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Marketing Research MKT514J1

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To outline and describe the nature of observation ... Brand substitution and cannibalism. Family brand buying. Consumer Panel Uses ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marketing Research MKT514J1


1
Marketing ResearchMKT514J1 J2Lecture
8Observation Research
  • Christine Wightman
  • School of Management

2
Objectives
  • To outline and describe the nature of observation
  • To understand the benefits and limitations of
    observation studies
  • To describe the main types of machine and human
    observation studies and apply these to marketing
    problems
  • To understand the purpose, benefits and
    limitations of consumer panels, retail audits and
    mystery shopping
  • To discuss the trend towards ethnographic studies
    in market research

3
Observation Research Defined
Systematic process of recording behavioural
patterns of people, objects and occurrences
without questioning or communicating. Watching
for outcomes.
4
Observation
  • Watching for outcomes
  • Outcome must be overt
  • Motivation and attitudes unobservable
  • Outcome occurs frequently
  • Long waits boring and time consuming
  • Outcome happens quickly
  • Long processes difficult expensive

5
Approaches to Observation Research
  • natural vs contrived
  • disguised vs undisguised
  • structured vs unstructured
  • human vs mechanical (machine)
  • direct or indirect

6
Observation Research Advantages
  • do rather than say
  • actual not self reporting behaviour
  • doesnt rely on memory or willingness
  • real-time research - at time of occurrence
  • usually quicker eg scanners
  • avoids bias
  • good for observing children

7
Observation Research Disadvantages
  • cannot infer what caused behaviour
  • public behaviour only
  • limited future projection
  • time consuming eg infrequent actions

8
A Classification of Observation Methods
Observation Methods
Personal Observation
Audit
Mechanical Observation
Ethnography
mystery shopping
retail audit
traffic count
TV viewing
9
Mechanical Observation
  • traffic counters
  • physiological measurement
  • people meter
  • scanner-based research

10
Human Observation
  • mystery shopper
  • one-way mirror observation
  • shopper patterns
  • content analysis
  • humanistic enquiry
  • audit
  • trace analysis

11
A Comparison of Observation Methods
Personal Observation
Mechanical Observation
Audit
Ethnography
Criteria
Degree of structure
low
high
high
low
Degree of disguise
medium
low
high
low
Natural setting
high
high
low-high
high
Observation bias
high
low
low
high
Analysis bias
high
low
low
high
Remarks
flexible
expensive
intrusive
expensive
12
Longitudinal and Cross-Sectional Designs
CROSS SECTIONAL
CRITERIA
LONGITUDINAL
Can detect change
No
Yes
Volume of data
Moderate
Very Large
Accuracy
Moderate
Usually high
Representative Sample
Yes
No
Response bias
Yes
No
13
Syndicated Research Services
Market research suppliers who collect data on a
regular basis with standardised procedures. The
data are sold to different clients thus reducing
the cost to any one client. Examples
AC Nielsen Taylor Nelson AGB Arbitron
14
Features of Continuous Consumer Panels
  • Continuous (permanent) sample
  • Large samples (5000 households)
  • Factual information on purchases
  • Opinions motives NOT recorded
  • Data captured by postal diary or scanner
  • Panel maintenance is the key issue.

15
Consumer Panel Information
  • Market size by product category brand
  • Penetration ( households buying )
  • Shares of trade by retail outlet type
  • Profile of buyers ( age, SEG )
  • Profile of heavy, medium light buyers
  • Responsiveness to marketing mix changes
  • Brand substitution and cannibalism
  • Family brand buying

16
Consumer Panel Uses
  • Market overview and trend analysis
  • Demographic analysis
  • Loyalty analysis
  • Brand shifting analysis
  • Trial and repeat analysis

Source AC Nielsen Company, 1992
17
Consumer Panel Issues
  • Recruitment and maintenance problems
  • Effect of rewards on behaviour
  • Respondent conditioning
  • Accuracy or pick-up of purchases
  • Burden on respondents ( heavy buyers )
  • Data overload for buyers
  • How data are employed by buyers

18
Retail Audits
  • Retail sales by product category
  • Retail shares of trade
  • Sources of delivery to retailer
  • Stock cover at rate of sale
  • Shavings (display material)
  • Facings (packs facing shopper)
  • Prices, promotions

19
Uses of Retail Audit Data
  • Measure sales relative to competitors
  • Measure sell-in to the retailer
  • Evaluate brands in-store position
  • Analyse and correct distribution problems
  • Evaluate pricing and promotion strategies
  • Track advertising effects

20
Uses of Retail Audit Data
  • Monitor competitors marketing efforts
  • Analyse effect of marketing variables in store
  • Analyse sales and marketing efforts by territory
  • Track retail build for new or competitive
    products
  • Sufficient penetration levels prior to
    advertising

21
Retail Audit Issues
  • Retail sales not consumer purchases
  • Key outlets may not permit access
  • Outlets may not scan purchases
  • Outlet type not named retailer
  • Data overload for buyers
  • How data employed by buyers

22
Mystery Shopping
  • People employed to pose as consumers
  • Shop at own and/or competitors outlets
  • May simply compare prices, displays etc.
  • More likely to assess service interactions
  • Often employed to motivate staff.

23
Ethnography
  • Limitations of structured mechanical
    observation
  • Move towards human unstructured observation
  • Watching and communicating with respondents in
  • natural setting
  • Building descriptions of consumer culture
  • Learning more about what is usually taken for
    granted
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