INSTITUT EL AMOURI
Rechercher :

. Les études d'image et de notoriété
. Les études de positionnement
. Les études de satisfaction
. Les études d'usages, d'habitudes et d'attitudes
. Packaging tests
. Le pré-test et post-test publicitaires
. Les tests de produit et les dégustations
. Les tests de noms de marque
. Le Mystery Shopping
. Le Tracking
. Les études de prix
. Les études ethnographiques
. L'omnibus OMN'IEA
. Les Fast studies
. Les études médicales
. Présentation
. Nos techniques maîtrisées
. Notre logistique quali
. Nos techniques maîtrisées
. Notre logistique quanti




















. Ingénierie de la formation
. Séminaires et stages de formation
. Formation facteurs humains/ CRM
. Diagnostic organisationnel de l’entreprise
. Formation à la Qualité




Our CEO, Dr. Tahar El Amouri is member of the ESOMAR international network.

In all their interventions, the teams of the Institute rigorously respect the ESOMAR code of ethics approved by the International Chamber of Commerce and recognized all over the world as being the international standard of marketing researches and opinion polls.



 To have more informations about CCI / ESOMAR International code

ARTICLE 1 : BASIC PRINCIPLES
  1. Market research shall be legal, honest, truthful and objective and be carried out in accordance with appropriate scientific principles.
  2. Researchers shall not act in any way that could bring discredit on the market research profession or lead to a loss of public confidence in it.
  3. Market research shall be conducted with professional responsibility and conform to the principles of fair competition, as generally accepted in business.
  4. Market research shall be clearly distinguished and separated from non-research activities including any commercial activity directed at individual respondents (e.g. advertising, sales promotion, direct marketing, direct selling etc.).
ARTICLE 2 : HONESTY
  1. Market research shall not abuse the trust of respondents or exploit their lack of experience or knowledge.
  2. Researchers shall not make false statements about their skills, experience or activities, or about those of their organisation.
ARTICLE 3 : PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
  1. Respondents’ co-operation in a market research project is entirely voluntary at all stages. They shall not be misled when being asked for their co-operation.
  2. Researchers shall take all reasonable precautions to ensure that respondents are in no way harmed or adversely affected as a direct result of their participation in a market research project.
  3. Researchers shall not unjustifiably criticise other researchers.
ARTICLE 4 : TRANSPARENCY
  1. Researchers shall promptly identify themselves and unambiguously state the purpose of the research.
  2. Respondents shall be able to check the identity and bona fides of the researcher without difficulty.
  3. Researchers shall on request allow the client to arrange for checks on the quality of data collection and data preparation.
  4. Researchers shall provide their clients with appropriate technical details of any research project carried out for the clients.
  5. Researchers shall ensure that market research projects are designed, carried out, reported and documented accurately, transparently and objectively.
ARTICLE 5 : OWNERSHIP

Market research proposals and cost quotations are the property of the organisation or individual who developed them unless otherwise agreed .

ARTICLE 6 : RECORDING AND OBSERVATION TECHNIQUES

Respondents shall be informed before observation techniques or recording equipment are used for research purposes, except where these are openly used in a public place and no personal data are collected. If respondents so wish, the record or relevant section of it shall be destroyed or deleted. In the absence of explicit consent respondents’ personal identity shall be protected.

ARTICLE 7 : DATA PROTECTION AND PRIVACY

  1. Privacy policy Researchers shall have a privacy policy which is readily accessible to respondents from whom they are collecting data.
  2. Collection of data
    When collecting personal information from respondents researchers shall ensure that :
      • respondents are aware of the purpose of the collection;
      • and respondents are aware of any quality control activity involving re-contact.
  3. Use of data
    Personal information collected and held in accordance with this Code shall be:
      • collected for specified research purposes and not used in any manner incompatible  with these purposes;
      • adequate, relevant and not excessive in relation to the purpose of the research for which they are collected and/or further processed; and
      • preserved no longer than is required for the purpose for which the information was collected or further processed.

    Researchers shall ensure that respondents’ personal identity is withheld from the client. The researcher may communicate the respondent’s identifiable personal information to the client, unless national provisions require stricter regulations, under the following conditions :

      • the respondent has explicitly expressed this wish and/or
      • the respondent has given their explicit consent and
      • on the understanding that no commercial activity (as defined in Article 1d) will be directed at them as a direct result of their having provided information.

  4. Security of processing
    Researchers shall ensure that adequate security measures are employed in order to prevent unauthorised access, manipulation to or disclosure of the personal data.<br />
    If personal data are transferred to third parties, it shall be established that they employ at least an equivalent level of security measures

  5. Rights of the respondent
    Appropriate measures shall be taken to ensure that respondents understand and can exercise their rights.

      • not to participate in a market research project;
      • to withdraw from the market research interview at any time;
      • to require that their personal data are not made available to others; and to delete or to rectify incorrect personal data which are held on them.

  6. Transborder transactions
    Particular care shall be taken to maintain the data protection rights of individuals when personal data are transferred from the country in which they are collected to another country.
    When data processing is conducted in another country, all reasonable steps shall be taken to ensure that adequate security measures are observed and that the data protection principles of this Code are respected.
ARTICLE 8 : CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE

Researchers shall take special care when interviewing children and young people.
The consent of the parent or responsible adult shall first be obtained before interviewing children.

ARTICLE 9 : SHARED INTERVIEWS

Researchers shall inform clients if the work to be carried out for them is to be combined or syndicated in the same project with work for other clients, without disclosing the identity of such clients without their permission.

ARTICLE 10 : SUBCONTRACTING

Researchers shall inform clients, prior to work commencing, when any part of the work for them is to be subcontracted outside the researchers’ own organisation (including the use of any outside consultants). On request clients shall be told the identity of any such subcontractor.

ARTICLE 11 :PUBLISHING FINDINGS
  1. When reporting on the results of a market research project, researchers shall make a clear distinction between the findings, the researchers’ interpretation of these findings, and any recommendations based on them.
  2. Where any of the findings of a research project are published by the client, the latter shall be asked to consult with the researcher as to the form and content of publication of the findings. Both the client and the researcher have a responsibility to ensure that published results are not misleading.
  3. Researchers shall always be prepared to make available the technical information necessary to assess the validity of any published findings.
  4. Researchers shall not allow their name to be associated with the dissemination of conclusions from a market research project unless they are adequately supported by the data.
ARTICLE 12 : RESPONSIBILITY

Researchers have overall responsibility for ensuring that research is carried out in accordance with this Code, and for ensuring that clients and other parties to the research agree to comply with its requirements.

ARTICLE 13 : EFFECT OF SUBSEQUENT REDRESS FOR CONTRAVENTION

Subsequent correction and/or appropriate redress for a contravention of the Code, by the party responsible, is desirable but does not excuse the contravention.

ARTICLE 14 : IMPLEMENTATION

  1. The Code and the principles enshrined in it, should be adopted and implemented, nationally and internationally, by the relevant local, national or regional self-regulatory bodies. The Code should also be applied, where appropriate, by all organisations, companies and individuals involved and at all stages in a market research project.
  2. Marketers, researchers and clients should be familiar with the Code and with other relevant local self-regulatory documents on market research, and should familiarise themselves with decisions taken by the appropriate self-regulatory body. Requests for interpretation of the principles contained in this Code may be submitted to the ICC Code Interpretation Panel or to the ESOMAR Professional Standards Committee.
 
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