Marketing Chapter 4
GNP
Gross National Product, value of all the goods and services produced in an economy plus the value of the goods and services imported, less the goods and services exported
Inflation
Increase in the overall level of prices over an extended period of time
Research Problem
must be defined after defining the deliverable, exactly what information is needed to help management in the situation, assessing the target market's response
Marketing Research Process
define research problem establish research design search secondary sources collect the data analyze the data report findings
exploratory research
discovery type of research. Clarify the research problem, develop hypotheses for testing in descriptive or causal research, gain additional insight to help in survey development or to identify research variables, answer the research question
open ended questions
encourage respondents to be expressive and offer the opportunity to provide more detailed and qualitative responses
in depth interview
unstructured interview with an individual who has been chosen based on some characteristic of interest often a demographic attribute. one on one
quantitative research
used to develop a more measured understanding using statistical analysis to assess and quantify the results
mechanical observation
uses a device to chronicle activity
probability sampling
uses a specific set of procedures to identify individuals from the population to be included in the research.
Macroeconomics
study of economic activity in terms of broad measures of output like gross national product as well as interaction among various sectors of an entire economy. Big picture perspective, broad economic trends
Microeconomics
study of individual economic activities ie: firm, household or prices
census sample
subgroup of the population selected for participation in the research
nonprobability sampling
the probability of everyone in the population being included in the sample is not identified. done with time and financial constraint
What defines good market research?
follows a well defined set of activities and does not happen by accident, enhances the validity of the information, is impartial and objective
focus group
a meeting either in person or online of 6-10 people that is moderated by a professional who carefully moves the conversation through a defined agenda in an unstructured forum
data collection
access and distribution of the survey to the respondent then recording the respondents responses and making the data available for anlysis
observational data
behavioral patterns among the population of interest. ie: retailers watch how people move through a store
How to determine what type of research is appropriate
benefit vs cost: benefits of doing the research and the cost to do that research time until decision: sometimes data is needed quickly Nature of decision: more strategic the decision, the more need for data availability of data: CRM can provide secondary data so not always necessary to collect primary
Marketing Intelligence
collecting, analyzing, and storing data from the macro environment on a continuous basis. Analyzing and interpreting environmental info and then developing strategies to take advantage of opportunities and deal with threats
Market Information Systems
continuing process of identifying, collecting, analyzing, accumulating, and dispensing critical info to marketing decision makers. Decide what info to collect, what info needs are of each decision maker, how does the system maintain privacy and confidentiality of sensitive info
Secondary data
data collected for some other purpose than the problem currently being considered
Primary Data
data collected specifically for the research question
secondary sources
government sources, market research organizations, internet
behavioral data
info about when, what, and how often customers purchase products and services as well as other customer touches
qualitative research
less structured and can employ methods such as surveys and interviews to collect the data, not meant to be used for statistical analyses
management research deliverable
management working with researchers and marketing decision makers, what does management want to do with the information
Consumer Price Index
measure of the avg amount paid for a market basket of goods and services by a typical US consumer in comparison to the avg paid for the same basket in an earlier base year
Market Research
methodical identification, collection, analysis, and deistribution of data related to discovering then solving marketing problems or opportunities and enhancing good decision making
closed ended questions
more precise and provide specific responses. allow for more quantitative analysis
Causal Research
tries to discover the cause and effect between variables
Descriptive Research
seeks to describe or explain some phenomenon, involves something going on in the marketplace and can include the following issues: identify the characteristics of our target market, assess competitor actions in the marketplace, determine how customers use our product, discover differences across demographic characteristics with respect to our products or our competitors
Demographics
statistical characteristics of human populations such as age or income used to identify markets. Help to identify markets and new opportunities
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