Title: The Nature of Marketing Research
1The Nature of Marketing Research
2Market Research Defined
- MR is
- the systematic and objective search for and
analysis of information relevant to the
identification and solution of any problem in the
field of marketing. textbook - the function which links the consumer,
customer, and public to the marketer through
information American Marketing Association
3Goal of Market Research
- Good marketing research leads to better
decisions - Research is an aid to decision-making, not a
substitute
4Good Marketing Research is
Clearly Defined Be able to state the goals and
objectives. Easily Completed Respondents must
be able to understand and follow your
questions. Smoothly processed Data must be
clean and validThoroughly Analyzed Useful,
reliable results through thorough
analysis. Timely The time between planning and
completion must produce results in time to make
a difference to your organization.
SOURCE The hows and whys of survey research,
SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
5SOURCE The hows and whys of survey research,
SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
6Areas for Survey Research
SOURCE The hows and whys of survey research,
SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
7Popular Research Questions
SOURCE The hows and whys of survey research,
SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
8Broad Categories of Research
- Fundamental / Basic / Pure Research
- Creates new understanding
- Applied / Decisional Research
- Uses existing knowledge to do something
- Primary Research
- New data generated by researcher through a survey
or experiment - Secondary Research
- Existing information gathered from published
sources, like reports, journals, periodicals,
government reports
9Types of Marketing Surveys
- 1 - Market Description Surveys To determine the
size and relative market share of the market.
Such studies provide key information about market
growth, competitive positioning and tracking
share of market. - 2 - Market Profiling-Segmentation Surveys To
identify who the customers are, who they are not,
and why they are or are not your customers. This
is often a descriptive market segmentation and
market share analysis - 3 - Stage in the Purchase Process / Tracking
Surveys Where is the customer in the adoption
process? This information shows market Awareness
Knowledge Intention Trial Purchase
Repurchase of the product. - 4 - Customer Intention - Purchase Analysis
SurveysDirected at understanding the current
customer. What motivates the customer to move
from interest in the product to actual purchase?
This is key to understanding customer conversion,
commitment and loyalty. - 5 - Customer Attitudes and Expectations Surveys
Does the product meet customer expectations?
What attitudes have customers formed about the
product and/or company. Used to direct
advertising and improve customer conversion,
commitment and loyalty. - 6 - Customer Trust - Loyalty Retention Analysis
SurveysEspecially for high priced consumer goods
with long decision and purchase processes (time
from need recognition to purchase), and depth of
consumer attitudes formed about the product
and/or company.
10Types of Marketing Surveys
- 7 - New Product Concept Analysis Surveys Concept
test studies are appropriate in the initial
screening of new product concepts. Likes and
dislikes about the concept and evaluation of
acceptability and likelihood of purchase are
especially useful measures. - 8 - New Product Acceptance and Demand Surveys
(Conjoint Analysis) Primarily for estimating
demand for new products that can be described or
have been developed in drawing or concept, but
have not yet been developed physically. Develops
develop market share estimates of market
potential for the alternative potential products. - 9 - Habits and Uses SurveysDirected at
understanding usage situations, including how,
when and where the product is used. Habits and
uses studies sometimes include a real or virtual
pantry audit. - 10 - Product Fulfillment Surveys (Attribute,
Features, Promised Benefits) Evaluation of the
products promised bundle of benefits (both
tangible and image). Are expectations created for
the product by advertising, packaging and the
produce appearance fulfilled by the product? - 11 - Product Positioning Surveys (Competitive
Market Position) A Best Practices study of
How does the market view us relative to the
competition? Competitive positioning analyses
often compare the attributes and benefits that
make up the product using multidimensional
preference and scaling analysis. 12 - Brand
Equity Analysis Surveys What is psychological
value that a brand holds in the market place?
Brand equity is a composite of brand awareness,
brand quality, brand associations and brand
loyalty measures.
