers.
As part of our B2B market research, we use audience segmentation research and analysis to identify distinct groups within your target market based on motivations, buying behavior, operational challenges, decision-making style, attitudes, priorities, and unmet needs—not just firmographics or titles. Our segmentation studies uncover the deeper psychological and behavioral patterns that shape how different audiences evaluate products, perceive risk, prioritize vendors, and make purchasing decisions. These segments are translated into practical B2B personas that reflect how different buyers think and choose.
Using methodologies such as cluster analysis, survey research, qualitative interviews, and buyer persona research, we help companies move beyond surface-level segmentation to develop meaningful, research-backed B2B personas.
At Bixa, we combine qualitative and quantitative research to uncover meaningful customer segments based on motivations, attitudes, needs, behaviors, decision-making styles, and priorities. Rather than treating all customers as one audience, segmentation helps reveal the different ways people think, what they value, and how they prefer to engage with brands.
Through audience segmentation research, we help companies answer questions such as:
Are all of our customers looking for the same thing?
Which audiences represent the greatest growth opportunity?
What motivates different buyer groups?
How should messaging vary across segments?
Which customers are most likely to become long-term advocates?
The insights are often used to create buyer personas, refine go-to-market strategies, prioritize product investments, and improve customer acquisition efforts.
The result is a more nuanced understanding of your market and a clearer picture of who your customers really are—allowing you to make decisions based on real customer differences rather than assumptions.
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Messaging research - which messages drive action
You only have a few seconds to capture a buyer’s attention—and this is even more true in B2B sales.
Whether it’s a website headline, sales presentation, product positioning statement, PPC campaign, or value proposition, the words you choose can seriously influence how customers perceive your brand.
All too often, what we find is that many companies rely on internal anecdotes and gut feeling when developing messaging—only to discover too late (and a huge ad investment later) that customers interpreted it much differently than it was intended.
Messaging research removes the guesswork.
At Bixa, we test positioning statements, value propositions, marketing claims, product descriptions, brand narratives, and campaign concepts with real buyers to understand what resonates—and what doesn’t. In our messaging studies, we observe over and over again how subtle shifts in messaging drastically change the audience’s perception of a brand, product, or service.
Our goal isn’t simply to determine which message people “like” best. When we conduct messaging research at Bixa, we test and refine a series of current or possible messaging to understand which messages resonate most with your target audiences, what differentiates you in a way that adds value for your audience, and what builds credibility with different B2B buyers (who, as we mentioned before, might have very different priorities).
We use a mix of qualitative interviews, diary studies, and message testing surveys to understand and prioritize which messages appeal as a whole to your audience, as well as which messages appeal to different segments or personas. We often use advanced survey techniques for messaging and positioning research such as MaxDiff analysis to evaluate and prioritize different message statements with real buyers. This allows companies to refine not just what they say, but how they say it… across websites, sales materials, campaigns, product launches, and go-to-market strategies.
Through messaging research, we help companies answer questions such as:
Which messages differentiate us from competitors?
What language resonates most with buyers?
Which claims feel credible and believable?
What value propositions are most compelling?
How do different audience segments respond to our messaging?
The findings often reveal surprising disconnects between what companies believe makes them unique and what customers actually find meaningful.
The goal of message testing is simple: make sure your message lands the way you need it to—clearly communicating value, strengthening differentiation, and aligning with how buyers actually think and make decisions.
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B2B survey research - what does the market really think?
Business decisions are often driven by a handful of customer conversations, internal opinions, or anecdotal feedback. While those perspectives can be valuable, they don’t always reflect what is happening across the broader market.
Sometimes you need to know whether a belief is widely shared, how common a behavior really is, or whether a trend is emerging across your customer base.
That’s where survey research comes in. When you need to validate insights at scale, B2B survey research gives you a clear, data-backed view of your market.
At Bixa, we design surveys to measure (and track over time) buyer preferences, awareness, brand perception, messaging effectiveness, demand, pricing sensitivity, and purchase intent across your target audiences. Depending on your goals, we can also evaluate pricing strategies, feature tradeoffs, and product or service bundles to understand what customers value most—and what they’re willing to pay for it.
