Title: Marketing Research
1Marketing Research
- Week 3Marketing Research Methodologies
2Session Objectives
- 1. five stages in the marketing research process
(Chisnell 2006) - 2. secondary, observational, qualitative and
quantitative research - practical examples of
each - 3. relative advantages and disadvantages of
adopting these methodologies - 4. main techniques for analysing qualitative data
(Proctor 2005) - 5. alternative approaches to gathering
quantitative data
3The Marketing Research Process (Chisnell 2005)
The Research Brief
The Research Proposal
Data Collection
Data Analysis and Evaluation
Preparation and Presentation of Research Report
4Four Main Methodologies
- Secondary Research
- Observation Research
- Qualitative Research
- Quantitative Research
5Secondary Research
6Secondary Data
- The collation of existing research results and
data from published secondary sources for a
specific, often unrelated project, MRS (2003) - Data that has already been published by someone
else, at some other time, usually for some other
reason than the present researcher has in mind,
Crouch and Housden (2003) - Information that has previously been gathered for
some purpose other than the current research
project. The data is available either free or at
a cost and can be delivered electronically by
computer or in printed hard copy format, Wilson
(2003)
7Methods of Collecting Secondary Data
- External Sources Libraries, Trade Associations,
Exhibitions, Government Depts, Banks,
Competitors, Internet, Trade Journals, Market
Reports (Mintel, Keynote, Euromonitor), News
articles - Online Resources
- Demographic surveys (TGI, Household survey,
census, Office of National Statistics) - Internal Sources Customer databases, sales
records, call centres
8Why Secondary?
- Understand the product and environment
- Prior to briefing meeting
- Design a better questionnaire
- Its cheaper than primary!!
- But has limitations
- Who published, age, accuracy, comparability
- First step for any research - why repeat what has
already been done! - Save Budget! And Your Time!
9Observation Research
10Observation Research
- A non-verbal means of obtaining primary data as
an alternative or complement to questioning, MRS
(2003) - A data gathering approach where information on
the behaviour of people, objects and
organizations is collected without any questions
being asked of the participant, Wilson (2003)
11Why Observe?
- Its what respondents do, not what they say they
do - Researcher is the witness, does not interfere
with the process (Hawthorne effect?) - Reporting errors can be reduced
- High refusal rates reduced
- Does not interfere with respondents day to day
life (dont have to fill in diaries or
questionnaires)
a short-term improvement caused by observing
worker performance.
12Categories, Wilson (2006)
- Natural
- Mountain gorillas
- Visible
- See monitoring equipment
- Structured
- Observer keeps count certain behaviours
- Mechanical
- Recording equipment
- Participant
- Observer participates eg., mystery shopping
- Contrived
- Big brother house
- Hidden
- Know its happening but
- Unstructured
- Notes on all aspects
- Human
- Non-participant
- Traffic survey
13Observation Methodologies
- Audits and scanner based
- EPOS, hand held scanner
- Media Measurement
- BARB, panels, cameras
- Ethnography
- Day in the life of, week in the life of
- Immersion in life of the subject
14- Mechanical Observation
- Psychogalvanometers (arousal, pre-testing
advertising copy) - Pupilmeters (dilation of eye)
- Eye cameras (track movement of eye around an
object) - Tachistoscopes (measure minute response, recall
data) - Mystery Shopping
- Online observation
- cookies
device that displays (usually by projecting) an
image for a specific amount of time.
15T-Scope-Test
T-scope-test
Demonstration!
Søren Østerggard Packaging and Transport September
2003
16T-Scope-Test
A T-scope-test for a presentation of a new
packed product
- The product is presented together with other
products from the same product group as it will
be displayed in supermarkets - The same picture is presented in very short time.
- If the test person does not recognise the new
product the same picture is presented in a little
longer time. - Typically 1/8 sec. gt 1/4 sec. gt 1/2 sec. gt 1 sec.
gt 2 sec.
