Marketing Research: Chapter 5: Descriptive and Causal Research Designs
Telephone interviews
involve question-and-answer exchanges that are conducted via telephone technology.
Selecting the Appropriate Survey Method - Task characteristics
-Task difficulty -Required stimuli -Amount of information asked from respondents -Topic sensitivity
Ability to participate:
Ability of the interviewer and the respondent to participate in a question-and-answer interchange
Laboratory (lab) experiments:
Causal research designs conducted in artificial settings
Field experiments
Causal research designs that manipulate the independent variables in order to measure the dependent variable in a natural setting -Performed in natural settings
Variable:
Concept or construct that can vary or have more than one value •Demographics •Attitudes •Behaviors
Topic sensitivity
Degree to which a survey question leads the respondent to give a socially acceptable response
Knowledge level:
Degree to which selected respondents feel they have knowledge of or experience with the survey's topics
Control variables:
Do not vary freely or systematically with independent variables -Should not be changed as the independent variable is manipulated
Experiment:
Empirical investigation that tests for hypothesized relationships between dependent variables and manipulated independent variables
Types of Errors in Surveys
Errors can reduce the accuracy and quality of data collected by researchers. Survey research errors can be classified as being either sampling or nonsampling errors.
External validity:
Extent to which a causal relationship found in a study can be expected to be true for the entire target population
Internal validity:
Extent to which a research design accurately identifies causal relationships
Validity:
Extent to which the conclusions drawn from an experiment are true
Dependent variables
Measures of effects or outcomes that occur as a result of changes in levels of the independent or causing variable(s)
Extraneous variables:
Not measured or controlled and may affect the dependent variable
Incidence rate
Percentage of the general population that is the subject of the market research
Data generalizability
Projectable to the population represented by the sample in a study
Survey research methods
Research procedures for collecting large amounts of data using question-and-answer formats -Used in descriptive research designs
Willingness to participate:
Respondent's inclination or disposition to share his or her thoughts
Selecting the Appropriate Survey Method
Situational characteristics -Budget -Completion time frame -Quality requirements •Completeness of data
Causal research
Studies enabling researchers to assess cause-effect relationships between two or more variables
Independent variables:
Values are directly manipulated by the researcher
Nonresponse error
a systematic bias that occurs when the final sample differs from the planned sample. It occurs when a sufficient number of the preselected prospective respondents in the sample refuse to participate or cannot be reached.
Mall-intercept interviews
are face-to-face personal interviews that take place in a shopping mall. Mall shoppers are stopped and asked to complete a survey.
Computer-assisted telephone interviews (CATI)
are integrated telephone and computer system in which the interviewer reads the questions from a computer screen and enters respondents' answers directly into the computer program.
Mail panel surveys
are questionnaires sent to a group of individuals who have agreed to participate in advance.
Online surveys
are the most frequently used survey method today in marketing research. They collect data using the Internet.
Person-administered surveymethods
have a trained interviewer that asks questions and records the subject's answers
self-administered survey
is a data collection technique in which the respondent reads the survey questions and records his or her own answers without the presence of a trained interviewer.
in-home interview
is a face-to-face structured question-and-answer exchange conducted in the respondent's home
Wireless phone survey
is a method of conducting a marketing survey in which the data are collected using wireless phones
Drop-off survey
is a self-administered questionnaire that a representative of the researcher hand-delivers to selected respondents; the completed surveys are returned by mail or picked up by the representative.
Test marketing
is the use of experiments to obtain information on market performance indicators.
Response error
respondents have impaired memory or do not respond accurately. It is also termed as faulty recall.
Propensity
scoring can be used to adjust the results to look more like those a representative sample would have produced, but the accuracy of this procedure must be evaluated.
Mail surveys
typically are sent to respondents using the postal service