Featured in this case study: Culture, heritage & leisure, Hard to reach groups, Customer segmentation
Wellcome Collection believes everyone’s experience of health matters. Through its free museum, library, and events, Wellcome Collection strives to be inclusive and accessible to all, with a particular focus on welcoming and providing for deaf, disabled, neurodivergent and racially minoritised people. This underlying ambition was at the heart of Wellcome Collection’s intent for developing a whole market segmentation, which could support the organisation in achieving its accessibility goals.
An important consideration for our approach was a segmentation that could articulate the needs and priorities of marginalised groups without tokenising them or reducing them to a particular 'characteristic'. DJS Research addressed this by purposefully over-sampling priority communities to ensure adequate representation.
The team also ensured that diverse and marginalised voices were fully heard, employing accessible data collection modes for both quantitative and qualitative research, including speech-to-text and BSL-interpreted in-depth interviews, while collaborating with Wellcome Collection’s access and inclusion leads and external specialists to scrutinise design and recruitment. Opportunities were sought to de-bias research tool language, with critical feedback on data interpretation and ongoing validation of findings with the Wellcome Collection team.
The resulting segments are not defined by demographics, avoiding reductive or tokenistic labels, although differences in profile across segments are driven by needs. The project engaged with over 5,000 people from a range of genders, ages, ethnicities, and life circumstances. The sample included current and potential audiences and ensuring a mix of those vocationally connected to health and general audiences, providing a comprehensive and inclusive view of the market. DJS Research delivered a bespoke algorithm, interactive pen portraits, and embedding workshops.
Since adopting the segmentation system, Wellcome Collection has strengthened audience development, with increased visits from priority groups. Wellcome Collection is significantly ahead of the sector in terms of its engagement with disabled audiences.
The project has also had a broader impact. Wellcome Collection and its sector peers were keen to move away from historic standardised measures of demographics which reinforce existing disadvantage and 'othering' of minoritised groups. DJS Research collaborated with Wellcome Collection and external consultants to develop inclusive alternatives, now adopted into ongoing tracking research by Wellcome Collection and a consortium of National Museums and Galleries. Wellcome Collection leads the sector in this space and advocates for inclusive practice through sharing learnings, including a co-presentation of this study by DJS Research and Wellcome Collection at the Visitor Studies Group annual conference in 2023.
Featured in this case study: Culture, heritage & leisure, Hard to reach groups, Customer segmentation
Wellcome Collection believes everyone’s experience of health matters. Through its free museum, library, and events, Wellcome Collection strives to be inclusive and accessible to all, with a particular focus on welcoming and providing for deaf, disabled, neurodivergent and racially minoritised people. This underlying ambition was at the heart of Wellcome Collection’s intent for developing a whole market segmentation, which could support the organisation in achieving its accessibility goals.
The combined expertise of our in-house Field & Recruitment team and our highly experienced researchers means we have both the resource and the skills to identify and engage vital groups which can otherwise be under-represented or – worse still – overlooked. We connect with the audiences you wish to better understand and work with them to generate the authentic insight, and customer clarity, you seek.
Through our time spent with individuals who are facing challenging circumstances and extreme hardship, we understand how complex and multilayered personal struggles can be. For example, individuals who are digitally disengaged may be more socially isolated, while others who are experiencing financial difficulties may be struggling with physical or mental health problems. We recognise that vulnerabilities come in many different forms and audience needs can be multifaceted.
Engaging these audiences requires sensitivity, careful handling and bespoke planning – there’s never a one-size-fits-all approach…
How we engage the audiences you struggle to reach
By placing audiences at the centre of our projects from the start, we ensure their needs, and the needs of our clients, are met throughout the research process.
Our tailored end-to-end solutions reach, and build trust with, under-represented audiences using the following principles and practices:
With the right approach that puts participant needs at the heart of your research, no audience should be truly hard to reach.
Read more about our commitment to ensuring inclusivity and accessibility in all our market research projects.
And to find out how we can engage the specific groups you wish to hear from, and deliver the clarity and insight you need, contact our team today.
Since adopting the segmentation system, Wellcome Collection has strengthened audience development, with increased visits from priority groups. Wellcome Collection is significantly ahead of the sector in terms of its engagement with disabled audiences.
The project has also had a broader impact. Wellcome Collection and its sector peers were keen to move away from historic standardised measures of demographics which reinforce existing disadvantage and 'othering' of minoritised groups. DJS Research collaborated with Wellcome Collection and external consultants to develop inclusive alternatives, now adopted into ongoing tracking research by Wellcome Collection and a consortium of National Museums and Galleries. Wellcome Collection leads the sector in this space and advocates for inclusive practice through sharing learnings, including a co-presentation of this study by DJS Research and Wellcome Collection at the Visitor Studies Group annual conference in 2023.