Our specialized B2B recruiting panels ensure that you reach the people who are hard to recruit through standard methods — think VPs, CFOs, IT Directors, Procurement Leads, hospital administrators, enterprise decision-makers, and more.
Survey research can help answer questions such as:
How well known is our brand?
What do customers think about our products or services?
How satisfied are customers today?
Which features or benefits matter most?
How does our audience compare to the broader market?
Are we charging the right amount, and which features or services drive the most perceived value?
Depending on your goals, research may involve existing customers, prospective buyers, industry decision-makers, or a representative sample of the market.
The result is a reliable, quantitative foundation that gives B2B leaders the confidence to make clear decisions based on real human data, directly from your specific buyers.
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Concept testing - will B2B buyers want it? what's it worth to them?
Launching a new product, service, feature, or business initiative always involves at least some degree of uncertainty.
Even the most experienced teams struggle to predict how customers will respond to a new idea. The cost of getting it wrong can be huge… especially when development, marketing, and operational resources are all involved.
At Bixa, we evaluate new ideas (with real buyers) before major investments are made. Whether you’re exploring a new product, introducing a new feature, testing pricing, entering a new market, or refining your value proposition… concept testing provides early feedback from the people who matter most—your potential customers.
Our research helps uncover not only whether an idea is appealing, but why. We explore perceived value, relevance, uniqueness, purchase intent, concerns, unmet needs, and competitive alternatives.
Through concept testing, we help B2B companies answer questions like these:
Which ideas have the strongest success potential?
What aspects are most appealing?
What concerns or objections come up from real buyers or users?
Which alternatives or substitutes are your buyers comparing this new concept to? How does it stack up in their minds?
What enhancements or pivots can we make to improve adoption?
By pinpointing strengths and weaknesses before we’re too far down the pipeline, you can make smarter investment decisions and avoid costly mistakes.
The result? Confidence that you’re building something customers genuinely want—and a clear roadmap for improving concepts before launch.
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Win/loss analysis - why are we winning (and losing) deals?
When a deal is lost, the reason your sales team wrote down in the CRM is almost never the full story. In fact, you almost never find out the full story.
Here’s an example - when asked, a buyer may tell you that the competitor was cheaper. In reality, they may have simply trusted that competitor more. If they tell you there was a feature missing, the real issue might actually be deeper. On top of that, because so many different people are involved in a B2B sale, each potentially walks away with a different perspective on what happened and maybe one person writes you an email saying that it wasn’t “the right fit”.
If this is the kind of thing you’re struggling with or wondering about, win/loss research might be what you need.
At Bixa, we interview buyers, leads, customers, and stakeholders involved in real buying decisions to understand why deals were won, lost, delayed, or abandoned. We probe into topics like competitor dynamics, substitutes and alternatives, must-have vs. nice-to-have buying criteria, perceived strengths and weaknesses, which stakeholders’ voices and concerns mattered most, pricing, trust signals, case studies, testimonials, and so many other case-specific decision-making factors.
Because we’re a third-party research firm paying participants to speak with us, they’re typically very open and honest with us about real deals in competitive sales environments. Time after time, once we put all the interviews, survey data, and other research together, a clear picture emerges about what actually influenced the outcome of a purchase decision, whether it was a win or loss.
Through win/loss analysis, our experienced B2B researchers help companies answer questions like:
Why are we losing deals we expected to win?
What do buyers see in competitors that we’re missing?
How much does pricing actually influence decisions?
What objections are preventing buyers from moving forward?
Why are they ghosting us when we thought we had such a great relationship?
Which strengths consistently contribute to successful outcomes?
Our findings are often surprising. They tend to challenge internal assumptions and showcase specific opportunities to improve positioning, sales, messaging, product strategy, and positioning / differentiation.
The result is a clearer understanding of what’s driving sales outcomes—and a data-backed roadmap for improving your future win rates.
Where B2B market research has the most impact
B2B market research helps organizations understand how business decisions are made—across stakeholders, priorities, and internal dynamics. It’s most powerful when you need to understand how companies evaluate options and choose—not just what they say.