11Types of Marketing Surveys
- 13 - Advertising Value Identification and
Analysis SurveysAdvertising value analysis
focuses on mapping the hierarchical attributes,
benefits and values that are associated with and
portrayed by an advertisement. Means-end analysis
is often part of this type of study. - 14 - Advertising Message Effectiveness Surveys
(Media and Message)Message effectiveness testing
identifies the impressions, feelings, and
effectiveness in moving the respondent to a
desired goal (increased awareness, more product
information, trial, repeat purchase). - 15 - Sales Force Effectiveness SurveysA
combination of measures that focus on the sales
activities, performance and effectiveness in
producing the desired and measurable effect or
goal. Often measured as a 360 degree survey
completed by the sales person, the client
(evaluating the sales call) and the supervisor
responsible for evaluating the sales person. - 16 - Sales Lead Generation SurveysSales lead
generation surveys for (1) assuring timely use
and follow-up of sales leads, (2) qualifying
sales leads (thereby saving valuable sales force
time) and (3) providing more effective tracking
of sales leads. - 17 - Customer Service SurveysAkin to customer
satisfaction surveys, but focus in detail on the
actual customer service that was received, the
process involved in receiving that service and
the evaluation of the participants in the service
process.
12Types of Marketing Surveys
- 18 - Customer Service Representative (CSR)
Surveys Attitudes, Burnout, Turnover and
Retention Customer Service Representatives hold
attitudes that may reflect on their job related
activities and interfaces including (1) the
allocation of time (2) solutions to solving
customer needs (3) information or tools to help
improve their job (4) information and best
practices (5) the evaluation of internal
departments that help customers. - Customer Service Representatives must conform to
corporate policies and at the same time deal with
problems that are sometimes unsolvable. CSR often
exhibit frustration, burnout and high turnover.
Surveys focus on retention analysis and reducing
costs and increasing the quality of customer
relationships. - 19 - Sales Forecasting and Market Tracking
SurveysSales forecasting and market tracking
studies can take a number of forms and
methodologies, including expert opinion (experts
estimate the market), judgmental bootstrapping
(rule based decisions derived from experts that
describe how to use available secondary market
information), conjoint analysis (estimation of
consumer intentions based on product attributes
that are important in the decision), and
intentions evaluations (consumer self reported
intentions of future purchases) are to be made. - 20 - Price Setting Surveys and Elasticity of
Demand AnalysisPrice surveys estimate the
elasticity of demand and show optimal price
points, including prices too low or too high.
Price surveys may estimate the demand for
different product or service segments, or
different usage situations. - Source Twenty Different Types of Surveys for
"Market Analysis", Qualtrics.com Survey
University.
13Objectivity in Research
- Objectivity means gathering data without bias
- Slanting research to arrive at predetermined
results is a breach of professional ethics - One-sided research to prove a prior opinion is a
waste of time and resources
14Advocacy SurveysNot Objective
- Advocacy surveys are typically sent out by
political causes and candidates - Questions are worded so that everyone gives the
desired response - Goal is raising money instead of research
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19What Market Researchers Do
- Provide informational and analytical inputs for
- Planning future marketing activity
- Controlling present marketing operations
- Evaluating marketing results
- On research projects, they
- Specify the information to be gathered
- Design methods for collecting the information
- Manage and implement the data collection process
- Analyze the results
- Communicate the findings and implications
20Stages of a Research Project
SOURCE The hows and whys of survey research,
SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
21Planning Steps
- Step 1 Planning and survey design
- Define your research objectives and goals
- Before you get started, you need to determine
your goals, budget and resources in terms of
money and expertise. No survey project should
move very far forward without a clear statement
of the purpose and goals of the survey. If you
dont know why you and your organization want to
conduct the survey, you may be collecting
unnecessary data. - Always write out explicit and specific goals so
you can refer to them and share them with your
organization. The objectives should be clear.A
goal such as, We want to understand why
customers of ABC Bank are satisfied is too
vague. Focus on the particular issues that you
wish to explore and measure. Satisfaction with
service, interest rates offered, competitive
offers, hours of operation, etc. Clear objectives
lead to easier formulation of questions.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
22Planning Steps
- Outline your research
- Plan for the Results Be prepared to know which
statistics youll need to run for your analysis,
along with what initial relationships and
patterns you expect to find. - Establish a project budget
- Mapping an action plan helps you justify your
study and budget. It also helps you determine the
scope and size of your survey. Before beginning a
study, many organizations must prove that the
research has a viable chance of producing
results. Be sure to askHow much will the
survey cost? What can I do to reduce costs
change methods? - How long will it take to complete the survey and
produce results? - Plan your schedule
- Assume your survey will take longer than you
expect. Reduce the total time dramatically by
using existing questionnaires and electronic
methods of data collection. Dont shortchange
the time needed for questionnaire development,
pre-testing and analysis. Dont shortchange the
reporting end of the process, which is often
rushed. Anticipate the tables and graphics to be
constructed to get a head start on the tasks.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
23Planning Steps
- Define the population
- You need to consider your population before you
can develop questions and format your survey.
