Sugging
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sugging is a market research industry term, meaning "selling under the guise of research". This behavior occurs when a product marketer falsely pretends to be a market researcher conducting a survey, when in reality they are simply trying to sell the product in question.
Generally considered unethical, this tactic is strictly prohibited by trade groups, such as CASRO and MRA, for their member research companies.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Elliott, Stuart, "You've Got Mail, Indeed", The New York Times, October 25, 1999
- Elliott, Stuart, "A New Survey Seeks to Gauge the Research Needs of American Companies as They Look Abroad, The New York Times, January 5, 1996
- Glossary of Terms at Association for Qualitative Research (UK)
- "Comment on Email Authentication: Summitt Issues", filed by CASRO with Federal Trade Commission
- "Comment of Proposed Rule: CAN-SPAM Act Rulemaking", filed by CASRO with Federal Trade Commission
- "Research Abuse (Sugging and Frugging)", Marketing Research Association (US)