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Brand perception research is the process of finding out how customers actually experience, describe, and evaluate your brand. It helps you move beyond assumptions, measure brand image more accurately, and understand the gap between what your company wants to stand for and how customers see your brand in the real world.
Too many teams rely on internal opinions, campaign metrics, or a few anecdotal comments. That can be subject to confirmation bias and create a false sense of confidence. If you want a clearer view of customer brand perception, you need research that captures both what people say and why they say it.
Short on time? Jump straight to the specific section:
Brand perception research is a research approach used to understand how customers, prospects, or target segments view a brand. It looks at the associations, emotions, beliefs, and expectations people attach to a company, product, or service.
In practical terms, it helps answer questions like:
This kind of work often overlaps with:
A useful way to think about it is this: brand perception research does not just tell you whether people know your brand. It helps you understand what that awareness actually means in customers’ minds.
That distinction matters. A brand can be well known and still poorly understood, inconsistently positioned, or associated with the wrong value.
For companies like GroupSolver, the goal is the opposite: to ensure the brand is clearly understood, consistently positioned, and aligned with how customers think and decide. That’s why GroupSolver’s approach focuses on uncovering the “why” behind customer responses — combining qualitative depth with quantitative validation to reveal not just what people say, but what truly drives their perception.
Brand perception shapes decisions long before a purchase journey begins. It influences how customers react when they see your brand pop up in their first AI search when they begin their consideration of new purchase. Are they happy to see your name? Do they want to know more — or will they ignore you?
Here are three reasons your brand perception matters.
1. It reveals the gap between brand strategy and market reality
Many companies have a polished internal brand story. Customers may have a very different one.
For example, a brand may invest heavily in innovation messaging, but customers may primarily see it as expensive, confusing, or hard to work with. Without research, that disconnect can go unnoticed for months or years.
2. It helps you measure brand image beyond vanity metrics
Traffic, impressions, and engagement can show visibility. They do not fully explain perception.
If you want to measure brand image, you need evidence about associations, emotions, trust, differentiation, and relevance. That is where structured open-ended feedback, segment comparisons, and brand equity research become more useful than surface-level dashboards.
3. It improves decision-making across teams
Brand perception research is not just for marketing. It can inform:
That broader view is increasingly important as consumer expectations keep shifting. McKinsey’s recent consumer research notes that customer behavior, value perceptions, and trust signals continue to evolve across major markets, making ongoing customer understanding more important than one-time brand tracking.
A strong brand perception research program should combine structure with curiosity. You need enough rigor to compare results over time, but enough openness to hear things you were not expecting.
1. Start with the decisions you need to make
Do not begin with a generic survey — your brand is unique and you probably have some unique hypotheses you want to test.
Start with the business question at hand:
This step matters because the best research designs are decision-led, not template-led.
2. Define the perception dimensions you want to measure
Most teams try to measure everything and end up learning very little. Choose a focused set of dimensions based on the hypotheses you have formed and which you need to validate:
This is where brand equity research becomes especially valuable, because it connects perception to long-term brand value rather than short-term campaign reaction. GroupSolver’s brand perception and brand equity studies frame this work around understanding recognition, segment differences, and perceived value.

3. Use open-ended questions, not just rating scales
This is one of the biggest missed opportunities in brand research.
Rating scales can tell you what score a brand gets. They are much weaker at explaining why customers gave that score. Open-ended questions reveal language, nuance, and unexpected themes.
Examples include:
This is often where real insight appears. People may describe your brand as “reliable but old-fashioned,” “premium but not worth the price,” or “innovative but hard to understand.” Those combinations are far more useful than a single average score.
4. Combine qualitative depth with quantitative validation
A common mistake is treating qualitative and quantitative research as separate worlds. The better approach is to use both:
That combined model is especially effective when you want to understand not just how customers see your brand, but which perceptions actually influence purchase, loyalty, or advocacy.
5. Compare customer segments, not just overall averages
Average results can hide the most important story. For example:
If you only look at the total average, you miss the strategic opportunity. Segment-level research is often where the clearest positioning insights emerge.
6. Analyze both sentiment and meaning
Consumer sentiment analysis is useful, but sentiment alone is not enough.
A positive or negative label does not tell you what people are reacting to. To truly understand how customers see your brand, you need to connect emotion to themes such as trust, service, innovation, price, quality, or relevance.
That is why text analysis, theme clustering, and open-ended response evaluation can add so much value. They help you identify not just tone, but the drivers of that tone.

7. Turn findings into action
Research only matters if it changes something. Once you have results, translate them into action across teams:
A useful internal question is: which perceptions are simply interesting, and which ones are actively shaping behavior? That is where research becomes strategic rather than descriptive.
Treating awareness as proof of brand strength
Being known is not the same as being chosen. High awareness can coexist with weak trust, low relevance, or poor differentiation. How to avoid it: pair awareness metrics with deeper questions about associations, value, and preference.
Asking leading or focusing solely on closed-ended questions
If every question reflects your internal assumptions, customers can only confirm or reject your categories. You miss emerging themes and real customer language. How to avoid it: include open-ended questions early in the survey before exposing respondents to branded claims or fixed answer choices.
Looking at averages without segment detail
Overall scores often smooth out meaningful differences. You may optimize for the wrong audience or miss a perception problem in a key segment. How to avoid it: break results out by customer type, lifecycle stage, usage pattern, and relevant demographics.
Confusing social listening with full brand perception research
Social data can be useful, but it is incomplete. It tends to overrepresent vocal groups and specific channels. How to avoid it: use social inputs as one source, then validate with structured survey-based research.
If you want to know what customers really think about your brand, you need more than internal opinions and campaign metrics. Brand perception research gives you a clearer, more actionable view of customer beliefs, emotions, and expectations so you can close the gap between brand intention and customer reality. For teams that want to go deeper than surface-level survey data, GroupSolver’s approach is especially relevant: combining quantitative structure with open-ended insight to uncover the “why” behind customer feedback and brand perception. Explore GroupSolver’s brand perception and research solutions to turn customer understanding into smarter brand decisions.
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