Chapter 5: Organizational and Ethical Issues
cross-functional team
Employee teams composed of individuals from various functional areas such as engineering, production, finance, and marketing who share a common purpose
Forecast Analyst
Employee who provides technical assistance such as running computer programs and manipulating data to generate a sales forecast.
Manager of Decision Support Systems
Employee who supervises the collection and analysis of sales, inventory, and other periodic customer relationship management (CRM) data.
ethical dilemma
Refers to a situation in which one chooses from alternative courses of actions, each with different ethical implications.
Research assistants
Research employees who provide technical assistance with questionnaire design, data analyses, and similar activities.
Custom research
Research projects that are tailored specifically to a client's unique needs.
Debriefing
Research subjects are fully informed and provided with a chance to ask any questions they may have about the experiment.
do-not-call legislation
Restricts any telemarketing effort from calling consumers who either register with a no-call list or who request not to be called.
Push poll
Telemarketing under guise of research.
Placebo
A false experimental effect used to create the perception that some effect has been administered
Research analyst
A person responsible for client contact, project design, preparation of proposals, selection of research suppliers, and supervision of data collection, analysis, and reporting activities.
syndicated services
A research supplier that provides standardized information for many clients in return for a fee
Idealism
A term that reflects the degree to which one bases one's morality on moral standards.
Relativism
A term that reflects the degree to which one rejects moral standards in favor of the acceptability of some action. This way of thinking rejects absolute principles in favor of situation-based evaluations.
Research generalist
An employee who serves as a link between management and research specialists. The research generalist acts as a problem definer, an educator, a liaison, a communicator, and a friendly ear.
Outside agency
An independent research firm contracted by the company that actually will benefit from the research.
Standardized research service
Companies that develop a unique methodology for investigating a business specialty area.
Pseudo-research
Conducted not to gather information for marketing decisions but to bolster a point of view and satisfy other needs.
conflict of interest
Occurs when one researcher works for two competing companies.
Business ethics
The application of morals to behavior related to the exchange environment
Confidentiality
The information involved in a research will not be shared with others.
informed consent
When an individual understands what the researcher wants him or her to do and consents to the research study
Human Subjects Review Committee
carefully reviews proposed research designs to try to make sure that no harm can come to any research participant
research suppliers
commercial providers of marketing research services
Frugging
fund raising under the guise of research
moral standards
principles that reflect beliefs about what is ethical and what is unethical
In-house research
research performed by employees of the company that will benefit from the research
advocacy research
research undertaken to support a specific claim in a legal action or represent some advocacy group
Sugging
selling under the guise of research
Spyware
software placed on a computer without consent or knowledge of the user