Some things to consider are your populations
age, education, attention span, language level. - Estimate the required sample size
- If the sample size is too small, you risk not
finding any significant results and will have to
start over. On the other hand, if the sample size
is too big, you will waste money because a
smaller sample size would be sufficient. - Select a method of data collection
- As you plan a survey, you need to determine which
method or methods you should use to collect
data from respondents. Telephone, Mailed
questionnaire, Face-to-face interview, E-mail, or
other electronic methods. Sometimes, it takes a
combination of methods to get the best results. - The method you use depends on factors such as
- The population to be surveyed
- The sampling methodology
- The types of questions to be asked
- The resources (funds and personnel available)
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
24Planning Steps
- Determine how you will use the results
- One part of the planning stage is thinking about
how you will use the results. Some things to
consider include - The research answers you will report on
- The type of analysis you hope to do
- What reports you will write
- How the information will be used
- Often, people want to use the information they
collect to change policies, practices, products
or procedures to increase their effectiveness. - For example Ask commuters about their potential
use of a new subway line if your survey is
intended to determine potential demand for a new
subway line.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
25Planning Steps
- Write the questions
- The key to a successful survey is to ensure that
your questions address the research question and
are concise and easy-to-understand. - Poor questions will reduce the value of the data
gathered. - Use well-written and tested pre-existing
questions as much as possible, especially from
surveys done in your specific industry or topic
area. No question is usable in every situation
so you have to examine the questions for your
particular survey research. - Pretest questions to determine if they are
correct for your survey.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
26Planning Steps
- Design the questionnaire
- Poorly formatted surveys can deter people from
responding to your survey. Design your
questionnaire to - minimize measurement error and
- reduce non-response.
- Your questionnaire should be constructed so that
- Respondents are interested and motivated to
complete it - The questions are understood i.e., read
easily, correctly, thoroughly - Respondents understand how to respond to each
question and move through the questionnaire
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
27Planning Steps
- Pretest the questionnaire
- A pretest is a formal review of a questionnaire
and the associated data collection methodology. - By conducting a pretest, you can
- Find problematic questions and get the
opportunity to rewrite them - Estimate the cost of data collection
- Estimate the response rate and thus the
necessary sample size - Estimate the results on key variables
- Determine interviewer effectiveness
- Use 30 - 75 respondents for a pretest. The
pretest population should be similar in
characteristics to the population of your actual
survey.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
28Planning Steps
- Step 2 Data collection
- Once you have planned and designed your survey,
you can begin collecting the data. In order for
this step in the survey research process to be a
success, you need to collect clean, unbiased and
up-to-date data in an efficient manner. - Methods of data collection
- There is no best method of data collection. Each
has its strengths and weaknesses. - For example,
- Mail surveys relatively low costs, and low
response rates requires considerable follow-up. - E-mail even lower cost, but cant be used for the
general population, not everyone has e-mail. - Face-to-face interviews are prohibitively
expensive, but the lengthiest questionnaires can
be used. - Electronic methods, in general, can be used to
collect data more rapidly.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
29Planning Steps
- Failure from non-response
- Failure to collect data from a large portion of
those contacted results in a problem called
non-response. Non-response, by itself, should
not be a cause for concern. However if
non-respondents differ from respondents in
relevant ways, you have to account for the bias.
Typically this involves weighting results to
match the population values. - Failure from item non-response
- Another problem you might encounter in the data
collection stage is item non-response. - This is when people who do respond, fail to
answer an individual item. This can be avoided
completely through electronic surveys. You can
use software that creates rules that wont allow
respondents to continue if they dont answer a
question.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
30Planning Steps
- Step 3 Data access, preparation and
managementGet the data ready for analysis - When examining a new data set, perform data
verification and cleaning, which helps ensure
that your analytical results are accurate. For
example, if you have gender data in which 1 is
for male and 2 is for female, your data
shouldnt have 3 as a response. - If your respondents are entering in their own
data through electronic surveys, you can set up
rules that only accept approved responses, such
as 1 or 2. - Verify your data so that you dont analyze bad
data and get bad results. - Set up the codebook
- During the data preparation and management step,
youll also want to set up codebook
information, which is any variable definition
information. This includes variable names,
variable formats and descriptive variable labels
(data such as gender or income level) and value
labels (numbers assigned to data, such as 1 for
male, 2 for female).
