Title: MARKETING MANAGEMENT
1- MARKETING MANAGEMENT
- WEEK 5
- Marketing Research
2Quantitative versus QualitativeWhen to Use
Different Methods
- Depends on what you are trying to find out
- Choice should always be based on the method best
suited to answer your research question - Methods are your tools
- Also compared to lenses that reveal particular
aspects of consumer behavior
3Quantitative Research
- Description through numbers
- Researcher establishes categories to be measured
(variables) - Fixed-response format (scales)
- Hypothesis testing and validation
- Important Terminology
- Causality and Correlation
- Independent and Dependent Variables
4Qualitative Research
- Description through words and images
- Understand (sub)-cultures, experiences, and
interactions - Deep understanding
- Naturally occurring data
- Document the world from the point of view of the
people being studied - Hypothesis generating
- Can findings be validated and therefore
generalized?
5Quantitative vs. Qualitative
6Critique of Qualitative Data
- Reliability
- Degree of consistency in ones observation
- Interpretation depends on researcher
- Validity
- An account actually represents the social
phenomena - Generalizability
- The representativeness of the study
7Critique of Quantitative Data
- Researcher defines categories, not how the people
being studied necessarily define them - Statistical logic obscures common sense
understandings - Does not regard naturally occurring interaction
in normal, everyday contexts - Interpretation is everywhere variable
specification, correlation analysis,
recommendations, etc. - Lacks depth of understanding
8Hence.
- The question you are trying to answer should
determine the method(s) used - Often the use of multiple-methods is appropriate
- Understand the strengths and weaknesses of
quantitative and qualitative research - Know why you choose the methods you do
9The Marketing Research Process
- Defining the problem and research objectives
- Developing the research plan
- Implementing the research plan
- Interpreting and reporting the findings
10Developing the Research Plan
- Includes
- Determining the exact information needed.
- Developing a plan for gathering it efficiently.
- Presenting a written plan.
- Outlines
- Sources of existing data
- Specific research approaches
- Contact methods
- Sampling plans
- Instruments for data collection
11Gathering Secondary Data
- Information that already exists somewhere
- Internal databases
- Commercial data services
- Government sources
- Available more quickly and at a lower cost than
primary data. - Must be relevant, accurate, current, and
impartial.
12Primary Data Collection
- Consists of information collected for the
specific purpose at hand. - Must be relevant, accurate, current, and
unbiased. - Must determine
- Research approach
- Contact methods
- Sampling plan
- Research instruments
13Survey Research
- Most widely used method for primary data
collection. - Approach best suited for gathering descriptive
information. - Can gather information about peoples knowledge,
attitudes, preferences, or buying behavior.
14It is not every question that deserves an
answer.Publius Syrus(Roman,1st century B.C.)
15A Good Questionnaire Appears
- As easy to compose as a good poem
- But, it is usually the result of long,
painstaking work
16The Major Decisions in Questionnaire Design
1. What should be asked? 2. How should each
question be phrased? 3. In what sequence should
the questions be arranged? 4. What
questionnaire layout will best serve the
research objectives? 5. How should the
questionnaire be pretested? Does the
questionnaire need to be revised?
17What Should Be Asked?
- Questionnaire Relevance
- Questionnaire Accuracy
18Phrasing Questions
- Open-Ended Questions
- Fixed-Alternative Questions
19Classifying Surveys by Degree of Structure and
Degree of Disguise
Structured Unstructured
Undisguised Disguised
20Developing a Questionnaire
- No Hard and Fast Rules
- Only Guidelines
21- Avoid Complexity use simple, conversational
language - Avoid leading and loaded questions
- Avoid ambiguity be as specific as possible
- Avoid double-barreled items
- Avoid making assumptions
- Avoid burdensome questions
221a. How many years have you been playing tennis
on a regular basis? Number of years
__________ b. What is your level of
play? Novice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-1 Advanced . . . . . . . -4 Lower Intermediate
. . . . . -2 Expert . . . . . . . . . -5 Upper
Intermediate . . . . . -3 Teaching Pro . . . .
-6 c. In the last 12 months, has your level
of play improved, remained the same or
decreased? Improved. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. -1 Decreased. . . . . . . -3 Remained the
same . . . . . -2
232a. Do you belong to a club with tennis
facilities? Yes . . . . . . . -1 No
. . . . . . . -2 b. How many people in
your household - including yourself - play
tennis? Number who play tennis ___________
3a. Why do you play tennis? (Please X all
that apply.) To have fun . . . . . . . . . .
-1 To stay fit. . . . . . . . . . . .
-2 To be with friends. . . . . . -3 To
improve my game . . . -4 To compete. . . . . .
. . . . . -5 To win. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. -6 b. In the past 12 months, have you
purchased any tennis instructional books
or video tapes? Yes . . . . . . .
-1 No . . . . . . . -2
24Dear Passenger American Airlines is pleased to
have you on board today. To help us provide the
best service possible, we need to know more about
you and your opinions of our service. If you are
over 11 years old, we would appreciate it if you
would complete this questionnaire. Your flight
attendant will pick up your completed
questionnaire shortly. Thank you.