At Bixa, our B2B market research helps companies reduce uncertainty, strengthen decision-making, and uncover the real drivers behind buyer behavior. We use B2B research to move from insight to impact in areas including:
• Positioning and messaging: What resonates with decision-makers vs. what sounds good internally, including message testing, value proposition research, and competitive positioning analysis
• Product and service development: What features, capabilities, offerings, and and bundling or tier structures matter most to buyers—and why
• Pricing and value perception: How businesses evaluate cost vs. return, what shapes willingness to pay, and which pricing and packaging strategies strengthen perceived value
• Audience segmentation and buyer personas: Which customer groups represent the highest opportunity, how their needs differ, and what drives decision-making across segments
• Buyer journey mapping: Where decisions happen across the B2B buying process, , which touchpoints influence consideration, —and where deals stall or break down
• Brand perception: What your brand signals to business buyers, often without you realizing it, including perceptions around expertise, innovation, trust, scalability, and differentiation
• Go-to-market strategy: For new products, services, market expansion, or repositioning efforts, understanding how buyers search, evaluate vendors, compare alternatives, and make final decisions
• Competitive intelligence and win/loss analysis: Why buyers choose competitors, where your offering is winning or losing, and what factors shape purchasing outcomes in competitive markets
• B2B brand tracking and market shifts: How awareness, consideration, trust, and brand perception evolve over time — especially in rapidly changing markets shaped by factors like AI, emerging competitors, changing buyer expectations, economic pressure, or industry disruption. Brand tracking research helps companies monitor shifts in buyer sentiment, identify early warning signs, and understand how market changes are impacting positioning, differentiation, and purchase behavior.
How our B2B market research process works
Study design
Every B2B research project starts with the decision you need to make.
During a discovery process, we work closely with your team to understand your goals—whether that’s refining positioning, improving conversion, testing a new offering, or understanding your target market. We define clear research objectives and align on the key business decisions upfront.
From there, we design a custom B2B market research approach, selecting the right mix of qualitative and quantitative methods—such as in-depth interviews with decision-makers, B2B surveys, segmentation, or concept testing—to ensure the study delivers actionable answers.
Participant recruiting & fielding
B2B research is only as strong as the people you talk to.
We recruit highly targeted participants using precise screening criteria to ensure you’re hearing from the right audience—whether that’s buyers, decision-makers, influencers, or end users across industries and roles.
We work with trusted B2B panels, proprietary networks, and targeted outreach to find high-quality participants who match your exact criteria—so the insights reflect real-world buying behavior, not generic opinions.
During fielding, we conduct interviews, focus groups, video diaries, surveys, or advanced quantitative studies, depending on your needs. The data we collect captures how businesses evaluate options, compare alternatives, and make decisions across B2B stakeholders.
Data analysis
This is where we uncover how B2B decisions happen.
For quantitative research, we apply methods like segmentation, conjoint analysis, and MaxDiff to identify patterns and priorities at scale.
For qualitative research, we analyze conversations in detail, coding line-by-line throughout transcripts in multiple rounds, to uncover the nuances behind decision-making. Our coding is still done manually by real human researchers, not by an AI tool, because we get nuanced, real insights this way.
The goal is to surface what buyers choose under pressure and identify what truly drives selection.
Reporting & recommendations
A clear direction—not data—is what moves a business forward.
We synthesize findings into structured insights that highlight what’s driving decisions, where you stand in the market, and what opportunities exist. More importantly, we translate those insights into specific recommendations tied to your business goals.
Whether that’s refining messaging, improving your sales approach, adjusting pricing, or strengthening your go-to-market strategy, you’ll walk away knowing exactly what to do next.
Your deliverable is a clear, decision-ready roadmap, not another dashboard.
Learn the foundations of conducting B2B market research
If you want to better understand how B2B market research works (and how to apply it), this course walks you through it step by step.
Created by Bixa Founder & CEO Sarah Weise, this LinkedIn Learning course (B2B Market Research) covers how B2B firms plan, execute, and apply both qualitative and quantitative research in real business settings.
