Can Ice Cream Research Survive the Journey Home?
Testing frozen products at home requires more than consumer feedback — it requires protecting the product experience from delivery to consumption. Inquiry combined home-use testing with cold-chain management to capture reliable insights in real-life conditions.

The use of just these few research techniques was enough to bring about a complete change in sales strategy
THE CHALLENGE
The taste test starts before the first spoonful
A leading ice cream manufacturer wanted to understand how consumers experienced a new ice cream concept in natural, everyday usage conditions. Unlike a central location test, the product needed to be tasted at home, after being stored and served by consumers themselves.
The key challenge was operational: ice cream is highly sensitive to temperature changes, so any break in the cold chain could affect texture, flavour perception, and overall product evaluation. The research design therefore had to combine reliable consumer insight with precise logistics, ensuring that each respondent received the product frozen, undamaged, and ready for testing.
The study was designed to assess both product performance and the practicality of testing frozen products in a home environment.
Capture spontaneous reactions immediately after consumption through an online diary.
- Evaluate overall liking, taste, texture, sweetness, creaminess, and flavour intensity.
- Understand consumption context: when, how, and with whom the product was eaten.
- Identify strengths and potential improvement areas before market launch.
- Compare product performance against competitors
Our Proposal
Focus on the data, not the budget
Inquiry followed a strict home-use test protocol that allowed consumers to try the product in realistic conditions while still providing structured, comparable feedback.
- Respondents were recruited according to predefined category usage and purchase criteria.
- Each participant received the ice cream at home and was instructed on storage and tasting conditions.
- Participants completed an online questionnaire and short consumption diary shortly after tasting.
- The study combined sensory evaluation with questions on packaging, perceived quality, purchase interest, and usage occasions.
The logistics process was treated as a critical part of the research methodology. For frozen products, delivery is not only an operational task but also a quality-control condition: if the product arrives softened or partially melted, the test result may reflect the delivery experience rather than the product itself.
- Delivery windows were scheduled in advance with respondents to reduce the risk of missed handovers.
- Products were packed in insulated containers suitable for maintaining frozen conditions during last-mile delivery.
- Dispatch, handover, and respondent receipt were coordinated between participants and interviewers to minimise time outside controlled storage.
- Clear instructions explained how to place the product in the freezer, when to taste it, and how to report any delivery issues.
This approach helped protect the cold chain and ensured that respondents evaluated the ice cream in a condition close to what they would expect after a high-quality retail purchase or e-commerce delivery.
EFFECTS
Clear tips for boosting sales
The study delivered actionable feedback on the product’s sensory profile and market potential, while also proving that a home-use test for frozen desserts can be successfully executed when logistics are built into the research design from the start.
- The results clear guidance on product strengths and optimisation opportunities against market competitors
- Consumer feedback reflected real home consumption rather than artificial testing conditions.
- The logistics setup reduced the risk of product deterioration before tasting
- The project created a replicable model for testing other frozen or temperature-sensitive FMCG products.
By combining consumer research expertise with carefully managed cold-chain delivery, Inquiry enabled the client to evaluate the product in the context that matters most i.e., the consumer’s own home.
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“Our client had the courage to ask the right questions, and that paved the way for growth. Sometimes, all it takes is looking at your business through the eyes of your users to discover a direction that was previously hidden.”
Agnieszka Górnicka, Chair of the Management Board of Inquiry sp. z o. o.

FAQ
Questions and Answers
Market research for small businesses requires methods to be carefully tailored to actual budgetary constraints – without compromising the quality of the data or the accuracy of the findings. Below, we have compiled the most common questions that arise when planning research on a limited budget, along with answers to help you understand how to gain valuable insights without significant expenditure and how to translate the results into concrete actions.
Yes. Inquiry offers specialised approaches to research on a tight budget – including short customer-based surveys, mini-IDIs and modular projects that enable you to quickly gain key insights without significant expenditure.
Yes. Inquiry regularly supports small and medium-sized service businesses (e.g. clinics, medical practices) in analysing the customer journey, assessing purchasing motivations and planning growth strategies.
Yes. Inquiry combines research findings with business data analysis, market benchmarks and operational recommendations. It provides insights that can be implemented straight away (e.g. changes to communication, pricing, positioning or the product range).
Yes. Depending on the scope, Inquiry can complete a project in a matter of days – particularly in the case of online surveys or customer-based analyses.