251. Please indicate Flight number ___________
Date_____________ 2a. At the city where you
boarded this particular plane, did you make a
connection from another flight? Yes, from
American . . . . 1 Yes, from Other Airline .
. 2 No . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
b. Did you board this plane at the airport from
which it just took off, or were you a through
passenger for which that was an intermediate
stop? Boarded here . . . . . . . . .
. 1 Through passenger. . . . . . 2 3. How
would you rate the overall service from American
for this flight, all things considered, from your
arrival at the airport terminal until
now? Excellent Good Fair
Poor Overall Service . . . . . . . . . . 1 2
3 4
264. Please rate each of the following with regard
to this flight, if applicable.
Excellent Good Fair Poor 1
2 3 4
Courtesy and Treatment from the Skycap at
airport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Airport
Ticket Counter Agent . . . . . Boarding Point
(Gate) Agent . . . . . Flight Attendants . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . Your Meal or Snack. . . . .
. . . . . . . . Beverage Service . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . Seat Comfort. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . Carry-On Stowage Space. . . . . . .
. Cabin Cleanliness . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Video/Stereo Entertainment . . . . . . On-Time
Departure . . . . . . . . . . . .
27Experimental Research
- Tries to explain cause-and-effect relationships.
- Involves
- selecting matched groups of subjects
- giving different treatments
- controlling unrelated factors
- checking differences in group responses
28Projective techniques
- Free words associations
- Sentences completion
- TAT (thematic apperception test)
- Vignette comment
- Cartoon
- Role play
29Focus group
- Group discussion (6-12 individuals), lead by an
expert - Advantages
- motivations emerge spontaneously and quickly,
thanks to action/reaction processes - Disadvantages
- group may cooperate, determining biased results,
especially if there is group heterogeneity
(leadership) group dynamics
30Contact method Personal interviews
- Advantages
- Flexibility and reliability
- Control of identity of respondents and sample
composition - Low refusal rate
- Disadvantages
- High cost
- Interviewer discretionality
31Contact method telephone interviews
- Advantages
- Speed
- Low cost
- Low refusal rate
- Big samples
- Disadvantages
- Short and superficial interview
32Contact method mail interviews
- Advantages
- Large sample
- Low cost
- No interviewer (adv./ disadv..)
- Disadvantages
- Slow
- High refusal rate
- No check on interviewee identity
33Sampling Plan
- Sample segment of the population selected to
represent the population as a whole. - Sampling requires three decisions
- Who is to be surveyed?
- Sampling unit
- How many people should be surveyed?
- Sample size
- How should the people in the sample be chosen?
- Sampling procedure
34ETHNOGRAPHIC FIELD STRATEGIES
35What is Fieldwork?
- Out there
- Participation and Observation
- Non-Interference
- Long-Term
- Gaining Access to the Emic Perspective
36Field Access Getting In
- Overt vs. Covert
- Reactivity
- Attitude of the Researcher
- Gaining Entry
37Watching, Listening and Learning
- Take in the physical setting
- Develop relationships
- Tracking, observing and listening
- Subgroups and stars
- Thick description
38THICK DESCRIPTION
- Is multisensory
- Describes people and things
- Uses informant quotes
- Provides for transferability
39Critical Incidents
- A specific critical event
- Recorded in descriptive terms
- One event specific persons, locations and times
observed or verifiable defining as typical or
atypical
40Becoming Invisible
- Hawthorne Effect
- Disattending
- Dangers of Invisibility
41DISENGAGING
42Observation is the systematic description of
events, behaviors, and artifacts in the social
setting chosen for the study (Marshall and
Rossman 1989, p. 79)
43Observations
- Range from focused to unstructured
- Identify salient and atypical features
- Require sufficient time and planning
- Can involve secrecy (not recommended)
- Vary in degree of participation
- Interact with interviews
44Observation...Lincoln and Guba 1981, p. 193
- Motives, beliefs, concerns, interests, behaviors,
customs - See the world as subjects see it, live in their
time frames, capture the phenomenon in and on its
own terms - access to the emotional reactions of the
group...permits the observer to use himself as a
data source
45A Dramaturgical Look at Interviewing
46Interviewing
- Types of interviews standardized,
semistandardized, unstandardized - Types of questions essential, extra,
throw-away, probing - Problems affective wording, Why?,
double-barreled, complexity, sequencing
47Interviewing Techniques
- Self-assurance and preparation
- Establishing roles and rapport
- Letting the interviewee speak
- Silence is golden
- Avoid leading
- Questions of closure
48Interviewing Issues
- Sampling
- Recording
- Confidentiality
- Number of participants in a single interview
- Number of interviews
49 Interviewing as Drama
Looking and playing the Part
Self-conscious performing
Social interpretations--how things
are said
Actors, Directors, Choreographers
50Implementing the Research Plan
- Collecting the data
- Most expensive phase
- Subject to error
- Processing the data
- Check for accuracy
- Code for analysis
- Analyzing the data
- Tabulate results
51Interpreting and Reporting Findings
- Interpret the findings
- Draw conclusions
- Report to management
- Present findings and conclusions that will be
most helpful to decision making.