It’s designed for teams working through complex buying cycles, niche audiences, and multi-stakeholder decisions.
In this course, you’ll learn how to approach B2B market research with the right structure, avoid common pitfalls, and generate insights that lead to stronger marketing, product, and sales decisions.
Course details:
47 minutes • Beginner to Intermediate • 4.9 rating (700+ reviews)
Why organizations choose Bixa as their B2B market research agency
Bixa specializes in B2B market research designed to produce clear, decision-ready insights.
Our team works with organizations across industries—including technology, SaaS, financial services, healthcare, and professional services—to understand how business buyers evaluate options, align internally, and make decisions.
Our approach focuses on:
• Research designed around real business decisions—not just data collection
• Access to the right B2B audiences, including decision-makers and stakeholders
• Advanced methods that reflect how buyers choose, not just what they say
• Analysis that connects insights directly to strategy and clear next steps
Rather than delivering raw data or high-level summaries, we translate B2B research into actionable recommendations—so you can refine your positioning, strengthen your messaging, and win more business with confidence.
Bixa market research: client testimonials
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"Their market research showed that our initial assumptions were totally off-base. If we'd moved forward without their support, we would've wasted a lot of time and money pursuing the wrong path. I've worked with many market research firms, and Bixa is fantastic."
— Kate Jeffrey, VP of Marketing, Fair Trade Outsourcing
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"The team had a comprehensive and thoughtful approach to the project and worked with us as partners. We attained statistically significant behavioral and attitudinal audience segments — and finally understood which segments are ideal to target, what current perceptions of competitive vendors are, and the best channels to reach qualified leads."
— CMO, Vention (Engineering & Software Company)
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"Bixa over-delivered and gave us more than what they put on the proposal. The quality of the deliverables, Bixa's timeliness, and the opportunities that they helped us identify were great."
— CMO, Retail Company (12-chain thrift store, Northeast)
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"It was always apparent that they were experts in the space. The client felt that this was the best presentation and research they've seen within their industry in a very long time. We found that we got more value than what we paid for."
— Senior Business Designer, Startup Incubator (Financial Services)
B2B market research FAQs
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B2B market research is the process of understanding how businesses evaluate, compare, and ultimately choose products or services. Unlike consumer research, B2B research focuses on more complex buying environments—where decisions often involve multiple stakeholders, longer sales cycles, and higher financial and operational stakes.
At Bixa, B2B market research is designed for the decision-making process. That includes identifying decision criteria, understanding how different roles influence the outcome, and mapping how buyers move from awareness to selection. The goal is not just to describe the market, but to give you a clear view of how to position, message, and sell more effectively.
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B2B buying decisions are rarely linear or made by a single person. Most purchases involve a group of stakeholders—such as executives, technical evaluators, procurement, finance, and end users—each with their own priorities, constraints, and definition of value. These decisions often unfold over weeks or months, with internal discussions, competing opinions, and shifting requirements shaping the final outcome.
Because B2B purchases involve multiple stakeholders, research needs to capture perspectives across roles—not just a single respondent. This includes decision-makers, influencers, technical evaluators, procurement, finance, and end users—each with different priorities, concerns, and definitions of value.
B2B buyer research shows that decisions are driven by more than just features or price. Buyers evaluate credibility, perceived risk, ease of implementation, and how well a solution aligns with internal goals. Just as importantly, different stakeholders prioritize different factors—what matters to a technical evaluator may be very different from what matters to an executive sponsor. Understanding these dynamics is critical if you want your positioning and messaging to resonate across all decision-makers.
At Bixa, we focus on uncovering how these decisions happen in practice. That means identifying key decision drivers, moments of influence, and points where deals stall or fall apart. The goal is to give you a clear, realistic view of how B2B buyers evaluate options and choose—so you can align your marketing, sales, and product strategy with how decisions are made, not how they’re assumed to work.
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B2B market research typically combines qualitative and quantitative methods to capture both depth and scale. Qualitative approaches—like in-depth interviews with decision-makers and stakeholder interviews across the buying group—are used to understand how businesses evaluate options, what drives trust, and deciding factors for internal decisions. Quantitative methods—primarily B2B surveys—are used to validate those insights at scale and measure patterns across a broader audience.
