How to Run Multi-Market Research Without Losing Comparability
Running research across multiple countries is complex. Learn how to design, recruit and deliver multi-market studies that stay comparable, reliable and insight-led.
Running research across multiple countries is complex. Learn how to design, recruit and deliver multi-market studies that stay comparable, reliable and insight-led.

Multi-market research sounds straightforward — until it isn’t.
What begins as a single brief can quickly turn into a patchwork of methods, translations, timelines, and interpretations that don’t quite line up. And when comparability slips, so does confidence in the insight.
So how do you run international research that stays locally relevant and globally consistent?
Here’s what actually works.
Most issues don’t come from data collection — they come from design decisions made too late.
Common pitfalls include:
Individually, these seem minor. Collectively, they undermine comparability.
Comparability isn’t something you “fix in analysis”.
It has to be designed in at the start.
That means:
A strong global framework gives local teams freedom — without fragmenting the data.
Sample quality is one of the biggest drivers of variation across markets.
Key principles:
What counts as a “decision-maker” or “heavy user” can differ dramatically by market if you’re not careful.
Poor translation is one of the most common — and costly — causes of non-comparable data.
Best practice includes:
If a question doesn’t land the same way emotionally, it won’t measure the same thing.
A frequent mistake is forcing identical execution everywhere.
Instead:
This protects the integrity of the data while respecting cultural norms.
Staggered fieldwork creates interpretation risk.
Where possible:
Real-time oversight is often the difference between clean comparisons and messy explanations later.
The strongest international programmes combine:
Not all variation is a “problem” — but you need to know why it exists.
When done well, international research delivers:
And crucially — fewer caveats in the final presentation.
Multi-market research doesn’t fail because markets are different.
It fails when those differences aren’t planned for.
Design for comparability early, control the fundamentals, and let nuance live where it belongs — in interpretation, not methodology.
At Skopos, multi-market research is built into how we work — from design and recruitment through to analysis and delivery.
If you’re planning research across regions, categories, or customer types, we’re happy to sanity-check your approach before fieldwork begins.