Marketing Management: Chapter 4 Marketing Research
Observational data
Behavioral patterns amount population of interest -specifically popular among retailers
What techniques are used for obtaining exploratory research?
In-depth interviews and focus groups
Behavioral data
Information about when, what, and how often customers purchase product and services as well as other customer "touches" - This data is more reliable than surveys
What are the disadvantages of secondary data?
- Data will not fit the research problem exactly - It is not current - Its validity cannot be proven out-right
What are the three basic types of research?
- Exploratory - Descriptive - Causal
"Good" Market Research...
- Follows a well-defined set of activities and does not happen by accident - Enhances the validity of information - Is impartial and objective
What are some sources used for obtaining secondary data?
- Government sources - Market Research Organizations - The internet
What are the advantages of secondary data?
- It's a fast way to get information - Relatively less expensive than primary data
Marketing Research Process
1. Define the research problem 2. Establish research design 3. Search secondary sources 4. Collect the data 5. Analyze the data 6. Report the findings
What are the steps involved in defining a research problem?
1. Defining management research deliverable 2. Define the research problem
Census
A comprehensive record of each individual in a population of interest
Focus group
A meeting of 6-10 people that is moderated by a professional who carefully moves the conversation through a defined agenda in an unstructured, open format. Participants are usually selected on the basis of some criteria (i.e. current customer who have specific demographic characteristics)
Establish the Research Design
A plan of action for attacking the research problem. It consists of defining a type of research, nature of the data, nature of data collection, information content and sampling plan
Sample
A subgroup of the population selected for participation in research
Data Collection
Access and distribution of the survey to the respondent, then recording the respondent's responses and making data available for analysis. - Most costly - Data collection can be bias - Greatest potential for error exists
In-Depth interviews
An unstructured interview with an individual who has been chosen based on some characteristic of interest, often a demographic attribute. These are one-on-one and often used to help formulate other types of research
Management Research Deliverable
Answers the question "What does management want to do with this research?" An example is if McDonald's wants to if a new advertising campaign will increase sales for their burger
Research Problem
Answers the question "What information is needed to help management in this situation?" This can be multi-part (i.e. textbook Harley Davidson example)
Analyse the Data
Data analysis will lead to findings that address the research questions
Secondary data
Data collected for other purposes than the problem currently being considered
Primary data
Data collected specifically for this research question
Exploratory Research
Discovery - Clarifies the research problem - Develops hypothesis for testing descriptive or casual research - Gain insight to help in survey development - Answer the research question
Open-ended questions
Encourage respondents to be expressive and offers the opportunity to provide more detailed, qualitative responses - Used in exploratory research
Qualitative Research
Less structured and often collected via surveys and interviews. It is not meant to be used for statistical analysis
Define the Research Problem
Market research can be used to help managers identify and deal with an issue
Report FIndings
Must be well-presented in order to benefit managers. A key section is the executive summary, which is a 1-2 page document that summarizes the analysis and essential findings
Closed-ended questions
Precise and provide specific responses. Allow for quantitative analysis and is often used in descriptive research
What are the two basic approaches to sampling?
Probability and non-probability
Descriptive Research
Seeks to describe or explain a phenomenon (identifies association between variables) - Identifies characteristics of our target market - Assess competitor actions in the market place - Determines how customers use our product - Discover differences across demographic characteristics *includes secondary data, surveys and observation
Surveys
Structured questionnaires given to a sample group of individuals representing the population of interest and are intended to solicit specific responses to explicit questions
What techniques are used to gather data for descriptive research?
Surveys, behavioral data and observation data
Market Research
The methodical identification, collection, analysis and distribution of data related to discovering then solving marketing problems or opportunities and enhancing good decision making
Non probability sampling
The probability of everyone in the population being included in the sample is not identified. - This sample is used when there is time or financial constraints - Limits the ability to perform statistical analysis
Casual research
Tries to discover the cause and effect between variables i.e. Does an increase in Harley-Davidson advertising directed towards men lead to an increase in motor cycle sales?
Quantitative Research
Used to develop a measured understanding using statistical analysis to assess and quantify results
Mechanical observation
Uses a device to chronicle activity. I.E. Turnstiles for recording people coming in an out of an arena, or traffic counters to count cars. More invasive deices include eye camera to track people looking at an ad or thermal cameras to see if they enjoyed an ad.
Probability sampling
Uses a specific set of procedures to identify individuals from a population to be included in the research. i.e. Bank of America example (textbook)