More advanced quantitative techniques are often critical in B2B research. These include audience segmentation (cluster analysis) to identify distinct buyer groups, conjoint analysis to understand tradeoffs between features, pricing, and positioning, and MaxDiff to prioritize messaging or product capabilities. Pricing research methods like Van Westendorp and Gabor-Granger help quantify willingness to pay and price sensitivity.
At Bixa, we design the methodology around the decision you need to make. That may involve starting with qualitative interviews to uncover how buyers think, followed by a B2B survey to validate insights, and layering in advanced methods to model real-world decision-making. The goal is to generate insights you can confidently act on.
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Start with a few quick questions:
Are you debating between multiple directions without a clear answer?
Are stakeholders aligned—or are there competing opinions driving decisions?
Are you relying on internal assumptions about your buyers instead of direct input?
Are you about to invest meaningful time, budget, or resources into something that needs to work?
If you’re answering “yes” (or even “maybe”) to any of those, it’s a strong signal that B2B market research will pay off.
B2B research becomes especially important when you’re making decisions like:
Refining positioning or messaging and need to know what resonates with decision-makers
Launching a new product or service and want to validate demand before investing further
Entering a new market or audience segment where assumptions are risky
Adjusting pricing or packaging and need to understand perceived value and willingness to pay
Trying to improve conversion or sales performance and don’t fully understand where deals are breaking down
Aligning internal teams that have different perspectives on what buyers want
At Bixa, this is where we come in. Most teams need B2B market research or product research or UX research so they can feel clear and confident on what to do next. We design B2B market research around the decision in front of you, uncover how buyers evaluate options, and translate that into clear direction. By the time you’re asking whether you need research, you’re usually already at the point where the right insights can change the outcome—and that’s where working with Bixa becomes less of a question and more of the obvious next step.
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A good rule of thumb: if you’re making a product decision that’s expensive to get wrong, it’s the right time for research.
You likely need B2B product research if you’re facing questions like: • Are we building the right features—or just the ones we think matter? • Will buyers choose this over alternatives? • How should we package or bundle this offering? • Are we solving a real problem—or a perceived one? • Why is adoption slower than expected?
These moments often come up before a product launch, during roadmap planning, when refining an existing offering, or when something isn’t converting the way it should. In B2B, where decisions involve multiple stakeholders and longer sales cycles, assumptions can quietly steer product strategy in the wrong direction.
At Bixa, we step in at these inflection points. We combine interviews with decision-makers and users, along with quantitative methods like concept testing, feature prioritization, and conjoint analysis, to show you what drives adoption. We give you a list of what to build, what to prioritize, and how to position your product.
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The number of participants depends on the type of research and the level of precision required.
Qualitative B2B research such as in-depth interviews, focus groups, or video diary studies typically involves smaller, highly targeted samples—focused on depth and detailed understanding.
Quantitative B2B surveys require larger sample sizes to support statistical reliability.
For more advanced analysis, such as segmentation or conjoint analysis, larger sample sizes are often necessary to ensure stable and actionable results. At Bixa, we determine sample sizes based on your specific goals, ensuring the research is both efficient and robust enough to support real decisions.
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B2B buyer journey research maps how businesses move from initial awareness to final decision. This includes understanding where buyers search for solutions, how they evaluate options, what influences trust, and where deals stall or break down.
This type of research is especially valuable for improving marketing and sales effectiveness.
By identifying key moments of influence and friction, organizations can refine their go-to-market strategy, improve conversion, and create a smoother buying experience that aligns with the decision-making process.
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At Bixa, we design studies to reflect the complexity of the B2B buying-cycle. We recruit participants across roles, analyze differences in priorities and concerns, and identify how decisions are negotiated internally. Just as importantly, we map the end-to-end B2B buyer journey—understanding who gets involved at each stage, how influence shifts over time, and what information or proof points move the decision forward.