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
31Planning Steps
- Step 5 Data analysis
- Data analysis lets you extract useful information
from your collected data so you can make informed
decisions. You will better understand your
research problem with more detailed analysis. - Different statistical procedures are appropriate
depending on what you want to learn and the level
of measurement of the variable. - Keep track of what you do the analyses you run
and how you do them. When performing complex
analyses, keep a record of the procedures you
perform and the way you create new variables.
This record will help you reconstruct your
analyses if any questions arise when you write
your report.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
32Planning Steps
- Descriptive data analysis
- First understand your data. Descriptive data
analysis lets you see whats going on. For
example, a simple data analysis allows you to
discover the satisfaction level of your average
customer. - In descriptive data analysis, you want to asking
questions such as Whats the distribution of my
data? or, How did my respondents answer each
question? - The goals of descriptive data analysis are to
- Summarize your data
- Get an accurate description of the variables of
interest
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
33Planning Steps
- Advanced data analysis
- Inferential data analysis helps you predict
future outcomes, such as customers most likely to
be satisfied or employees most likely to leave
your organization. - Find out which predictors are important and
determine the level of importance. For example,
if you are trying to predict customer
satisfaction, you can determine the importance of
factors such as the length of time a person has
been a customer, the impact of various
promotions, geographic location and more.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
34Planning Steps
- Step 6 Reporting
- Once you have analyzed your data, you need to
report the results. Create easy-to-understand
results from your data analysis that decision
makers can quickly understand and act upon. - Highlight the information you want to emphasize.
You want to get your point across clearly with
reports that are easy to read and easy to
interpret. - If your audience doesnt understand the point,
then your thorough analysis is wasted.Generate
a Powerpoint Summary of your research.Also
generate a Microsoft Word document with
tablesUse software that lets you create
interactive, customizable reports.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
35Planning Steps
- Step 7 Deployment
- Dont do the research if you are not going to
deploy or take action on the results. - Take action on the results
- Let your audience interact with the reports.
- Share information easily
- Allow your clients to view your reports using a
standard Web browser.
SOURCE Edited from The hows and whys of survey
research, SPSS Technical report WSRIWP-0402
36Benefits of Marketing Research
- Discover options available to managers facing
decisions - Reduce the risk of a terrible decision
- But Marketing results will never be 100 certain
- Ideas, strategies, and tactics cannot be proved
before implementation - Not all information is equally valuable
- Dont waste large amounts of time and resources
on information that isnt as valuable
37Your Research Process???
38Ethical Considerations in Treatment of Subjects
and Respondents
- Deceptive practices, Invasion of privacy, and
Lack of consideration. - Unrealized promise of anonymity
- Use of disguised questionnaires and interviews
- Faked sponsor identification
- Implication of required response
- Lying about research procedure
- Faked testing in experimental research
- Promise of undelivered compensation
- Sales solicitation
- The following are examples of invasions of
privacy - Observation without informed consent
- Questions concerning people other than the
subject - Projective techniques
- Personal classification data
- Full disclosure and use of optional
participation
- All of the following practices exhibit a lack of
consideration for subjects or respondents - Overuse of public (i.e., research placing an
unreasonable demand on the time and energy of
respondents) - Research in subject areas with a depressing
effect on respondents - Subjects of no immediate interest to respondents
- Poor interviewers
- Contacts at inconvenient times
- No mention of procedural aspects
- Failure to debrief
- Failure to present subject with option to
discard results upon completion - Of specific concern to many are excessive
interviewing, lack of consideration for and abuse
of respondents, and the use of marketing research
as a sales ploy (McDaniel, Verille, Madden,
1985).
39Overview
- Give the big picture of the research process
- Explain how all the individual topics fit together
- Develop into the Research Report
40Most Common Research Studies
- Qualitative
- Product / service tests
- Brand / advertising tracking
- New product screening tests
- External market volume / share
- Advertising pre-test
- Marketing strategy
- Customer Satisfaction
- Name / packaging tests
- New product forecasting
- Pricing
- Purchase / usage panels
- Demographics
- Market information systems
- Database marketing
- Sales / marketing mix models
- Product Category Management
41Sources of Marketing Research
- Internal research staff
- Commercial research firms, syndicated studies
- Gartner selling same report to many clients
- Commercial research firms, commissioned reports
- Advertising agencies
- Media viewing habits, testing advertising
concepts - Trade associations
- Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, crash
tests - Government and nonprofit organizations
- Federal census, demographic data