1 / 18

Marketing research and information

Marketing research and information. Chapter five. Why do marketers need to do research?. What Good Information does for Marketers. Helps gain a competitive edge. Reduces the risks of marketing actions and strategy implementation. Provides key consumer insights.

faunus
Download Presentation

Marketing research and information

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marketing research and information Chapter five

  2. Why do marketers need to do research?

  3. What Good Information does for Marketers • Helps gain a competitive edge. • Reduces the risks of marketing actions and strategy implementation. • Provides key consumer insights. • Verifies intuitions and certain types of evidence. • Measures market performance. • Improves overall organizational effectiveness.

  4. Secondary Data or information that has been gathered and published by other parties. Publications, websites, directories. Primary Data or information that is gathered directly from the subjects of the research. Interviews, focus groups, observation, surveys, experiments. Types of Data

  5. Internal Data • Internal databases store information (or in some cases paper files) • Collected from different functions within the company • The challenge is to integrate and make information usable (data-mining) • Types of information that may be useful includes: • customer’s names, addresses, phone #, • past purchases, responses to previous offers • Demographic characteristics • Intranet • A company’s private decision support system that uses Internet standards and technology.

  6. Video Burke Inc. Methodologies

  7. What’s Happening? • Mid-term exam time and location • Term projects – proposals due on Monday. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N0gb9v4LI4o

  8. What is marketing research? • The systematic design, collection, analysis, and reporting of data relevant to a specific situation facing an organization

  9. Exploratory research:marketing research to gather preliminary information that will help define problems and suggest hypotheses Focus group discussions, personal interviews Gathering of secondary data Types of Marketing Research • Descriptive research: marketing research to better describe marketing problems, situations, or markets • Surveys, observational studies • Causal research: marketing research to test hypotheses about cause-and-effect relationships between variables of interest. • Experiments in controlled conditions

  10. Discussion Question Question1 – page 134

  11. Observational Research Fisher-Price set up an observation lab in which it could observe the reactions of little tots to new toys.

  12. 1 2 3 4 The Research Process

  13. Research Process: Stage 1 defining the problem • Problems are Often Opportunities • Don’t Confuse Symptoms with the Real Problem • Exploratory Research • Descriptive research • Causal research • Focus group interview

  14. Research Process: Stage 2Planning the research design • Research Using Primary Data • Surveys • Observation • Experiments • Research Designs Using Secondary Data (exhibit 5.4)

  15. Research Process: Stage 3Sampling, Collecting & Analyzing data • Sampling Data • Three questions: • Who is to be sampled? • How big should the sample be? • How should the sample be selected? • Sample Selection: Probability Sample vs. nonprobability sample • Collecting Data • Pre-testing • Analyzing Data • Editing & Data analysis

  16. Drawing Conclusions Follow-up:get feedback! Research Process: Stage 4drawing conclusions and follow-up

  17. Typical Problems in Wording Questions PROBLEM SAMPLE QUESTION EXPLANATION Leading question Ambiguous question Unanswerable question Two questions in one Consumer is led to make statement favoring Wendy’s hamburgers What is meant by word regularly-once a day, once a month, or what? Who can remember the answer? Does it matter? How do you answer if you eat Wendy’s hamburgers but not chili? Why do you like Wendy’s fresh meat hamburgers better than those of competitors made with frozen meat? Do you eat at fast-food restaurants regularly? Yes No What was the occasion for your eating your first hamburger? Do you eat Wendy’s hamburgers and chili? Yes No (continued)

  18. Typical Problems in Wording Questions PROBLEM SAMPLE QUESTION EXPLANATION Non-exhaustive question Nonmutually exclusive answers Where do you live? At home In dormitory What is your age? Under 20 20-40 40 and over What do you check if you live in an apartment? What answer does a 40-year old check?

More Related