This approach allows us to identify patterns in decision-making across the full buying group, rather than overindexing on individual feedback. The result is a clearer view of who matters most, what each stakeholder needs to see, and how to align your messaging, product, and sales approach to win the business.
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B2B pricing research is the process of understanding how business buyers evaluate price in the context of value, risk, and return. Unlike consumer pricing, B2B decisions are rarely based on price alone—they’re tied to ROI, budget ownership, implementation effort, and how different stakeholders justify the investment internally. Pricing research helps you understand not just what buyers will pay, but how they think about cost, value, and tradeoffs during the decision process.
Strong B2B pricing research looks at multiple dimensions. It identifies acceptable price ranges, price sensitivity, and thresholds where demand starts to drop off. It also uncovers how pricing interacts with packaging, features, service levels, and positioning. For example, what makes a higher price feel justified? When does a lower price create doubt? And how do different stakeholders—like finance vs. end users—evaluate the same price differently?
At Bixa, we use a combination of methods to answer these questions, including the Van Westendorp research method to establish price ranges, Gabor-Granger research method to measure demand at different price points, and conjoint analysis to model real-world tradeoffs between price and features. The result is a pricing strategy grounded in how buyers make decisions—so you can set prices with confidence, avoid leaving revenue on the table, and position your offering in a way that aligns with perceived value.
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Many B2B research firms focus on collecting data or delivering reports. At Bixa, we focus on helping you make better decisions.
Our approach is grounded in how B2B buying works. We capture the full buying group, use advanced research methods to uncover real decision drivers, and translate findings into clear, actionable recommendations. The result is not just insight—it’s direction you can use to improve positioning, messaging, pricing, and growth strategy.
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Most B2B market research studies take between four and eight weeks, depending on the scope, methodology, and complexity of the audience being studied.
More advanced studies—such as segmentation, conjoint analysis, or multi-phase research combining qualitative and quantitative methods—may take longer. At Bixa, we provide a clear timeline upfront so you know what to expect and can plan accordingly.
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The cost of B2B market research varies depending on the type of study, number of participants, and level of analysis required. Qualitative interviews, B2B surveys, and advanced modeling techniques each have different cost considerations.
We tailor each project to your goals and budget, ensuring the approach is aligned with the value of the decision you’re making. The focus is always on delivering insights that drive meaningful business impact—not just completing a study.
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B2B and B2C market research share the same core goal — understanding how people make decisions — but the environments they operate in are fundamentally different.
In B2C research, you're typically studying an individual making a purchase based on personal preference, emotion, or habit. The decision is often fast, the stakes are relatively low, and the buyer and end user are usually the same person.
B2B market research is more complex. Business purchases rarely come down to a single person or a single moment. They involve multiple stakeholders — executives, technical evaluators, procurement teams, end users, and finance — each with different priorities and different definitions of value. Sales cycles are longer, budgets are larger, and the consequences of a wrong decision are much higher.
That complexity changes how research needs to be designed. B2B market research has to capture the full buying group, not just one respondent. It needs to account for how decisions are negotiated internally, how risk tolerance shapes evaluation, and how different roles influence the outcome at different stages of the process. Generic surveys designed for consumer audiences often miss all of this entirely.
At Bixa, our B2B market research is built around how business decisions work — across stakeholders, timelines, and competing internal priorities. The result is research that reflects the real dynamics of your market, not a simplified version of it.
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This varies by project, but at Bixa, every B2B market research engagement is designed to leave your team with something you can use — not just a file to archive.
Typical deliverables include a comprehensive findings presentation with clear, structured insights tied to your original research objectives. Rather than walking through methodology and raw data, we lead with what it means for your business and what you should do about it.
Most projects also include specific strategic recommendations — whether that's refined positioning, adjusted messaging, a revised pricing tier, or a clearer picture of where your sales process is breaking down. These are written for decision-makers, not data scientists.
Depending on the scope of the study, deliverables may also include buyer personas grounded in research rather than assumptions, a buyer journey map identifying key moments of influence and friction, audience segments with actionable profiles for your marketing and sales teams, a competitive positioning summary, and in quantitative studies, a market simulator that lets you model different product or pricing scenarios.
