Chapter 4: Research Design
experimental group
a group that has been exposed to a change in the independent variables
control group
a group whose subjects have not been exposed to the change in the independent variable
research design
a master plan that specifies the methods that will be used to collect and analyze the information needed for the research project
posttest
a measurement of the dependent variable that is taken after changing the independent variable
pretest
a measurement of the dependent variable that is taken prior to changing the independent variables
experimental design
a procedure for devising an experimental setting so that a change in a dependent variable may be attributed solely to the change in an independent variable
causality
a relationship in which one or more variables affect one or more other variables
case analysis
a review of available information about one or more former situations to gain understanding of a current research problem with similar characteristics
simulated test markets (STM)
a test market in which a limited amount of data on consumer response to a new product is ged into a model containing certain assumptions regarding planned marketing programs, which generates likely product sales volume
electronic test markets
a test market in which a panel of consumers has agreed to carry identification cards that each consumer presents when buying goods and services
standard test market
a test market in which the firm tests the product or marketing mis variables through the company's normal distribution channels
controlled test market
a test market that is conducted by outside research firms that guarantee distribution of the product through respecified types and numbers of distributors
experiment
a type of study in which one or more independent variables are manipulated to see how one or more dependent variables are affected, while also controlling the effects of additional extraneous variables
extraneous variables
all of the variables other than the independent variables that may ave an effect on the dependent variables
internal validity
an experimental study is the extent to which the researcher is certain that a change in a dependent variable is actually due to the independent variable
test marketing
conducting an experiment or study in a field setting to evaluate a new product or service or other elements of the marketing mix
sample surveys
cross-sectional studies whose samples are designed in such a way as to be representative of a specific population at a pre-determined margin of error
laboratory experiments
experiments in which one or more independent variables are manipulated and measures of the dependent variable are taken in an artificial setting for the purpose of controlling all extraneous variables that may affect the dependent variable
field experiments
experiments in which the independent variables are manipulated and the measurements of the dependent variables are taken in their natural setting
exploratory research is used to
gain background information, to define terms, to clarify problems and hypotheses, and to establish research priorities
experience surveys
gathering information from those thought to be knowledgeable on the issues relevant to the research problem (also called key-informant or lead-user surveys)
cross-sectional studies
measure units from a sample of the population at one point in time
before-after with control group
randomly dividing subject of the experiment into two groups
longitudinal studies
repeatedly measure the same sample units of a population over a period of time
3 criteria for selecting test-market cities:
representativeness, degree of isolation, ability to control distribution and promotion
continuous panels
samples of respondents who agree to answer the same questions at periodic intervals
panels
samples of respondents who have agreed to provide information or answer questions at regular intervals
brand-switching studies
studies that examine the extent that consumers are loyal to one brand
A/B testing
testing two alternatives (A and B) to see which one performs better
external validity
the extent to which a researcher can be certain that a relationship observed between independent and dependent variables during an experiment would occur under real-world conditions
descriptive research
undertaken to collect data to examine the characteristics of consumers and/or markets
exploratory research
unstructured, informal research that is undertaken to gain background information about the general nature of the research problem
causal research
used to measure causality in relationships, such as "if x, then y"
independent variables
variables over which the researcher has control and wishes to manipulate to measure the effect on the dependent variable
dependent variables
variables that are measured in response to changes in independent variables
discontinuous panels (omnibus panels)
vary questions from one panel measurement to the next