ICM Research

ICM Research is a public opinion research company that was founded in 1989.[1][2] ICM is a subsidiary of Creston Insight, a marketing services company, and is a member of the British Polling Council.[3]

History

When ICM was initially established, the initialism represented "Independent Communications and Marketing". However, the full name was never used in practice, with the company simply being known as "ICM". It was founded by three people: Nick Sparrow, who reinvented opinion polling after the 1992 polling miss to common acclaim, Steve Parker who focused on retail research, and Kate Turner who conducted IT and telecoms research. All founders joined from Marplan, a market research company that ceased to exist just prior to ICM being set up.

FieldworkUK was set up as a face-to-face interviewing operation in 1999, followed by ICM Direct for telephone (and later, online data collection) in 2001.

ICM was sold to Creston Plc in 2008, after which the three founders left the business.

ICM Research re-branded in November 2014 to ICM Unlimited.

Research

ICM conducted polling research for media publications such as The Guardian, The Scotsman and The Sunday Telegraph. It was credited by the British Polling Council with the most accurate prediction of both the 1997 and 2001 General Elections, along with the 2010 General Election. Other notable correct predictions include the 2011 AV referendum which was correct to 1 decimal point and its published online and telephone polls before the 2016 EU referendum.

Like all polling companies, its prediction of the 2015 General Election was wrong, predicting a 1-point victory for Labour rather than the 7-point Conservative outcome.

The company has won various awards for its polling work, including the both the Innovation in Research Methodology 2013 and the Market Research Society Silver Medal for Best Paper in the International Journal of Market Research (IJMR) 2013, won by Martin Boon" for his paper Predicting Elections - a Wisdom of Crowds Approach"; Nick Sparrow won the Silver Medal in 2007 for "Developing reliable online polls" and with John Turner in 1995/96 for "Messages from the spiral of silence: developing more accurate marketing information in a more uncertain political climate".[4]

In 2014, research papers cover topics such as business banking, mobile commerce and retirement planning.[5]

ICM was involved with the polling of the Scottish constituency in regard to the independence referendum poll that occurred on 18 September 2014. The BBC published the research conducted by ICM, in addition to other polling firms, as part of its "poll tracker" in the lead-up to the vote which resulted in Scotland remaining part of the UK.[6]

gollark: You can just type @!0.
gollark: Excalamation mark zero two slashes musical note icon double lines down arrow E open curly bracket accented A thing 2 Y o umlaut one quarter upside down small F one quarter.
gollark: Although I would assume being shot for gayness is still rare, or there would be lots more deaths.
gollark: Oh, right, I suppose it compares favorably to some bad parts of the US.
gollark: I mean, you can go there. You can't retroactively have been born there, but meh.

References

  1. "Review of the Year: Market Research Leagues - Behavioural Stimulus". Marketing   via Questia (subscription required) . 14 December 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  2. Harrison, Lisa (2001). Political Research: An Introduction. Routledge. p. 50.
  3. "Officers / Members". British Polling Council. British Polling Council. June 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  4. Limited, AMA DataSet. "MRS Medal Papers | Market Research Society". www.mrs.org.uk. Retrieved 2016-07-26.
  5. "Media Centre". ICM Research. Creston Insight. 2014. Archived from the original on 23 July 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  6. "Scottish referendum poll tracker". BBC News. BBC. June 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2014.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.