AI market research from real conversations.
Surveys tell you what people say when asked. BuzzSearch reads what they say when nobody is asking, on Reddit and TikTok, at scale.
Ask it something real
- Validate demand for a subscription for replacement water filters
- Who is the customer for cold plunge tubs, in their own words?
- What would make people switch away from their current CRM?
- Map the objections to buying refurbished electronics
Demand, verbatim
Real people describing real problems: the raw material of market research, without recruiting a panel.
Minutes, not weeks
A research run takes minutes. Ask the follow-up immediately, while the question is still hot.
Sources on every claim
No hallucinated statistics. Every finding links to the post, video, or comment it came from.
Strong and specific. Across r/MechanicalKeyboards and office-setup TikTok, 'quiet enough for calls / shared spaces' is a top-3 recurring need. People currently solve it with mods (o-rings, lubed switches, foam), and that workaround spending is demand for a pre-built answer.
“I just want thocky but my wife works next to me. I've spent $80 modding a $120 board.”
reddit.com/r/MechanicalKeyboards · 950 upvotes
How it works
Ask the research question
Demand, audience, objections, positioning. Phrase it like you would ask an analyst.
It reads the market
Live Reddit threads and TikTok videos with their full comment sections.
Decide with evidence
A sourced answer you can defend in the next meeting.
Go deeper on either platform: Reddit market research · TikTok trends · Buyer persona generator
Questions
How can AI do market research?
The research already exists: millions of people describing problems, comparing products, and reacting to trends in public. BuzzSearch reads that at a scale no human team can, and cites its sources.
How is this different from asking ChatGPT?
General assistants answer from training data and a handful of web results. BuzzSearch searches Reddit and TikTok live, reads full comment threads, and links every claim to a real conversation.
Is this a replacement for surveys and interviews?
It's the step before and after them: find what to ask, from real behavior, in minutes, then validate what you heard. Many teams find the sourced conversations answer the question outright.
What kinds of questions work best?
Demand validation, audience definition, pain-point discovery, competitive perception, and trend context. If people talk about it online, it's researchable.
What does it cost?
1 credit per research run. Your first is free, then packs from $5. No subscription.