Insights

Research your market without the manual work

Use Template

By Nalvin

Use Template

Description

Nalvin helps you run structured market research by pulling signals from the web, competitor sources, and industry publications, then synthesizing findings into a clear brief. You define the questions, segments, or trends to investigate, and Nalvin returns a structured summary with sources, themes, and recommended next steps.

Supported Integrations

Templates are flexible by default. Nalvin automatically picks the right integrations based on what you’ve connected.

How to best use this template

Below are a few tips & tricks from the Nalvin team to get the most out of this template.

Start with a focused research question

Open-ended research produces noisy results. Start with a specific question—for example, how are competitors positioning AI for enterprise buyers—and build from there.

Use this to validate assumptions, not generate them

You can level this up by feeding Nalvin your existing hypotheses and asking it to find supporting or contradicting evidence. This makes the output more immediately useful for decision-making.

Define trusted source types upfront

Specify which types of sources matter most: analyst reports, competitor blogs, job postings, or review sites. This improves signal quality and reduces noise from lower-quality sources.

Ask for competing perspectives

Good market research surfaces disagreement. Have Nalvin present multiple perspectives when they exist, and flag where evidence is thin or conflicting.

Turn findings into a one-pager

End with a 3–5 point summary you can share in a meeting or Slack thread. Nalvin can format the output as a brief or decision memo so findings are immediately usable.

Start with a focused research question

Open-ended research produces noisy results. Start with a specific question—for example, how are competitors positioning AI for enterprise buyers—and build from there.

Use this to validate assumptions, not generate them

You can level this up by feeding Nalvin your existing hypotheses and asking it to find supporting or contradicting evidence. This makes the output more immediately useful for decision-making.

Define trusted source types upfront

Specify which types of sources matter most: analyst reports, competitor blogs, job postings, or review sites. This improves signal quality and reduces noise from lower-quality sources.

Ask for competing perspectives

Good market research surfaces disagreement. Have Nalvin present multiple perspectives when they exist, and flag where evidence is thin or conflicting.

Turn findings into a one-pager

End with a 3–5 point summary you can share in a meeting or Slack thread. Nalvin can format the output as a brief or decision memo so findings are immediately usable.