Product teams often know which sensory attribute they want to improve. A product may need more creaminess, more body, less sweetness, a different texture, or a richer mouthfeel.
The difficult question is not only whether consumers are more satisfied with the changed product on average. It is whether they perceive the change, whether it changes their satisfaction, and for which consumers this matters.
This is especially important when the attribute itself contributes to product quality. A small change in mouthfeel, sweetness, saltiness, or texture may make one group more satisfied, another group less satisfied, and have little effect on consumers who do not consistently notice the difference.
The project focused on bouillon mouthfeel. Could increasing thickness make the product more satisfying? And if so, for whom?
To answer that, we needed to study perception and satisfaction together: who noticed the difference, who became more satisfied, and where the real opportunity and risk of product change sat.