For Clients: Preparing Briefs That Enable Rich Insights
By Paul Nnanwobu, Random Dynamic Resources Ltd
We often say good research begins with a good question. But in truth, it starts even earlierâwith a clear, thoughtful brief.
At Random Dynamic Resources Ltd, operating across Nigeria and Canada, we've reviewed hundreds of client briefs over the yearsâsome sharp and focused, others more⌠letâs say exploratory. And while thereâs no such thing as a perfect brief, some small shifts in how clients frame their needs can make the difference between shallow results and rich, decision-ready insights.
Hereâs the thing. Researchers arenât mind readers. We donât magically extract meaning from vague goals. But with the right foundation, we can uncover patterns, nuance, even surprises that reshape strategy. That starts with alignment.
So, for those who are planning to commission researchâwhether on customer behavior, policy attitudes, market testing, or social impactâhere are a few simple, real-world tips for preparing briefs that lead to deeper, more useful results.
1. Be Clear About What You Actually Want to Learn Seems obvious, right? But many briefs start with long descriptions of the business or organization, followed by a laundry list of potential objectives. The result? A cloud of ambition but no core question. Try this instead: boil it down to 2â3 questions you must have answers to by the end of the study. If everything else dropped away, what would still matter?
For example, saying âwe want to understand youth engagement with our brandâ is broad. But âwe want to know what influences trust among first-time youth users of our mobile platform in Lagos and Nairobiâ gives researchers a directionâand a lens.
2. Context Is Gold One of the most useful things clients can do is share background contextâeven the messy parts. Failed pilots. Market shifts. Office debates. This doesn't make you look disorganized; it gives us texture. And sometimes, what you think is the research problem isnât actually the issueâitâs a symptom.
We once had a client in the agricultural sector who wanted to test a new digital service. But after reviewing their brief and digging deeper, we realized the real barrier wasnât the tech. It was local skepticism, tied to past programs that had overpromised. Without that context, we might have asked the wrong questions entirely.
3. Define the Audience, Then Question It Clients will often specify âwe want to talk to women aged 18â45 in rural areas.â Thatâs a start. But weâll askâwhy that group? Is it based on sales data, assumptions, policy mandates? Sometimes narrowing the audience makes sense. Other times, it excludes voices that could surface new angles.
Also, think about representation. Are there groups youâve overlooked because theyâre hard to reach or donât respond to surveys easily? Including them might cost a bit moreâbut could lead to insights that pay off long-term.
4. Be Honest About Constraints Budget. Timeline. Internal politics. Share them. Weâre not here to judgeâweâre here to work within reality. If you need findings in six weeks for a board meeting, say so. If there are topics you canât touch due to sensitivities, flag them. Surprises donât help anyone at the eleventh hour.
5. Leave Room for the Unexpected Some of the best findings arenât answers to direct questionsâthey're revelations that emerge when people feel free to speak. So while structure is essential, rigidity can kill insight. In your brief, allow space for exploration, especially during qualitative phases. You might discover an issue you didnât even know existed.
6. Think Beyond the Report What will you do with the data? If the goal is to inform a campaign, we may recommend testing messaging along the way. If itâs to guide a product, we may propose rapid feedback loops. If the findings are meant for stakeholders or funders, we might suggest visual storytelling formats.
Research doesnât end with a report. It begins there.
At Random Dynamic Resources Ltd, weâre constantly working with our clientsâacross continents and sectorsâto build research that matters. And Iâd like to quietly mention here, with some pride, that weâre nominated for the 2025 Go Global Awards, hosted by the International Trade Council this November in London. This event isnât just a celebrationâitâs a convergence of business minds from around the world, looking to solve real challenges with real tools. Being part of that space validates the very things weâve been committed toâdepth, partnership, adaptability.
Because ultimately, good research isnât a transaction. Itâs a collaboration. And it beginsânot with fieldworkâbut with the brief.