Søren Østerggard Packaging and Transport September
2003
17T-Scope-Test
Fast view
Søren Østerggard Packaging and Transport September
2003
18T-Scope-Test
Short view
Søren Østerggard Packaging and Transport September
2003
19T-Scope-Test
Long view
Søren Østerggard Packaging and Transport September
2003
20T-Scope-Test
This is the picture
Søren Østerggard Packaging and Transport September
2003
21T-Scope-Test
This is a tool for analysing
- Attention effect
- Consumer interest
- Consumer desire and decision can be studied after
the T-scope-test
Søren Østerggard Packaging and Transport September
2003
22Qualitative Research
23Qualitative Research
- A body of research techniques which seeks
insights through loosely structured, mainly
verbal data rather than measurements. Analysis
is interpretive, subjective, impressionistic and
diagnostic, MRS (2003) - Research that is undertaken using an unstructured
research approach with a small number of
carefully selected individuals to produce
non-quantifiable insights into behaviour,
motivations and attitudes, Wilson (2006)
24Qualitative Data
- Qualitative
- Largely diagnostic
- Concerned with gaining deeper understanding
- Probing rather than counting
- Unstructured or semi structured
- Observant and reflective
- The partner of quantitative investigations
25Problems with Qualitative Research
- Lack of scientific basis
- Unrepresentative
- Size of survey
- Lack of response
- Intimidation
- Hawthorne effect
- Groupthink
26Qualitative Research Methodologies
- Depth Interview where respondent is encouraged to
talk about the subject - Group interview
- where respondents may feel less inhibited
- Focus Group
- 8-10 respondents
27Interviewing Techniques
- Structured
- Semi-Structured
- Unstructured
- Projective Techniques
28Projective Techniques (Proctor 2005)
- Sentence completion
- I think that McDonalds food is .
- People who buy model railways are .
- Story completion
- Word Association
- Stimulus then asked for first word that comes
into head - Cartoon Completion (speech bubbles)
- Brand personality (if IBM were an animal .)
- Brand mapping
29- Photo sorts
- Role play
- Online qualitative research
- Online focus group, chat room technology
- Lose power of observation
- Difficult to detect sarcasm
- Less creative environment
30Focus Group - considerations
- The environment
- The atmosphere
- Seating
- Observation and recording
- Structure
- Interviewer technique
- Question style
- Open
- Probing, think, feel, act
- Behaviour, past, present, future.
31Analysing Qualitative data
- Recorded interviews (video, audio, transcript)
- Difficult due to nature and breadth of responses
- Bias in own interpretation of respondents
- Time consuming.
32Analysing Qualitative Data
- Content Analysis
- Tabulation
- Headings, categories
- Cut and paste
- Verbatim comments, quotes
- Spider diagrams (visual)
- Annotation (marking up, highlighting)
- Computerised analysis (word frequencies).
33Quantitative Research
34Quantitative Data
- Research which seeks to make measurements as
distinct from qualitative research, MRS (2003) - Research that is undertaken using a structured
research approach with a sample of the population
to produce quantifiable insights into behaviour,
motivations and attitudes, Wilson (2006).
35Quantitative Data
- Quantitative
- That which can be observed and counted
- Shopper surveys, government statistics, school
league tables, hospital waiting lists, political
polls, population census - Sample size is important
- Methodology crucial
- Statistical application
- Both primary and secondary can be quantitative
- Lies, lies, lies and then there are statistics!.
36Quantitative Research Techniques
- Surveys (telephone, face to face, internet,
postal) - ONS General Household Survey, 13,250 adults
- In-home, doorstep, street
- Computer assisted personal interviewing (CAPI)
- Computer aided telephone interviewing (CATI)
- Web based interviewing (Tesco internet shopping)
- Omnibus surveys
- Cheaper method, Office Nat Stats (1800 adults
monthly) tobacco consumption, alcohol use
(question stays in up to 1 month)
37Quantitative Techniques
- Hall tests
- Bring in respondents where asked series questions
- Panels
- Permanent representative sample
- Placement tests
- Given product to use then answer questionnaire
389 stage research - - - The Dohring Company
- Definition of Project Objectives
- Determination of the Appropriate Direction and
Methodology to Accomplish the Objectives of the
Study - Questionnaire Development
- Pre-Testing And Fine Tuning
- Data Collection
- Coding, Data Entry, and Tabulation
- Analysis
- Comprehensive Written Reporting
- Presentation of Final Results
39Seminar
- Topics
- Tesco on Mill Road
- Congestion charge in Cambridge
- Guided Bus pricing
- Future of Brookfields Hospital
- Future energy demands and provision
- Refurbishment of Cambridge Campus
- Groups