Title: Market Research
1Market Research
- Professor Lawrence Feick
- University of Pittsburgh
2Outline
- Definition what is market research?
- Examples of market research problems
- Who does market research?
- Glossary types of data, studies, variables
- Focus on focus groups, surveys, observation,
experiments - Sampling
- Market research in 1998
3What is market research?
- Collection and organization of information to be
used for marketing decision making
4Examples of market research problems
- Target market selection
- Product studies
- Pricing studies
- Distribution studies
- Promotion studies
- Sales research
5Who does market research?
- Managers or market researchers in the firm
producing the product (clients) - Market research firms (suppliers)
- Advertising agencies (agencies)
- Organizations that produce market research
information as a byproduct of other activities
6The Largest Market Research Firms 1997
7Market research supplierstypes of services
- Custom research
- Syndicated research
8A glossary of research terms
- Types of data
- Types of studies
- Type of variables
9Types of data
- Secondary data
- collected for another purpose
- there is always relevant data available
- sources of secondary data
- Primary data
- collected to answer the current question
10Types of studies
- Quantitative
- quantity data amounts, means, percentages
- surveys, experiments, observation methods
- Qualitative
- richness, depth of understanding
- directional, not quantified results
- depth interviews, focus groups
11Types of variables
- Independent variable
- a variable that has an effect on another
- a predictor or explanatory variable
- Dependent variable
- a variable that is affected by another
- Examples
- purchase patterns and income
12Focus on Focus Groups
13Focus groups
- Most frequently used qualitative method
- Involves moderated group discussion
- Typically 1.5 hours
- Example usage product concept testing, name tests
14Focus on Surveys
15Surveys
- Data collected by asking questions
- Art and science of asking questions
- Descriptive technique that yields
- averages potato chip consumption
- relationships is potato chip consumption related
to age? to income?
16Interviewer-administered questionnaires
- Personal interview surveys
- Telephone surveys
17Self-administered questionnaires
- Mail surveys
- Fax surveys
- Computer surveys
18Comparing methods of collecting survey data
19Radisson Hotels Customer Satisfaction Survey
20Radisson Hotels Customer Satisfaction Survey
21Architectural Digest 1998 Rate Card Survey First
page
22Architectural Digest 1998 Rate Card Survey Last
page
23Focus on Observation
24Observation
- Data collected by recording information
- Avoid bias from contact that influences responses
- UPC scanners, Nielson Medias black boxes, hidden
cameras
25Focus on Experiments
26Experiments
- Involve manipulated independent variables
- provide insight into cause and effect
- Data collected with surveys and observation
- Package design tests, ad copy tests, test markets
27Sampling an aside
- Population
- Census versus sample
- Types of samples
- probability samples
- nonprobability samples
- Sampling and statistics
28Market research in the late 1990slinked data
- Supermarkets loyalty cards
- purchase data from scanners
- demographic data from membership
- tailored promotions to members, neighborhoods
- Readers Digest direct mail system
- tailored mailings based on expected response and
expected profitability - uses purchase data, survey data, purchased lists
29Market research in the late 1990s single source
data
- Uses a consumer panel
- Combines
- demographics from surveys
- observed black box data
- observed scanner data
- Provides linkages among
- customer demos, media habits, purchases
- Split cable experiments
30Market research in the late 1990s brand
anthropology
- Developing new ways to understand brand meaning
in consumers - collages
- thick description
- in-home observation
31Market research the bottom line
- Market research defined--reprise
- Collection and organization of information to be
used for marketing decision making - Market research, to be useful,
- focuses on managers problems
- answers the right questions
- affects decision making