marketing research true/false
A description of a construct at the theoretical level, stated in terms of unobservables is called the operational definition
false
If you contacted 1,000 participants and the response rate is 10%, then the number of complete surveys should be 10
false
In symbolic analysis, the interviewer step by step probes to the question of interest
false
In-depth-interviews are the most used qualitative research method in over 50% of the marketing research firms
false
Marketing research is a potential waste of resources for companies; instead of spending money on marketing research, managers might rely on their educated guesses
false
Surveys can be used to understand consumers' attitudes about products and services
false
Surveys cannot be used to collect information about consumer demographics and lifestyles
false
The cost of telephone interviews are typically higher than face to face interviews.
false
In order to answer "why" questions, one can use observation rather than questioning
false, asking is the best way to answer "why" questions
Intention or action component refers to a person's information about an object
false, cognitive or knowledge
Home audit approach and the mail diary method are the two ways to collect scanner data
false, consumer panel data
Selection bias, mortality, and testing effects bias the reliability of retail store audits
false, consumer panels
When conducting secondary research, you should first start with external sources, and then check the internal sources
false, internal first
Nominal level refers to both labeling and order
false, just labeling, ordinal is labeling and order
One of the main disadvantages of secondary data is its high cost
false, low cost is an advantage
Close-ended questions are more open to interviewer biases
false, open-ended
Among the standardized sources of data, retail store audits are the best source to understand the preferences of customers at an individual level
false, retail store audits do not let you see consumer preferences at an individual level, use consumer panels instead
The response rate in a self-administrated survey increases as the survey becomes longer
false, shorter
In a typical questionnaire, the questions related to demographics should be asked at the very beginning
false, the end
Qualitative methods can easily be used to replace surveys
false, they should be used to supplement them
In semi-structured or focused interviews, the respondent is given the maximum freedom to respond
false, this is true in in-depth interviews
One can conduct real time sales analysis by using retail store audits
false, to do this you would want a digitally enhanced tracker
A systematic process of recording behaviors without normally communicating with the people involved is called observation
true
All behaviors can be observed
true
All the discussed sources of standardized data might be used to understand the sales/shares of brands in the market
true
Asking more questions tend to decrease the response rates in questionnaires
true
Business intelligence is the bridge between end business users and information coming from different data sources
true
Causal research is the only research that can be used to prove that one variable causes another
true
Cognitive phenomena can't be observed
true
Data can be collected by either you or others in primary research
true
Descriptive research is used to describe an existing situation
true
Digitally enhanced trackers allow firms to understand its customers' non-purchase behavior over time
true
Experiments are the (almost) only ways to conduct causal research
true
Four advantages of surveys are their low cost, high accuracy, efficiency, and flexibility
true
If you do not have any contact information such as phone numbers, mailing, and email addresses, personal interviews become the feasible survey method
true
In causal research, hypotheses are very well-defined and very specific
true
In descriptive research, you ask questions like what, who, where, when, and how etc
true
In exploratory research, the methods are unstructured and mostly qualitative
true
In general, editing and coding is easier in close-ended questions compared to open-ended ones
true
In order to obtain meaningful results from a survey, one has to define the population of interest correctly
true
In telephone interviews, the interviewer must rely solely on verbal cues to judge the reaction and understanding of respondents
true
Intentions depend on buying habits and planning horizons
true
It is recommended to ask involving questions in the middle
true
Marketing intelligence is acquiring and analyzing marketing data to make better marketing decisions
true
Marketing research is the link between firm and market through information
true
Mental states used by individuals to structure their behaviors are called attitudes
true
One can use qualitative methods in order to get a better idea about things that can't be directly observed and/or measured
true
Surveys, interviews, focus groups, observations and/or experiments can be used to collect secondary data
true
The finding "50% of people in Oklahoma City drink beer once a week" is an example of descriptive research
true
The level of measurement increases from nominal level to the ratio level
true
The number of statistical/mathematical analysis that might be conducted become largest if one uses the ratio scale compared to all other three measurement scales
true
When the problem is ambiguous, you should use exploratory research. As you are aware of the problem, you should use descriptive research. When the problem is clearly defined, in order to find real causes of the problem, you should use causal research
true
When you have little prior knowledge of the problem at hand, you should use exploratory research
true
When direct questions fail, one might use projective techniques
true, projective techniques such as word association