Title: V. Primary Quantitative Research
1V. Primary Quantitative Research
- Questionnaire development and design
- ADV 3501 Advertising Research
- Spring 04
2Housekeeping
- To read
- Chapters 13 and 14.
- To do
- Qualitative report 3/23
- Quantitative proposal 3/25 (email)
- Team (3/25, E-Mail)
- Individual (3/30, X-Credit In class)
- 3nd assignment (Questionnaire) 3/30
- Handouts
- 1030-1130 Monday 3/29, Weimer 2066.
- Coffee with Andrew Lynch account planner at
Arnold Communications.
3Revised schedule (Next 5 classes)
- 3/23 Questionnaire development and design
- 3/25 Team work day
- 3/30 Data collection, coding and sampling
- 4/1 Lab CSE E211
- 4/6 Catch-up, review
4Question development forms
- Closed-ended
- Pre-defined response categories
- Open-ended
- Encourages free response
5Closed-ended questions
- Recall Four levels of quantitative measurement
- Nominal, ordinal, interval, ratio.
- Which level is the appropriate that will
contribute to management decisions?
6Nominal level questions
- Appropriate for categorizing responses
- Main purpose is to describe patterns among the
sample (descriptive statistics) - Types
- Dichotomous (Gender Male __ Female __ )
- Multiple choice (Age 12-15 ___ 16-20___ )
- Checklist (Brands bought Dasani ___ Aquafina __
- Notice that a checklist is a set of dichotomous
questions
7Considerations for writing nominal questions
- Alternatives should be exhaustive
- Age 12-15 ___ 16-20 __ 45-65 ___
- Options should avoid response bias
- Length of list influences choice
8- Response alternatives should be typical for the
behavior - How many hours a day do you spend watching TV?
9Ordinal level questions
- Appropriate when the order of responses is
important (Rank) - Presents respondents with a series of options and
asks for an evaluation relative to other options
in the series. - Instructions must be explicit
- Place a 1 next to the attribute that you feel is
more important, a 2 next to the next most
important attribute, through 4. There can be no
ties and please use each number only once.
10Interval level questions
- Appropriate when responses to an explicit,
well-defined question is needed
11Interval questions Rating scale
- Explicit, well-defined continuum
- Frame of reference
- Non comparative How believable or unbelievable
would you say the commercial was? - Comparative How believable or unbelievable would
you say the commercial was compared to other beer
advertising that you have seen in the past month?
12Interval questions Rating scale
- Graphic and itemized scales
- Graphic
- Extremely Extremely
- Believable ____________________ Unbelievable
- Itemized
- Extremely believable
- Slightly believable
- Slightly unbelievable
- Extremely unbelievable
13Interval questions special types
- Semantic differential
- Bipolar adjectives anchors
- The ad was
- Funny __ __ __ __ __ Not funny
- Elegant __ __ __ __ __ Plain
- Stapel scale
- Semantic differential simplified
- Funny 5 4 3 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5
14Interval questions special types
- Likert scale
- Agreement/disagreement scale
15Considerations for writing interval questions
- Lead in questions to the alternatives should be
unbiased - Scales should be constructed (visually/verbally)
so that there are equal intervals between points
16Considerations for writing interval questions
- Correspondence between info requested and
response items - 5 to 10 response categories
- Odd number gives you a neutral choice
17Ratio level questions
- Appropriate when degree of behavior, attitude or
relative weight is important - Constant sum scale
- Generally dividing sums of 10 or 100
- Target object, respondents task and evaluation
criteria are VERY clear.
18- What percentage of your major credit card
purchases (200) do you put on each of these
major cards?
19Open-ended questions
- Open-ended questions are analyzed as nominal data
- Wording of the question should facilitate free
response - What are your feelings about PBS?
- Do you like PBS or not?
20Open-ended questions
- Use simple language
- Active voice and commonly used language
- Avoid leading questions
- Dont you believe SUVs are good for off-road
driving? - Avoid double-barreled questions
- What do you think about the ad and the brand?
21Open-ended questions
- Avoid ambiguity, be specific
- What kind of shampoo do you use?
- Avoid assumptions
- Explain what you like about PBS
- What, if anything, do you like about PBS?
- Justify requests for personal information
- classify responses
- Responses are strictly confidential
22V. Primary Quantitative Research
- Questionnaire design
- ADV 3501 Advertising Research
- Spring 04
23Elements of a questionnaire
- Introduction
- Purpose and goals
- Screener
- Filter
- Main body
- Questions that answer the informational needs of
the researcher - Classification
- Demographic, brand usage information
24Structure considerations
- How are we going to administer?
- Does it have a structure?
- Does it flow well?
- Easy to difficult
- General to specific
- Topic by topic
- Sensitive questions should be last
- Sequencing bias
25Structure considerations
- Visual appearance
- Interviewer script
- Interviewer directions
- Open, airy format
- Coding info.
- Clarity
- Clear directions
- Logical transitions (In no, go to)
- Conciseness
- SHORT!
26Questionnaire evaluation
- Compare informational needs and concepts to be
analyzed with the questionnaire. - Think about how the data are going to be analyzed
- Revise again for
- Objectives
- Clarity of questions and layout
27Pilot testing
- Active vs passive testing
- Uncovers problems with
- Administration
- Comprehension
- Terminology
- Response options
- Organization
- Sequencing
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30Please answer the following questions
- What thoughts and feelings went through your mind
as you read the ad? - In your opinion, do you think this ad is
effective for the targeted market?