Barry Leggetter, AMEC's Executive Director and the force behind last week's Berlin Measurement Summit, very correctly asked me for specifics of "The Berlin Protocol" that I proposed in my post last week.
So here's a start.
So here's a start.
- 1. We agree to use no research methodology that isn’t based
on solid research and facts
- 2. We agree to a standard principle that the best
measurements are business outcomes not exposure, AVE or OTS
- 3. We all agree to avoid to not use multipliers and other
non-proven false statistics
- 4. We agree that transparency is key to credibility in our industry, and so we agree to reveal, if
asked, our methodologies and our intercoder reliability scores and eschew
“black boxes” and mystery algorithms
- 5. We do not promote or offer or endorse AVEs, and if they
are used, they must discount negative stories, stories that do not contain key
messages, and stories that do not mention the brand in the headline or top 20%
of the story. (i.e. stories you’d actually be willing to pay for)

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6. Measurement (considered as a kind of research) is a consultancy itself. Advicing what to do is just a qualitative interpreting of quantified data.
Posted by: Nickolai Grigoriev | June 23, 2009 at 07:15 AM