Title: Marketing Research Essentials
1MDSS Database Structure
Chapter Three
2Chapter Four
Qualitative Research
Chapter Four
3Chapter Four Objectives
Chapter Four
4Nature of Qualitative Research
- Qualitative
- Research whose findings are not subject to
quantification or quantitative analysis. Its
research conclusions are not based on precisely,
measurable statistics but on more subjective
observations and analysis. - Quantitative
- Research that uses mathematical analysis.
Typically research analysis is done using
measurable, numeric standards.
Chapter Four
5Qualitative Research Vs. Quantitative Research
Chapter Four
6Limitations of Qualitative Research
Things to Consider
1. Attitudinal, perception, and belief
differences revealed during qualitative research
might not be easily measure. Quantitative
research will more precisely measure these
differences. 2. Qualitative research is often
not statistically representative of the general
population. Although qualitative results might
give you a good idea about the population, they
do not allow you to precisely gauge the
populations responses based on the limited
sample typical of qualitative research. 3.
Anyone can purport to be an expert.
Chapter Four
7Qualitative Research Methods
- Factors to Consider
- Time and budget
- How the research results will be used
- Product and service tangibility
- Research goals and objectives
- Participant availability and willingness
- Desired analysis sophistication
- Whether quantitative research follows.
Focus Groups Interviews Observation Concept
Testing Perceptual Mapping
Chapter Four
8Growing Role of Focus Groups
Focus Group Defined
- A group of eight to 12 participants who are led
by a moderator in an in-depth discussion on one
particular topic or concept.
Interacting among people in a group. The
moderator must manages this issue deftly.
Group Dynamic
Some Key Characteristics
- Good for idea generation, brainstorming, and
understanding customer vocabulary - Can be helpful in gaining insight to motives,
attitudes, perceptions - Can reveal needs / likes dislikes / prejudices
driven by emotions.
Chapter Four
9Conducting a Focus Group
- Decide on the key focus group objectives
- Use secondary research to hone questions
- Select focus group facility and participants
- Begin recruiting after deciding on participant
incentives - Select a moderator
- Develop a moderator guide to chart flow of focus
group - Conduct the focus group - generally about two
hours - Review the videotape, your notes and analyze
the results - Prepare a written report.
Moderator Analyses Results
Focus Group Flow
Chapter Four
10Conducting a Focus Group
The Participants
- Selection process
- Potential opinion leaders are best
- Participants must be screened for relevance to
the topic - A focus group facility - A research facility
consisting of a conference room or living room
setting and a separate observation room with a
one-way mirror or live audiovisual feed. - A person hired by the client to lead the focus
group this person should have a background in
psychology or sociology or, at least, marketing. - Create moderator's guide to include
- Timetable for each topic , clear goals/questions
to be answered - Strategy for keeping group on task / focused
- Managing the group dynamics is critical
The Location
The Moderator
Chapter Four
11The Moderator and the Focus Group Building Rapport
Some Helpful Techniques
- Meet and greet the participants before the focus
group - Ask personal questions during the warm-up
- Reveal personal information about yourself
- Ask for the participants assistance during the
process - Use humor when appropriate
- Dress a the same level as the respondents
- Start the focus group session sitting down
- Have a discussion guide to assist.
A written outline of topics to be covered during
a focus group discussion.
Chapter Four
12What Makes a Good Moderator? Some Typical
Characteristics
- Is genuinely interested in peoples
- behavior, emotions, lifestyles, passions,
prejudices, and opinions -
- Is accepting and appreciative of participant
differences -
- Is objective and open minded
- Has good listening skills
- Has good observation skills - can pick-up on
body language -
- Is interested in a wide array of subjects
-
- Prepares for the topic at hand to enhance
credibility
Chapter Four
13What Make a Good Moderator? Some Typical
Characteristics
- Has good oral, written, and organizational
skills - Is able to deftly manage conversation flow
- Is good at follow-up questioning and probing
- Has good attention to detail and is precise
- Should understand the clients business and
industry - Should be able to provide strategic leadership
to management - Should to be personably agreeable and easy to
work with.
Chapter Four
14Benefits and Drawbacks of Focus Groups
- Participants candor
- Looks the customer in the eye
- Generates fresh ideas / brainstorming
- Allows client to observe comment onsite
- Can be executed quickly
- Can enhance other data collection methods
- Participants provide valuable information
useable for the next research phase.
Advantages
- Expense time
- Expertise needed
- Participation issues - no shows
- Interpretation is subjective
- Often misused as representative the general
population.
Disadvantages
Chapter Four
15Online Focus Groups
- Low costs no geographic barriers
- Can be executed quickly
- Good for generating fresh ideas / brainstorming
- Can enhance other data collection methods
- Participants provide valuable information for
the next research phase.
Advantages
- Loss of group, hands-on, dynamic
- Interpretation is subjective
- Projective techniques are less effective
- Security - you dont know who else might be at
the computer - Non-verbal inputs will be generally / often
missed - Attention to the topic - participants often
drift - Loss of direct client observational involvement
- Often misused as representative the general
population - Exposure to external stimuli stymied
- Role and skill of moderator not fully realized.
Disadvantages
Chapter Four
16Other Trends in Focus Group Research
- Combining online and telephone focus groups
- Videoconferencing
- Viewing focus groups online.
Chapter Four
17Other Qualitative Methodologies Depth Interviews
- Key Techniques
- Laddering approach
- Hidden issue questioning
- Symbolic analysis approach
- Advantages Disadvantages
- Group pressure is eliminated
- More costly than a focus group
- More personalized attention given
- Often geared towards getting underlying
information - Interviewee becomes more sensitive to nonverbal
clues - Respondent can be less forthright as the focus
is on them - An interview lacks the advantage of group
dynamics - Can result in limited ground getting covered
- An interview can be conducted anywhere you
dont need a facility.
Chapter Four
18Other Qualitative Methodologies Projective Tests
Technique tapping respondents deepest feelings
by having them project those feelings into and
unstructured situation.
Projective Tests
Some Techniques
- Word Association
- Cartoon Tests
- Photo Sorts
- Customer Drawings
- Storytelling
- Sentence and Story Completion
- Third Person Technique.
Chapter Four