The format is built for use — executive-ready, visually clear, and designed to align teams rather than overwhelm them. You'll walk away knowing exactly what the research revealed and exactly what to do next.
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Yes — and this is one of the most underutilized (and powerful!) applications of B2B market research.
For ABM, research helps you understand how target accounts evaluate solutions, what each stakeholder role cares about most, and what language resonates at different stages of the buying process. That's the foundation of any effective account-based strategy. Without it, you're personalizing content based on assumptions rather than real buyer behavior.
For sales enablement, B2B market research — particularly win/loss analysis and buyer decision research — gives your sales team an honest look at what's working and what isn't. It reveals the objections that keep coming up, the competitors your team loses to most often and why, and the proof points that move deals forward. That kind of insight sharpens how reps position your solution, handle pushback, and navigate multi-stakeholder conversations.
Research-backed personas and buyer journey maps are also directly useful in sales. When a rep understands how a procurement lead thinks differently from a technical evaluator, or where deals typically stall internally, they can adjust their approach accordingly.
At Bixa, we often work with marketing and sales teams together to make sure research doesn't stop at the strategy deck — it gets translated into tools and messaging your team can use in real conversations.
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Purchasing decisions for SaaS and technology often involve technical evaluators assessing integrations and implementation lift, end users concerned with usability and adoption, finance weighing total cost of ownership, and executives focused on strategic fit and ROI. Getting research right means capturing all of those perspectives, not just the one who fills out a survey.
There are also a few dynamics specific to SaaS and tech that good B2B market research needs to account for. Product-led growth models blur the line between the buyer and the user, which affects how you study decision-making. Competitive landscapes shift quickly, so positioning research needs to reflect current market perception rather than assumptions from a year ago. And because switching costs are real, churn and retention research often reveals as much as acquisition research — sometimes more.
Bixa works extensively with technology and SaaS companies, from enterprise teams like Google and Cvent to fast-growing product companies like Eko Health. We use methods like conjoint analysis to understand feature tradeoffs and pricing sensitivity, MaxDiff to prioritize roadmap decisions, and in-depth interviews with technical and executive stakeholders to understand how evaluations unfold. The result is B2B market research built for the speed and complexity of the tech sector — not adapted from a consumer research playbook.
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The straightforward answer: most B2B market research pays for itself by preventing a decision that would have cost more than the research did.
When a product launch misses the mark because the positioning didn't resonate, when a pricing tier gets set too low because no one tested willingness to pay, when a sales team keeps losing deals for reasons no one fully understands — those are expensive problems. And they're exactly the kinds of problems that solid B2B market research prevents.
More concretely, here's where organizations consistently see return on research investment:
Faster go-to-market decisions. No more debating. More alignment. When your team is aligned on what buyers want, you spend more time executing.
Higher conversion rates. Messaging and positioning grounded in real buyer language converts better than copy written from the inside out.
Reduced product risk. Concept testing and feature prioritization research keeps you from building things buyers don't value — or pricing them in ways that undercut perceived quality.
Stronger competitive positioning. Win/loss analysis and competitive research reveal exactly where you're winning, where you're losing, and what to do differently.
Better internal alignment. Research gives leadership teams a shared, objective foundation for decisions — which reduces the cost of stakeholder disagreement and speeds up execution.
The right B2B market research agency will tie every study to a specific business decision, so the value is tangible from the start. At Bixa, we design every engagement around what you need to decide — because research that doesn't change outcomes isn't worth the investment.
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Getting started with Bixa begins with a conversation about what you’re trying to learn and the decisions you need to make.
From there, we recommend the right B2B market research approach—whether that involves interviews with decision-makers, surveys, segmentation, pricing research, or a combination of methods. We’ll outline a clear plan, timeline, and scope so you know exactly what to expect.
Most importantly, you’ll walk away with a clear understanding of how research can support your goals—and what the smartest next step looks like.
Have a B2B decision you need to get right?
Schedule a complimentary 30-minute strategy session with a senior researcher to discuss your buyers, challenges, and the best research approach.