Title: Marketing research
1(No Transcript)
2Marketing research
3Lecture Objectives
- After going through this chapter, you should be
able to - Explain the role marketing research plays in
decision-making in the hospitality industry - Identify sources of marketing information
available to hospitality organizations - Define secondary and primary data collection
- Explain the differences between qualitative and
quantitative research methods - Recognize how bias and sampling errors can
distort marketing research findings - Describe how hospitality organizations conduct
online research.
4Introduction
- Managers are paid to make decisions.
- The purpose of marketing research is to inform
and improve decision-making by reducing
uncertainty. - Marketing research can be defined as the
systematic gathering and analysis of data to
provide relevant information to aid
decision-making. - Marketing research is a planned process.
- Market research describes the investigation of
consumer and organizational markets - Marketing research includes research into all the
marketing mix variables and the macro (PESTE) and
micro-environments.
5International Marketing Research
- Presents unique problems because of the
cultural and technological differences between
countries - Translation difficulties
- Variations in customer behaviour because of
different cultural backgrounds - Variations in customers product knowledge
- Difficulties in obtaining comparable samples
- Different cultural responses to market research
surveys - Differences in the infrastructure
6Marketing Information Systems
- Hospitality managers need relevant, accurate,
current and reliable information to be able to
make effective decisions that will influence the
future of the business. - Small, single-unit, owner-operated companies rely
on informal approaches to data collection and
interpretation. - Larger organizations need to develop more
- sophisticated marketing information
systems to ensure that corporate executives
understand complex environment - The marketing information system helps marketers
to identify trends and plan for the future
7The hospitality marketing information system
8Sources of information - internal
- Internal information is held by the organization
- Accommodation businesses hold a wealth of
information about customers because of legal
requirements - Information sources include
- Customer records
- Guest history
- Departmental reports
- Marketing and sales reports
9Sources of information - external
- External information can be collected via
the Internet and publications including - International and national government
organizations - Marketing research organizations
- Publicly quoted companies Annual Accounts
- Trade associations
- Hospitality industry trade press
- Financial press
- Universities and academic publishers
10Secondary (or desk) data collection
- Secondary (desk) data are data that have already
been collected - It is relatively easy to obtain secondary data
since the information has already been published - Limitations to secondary data include
- data have been collected and analysed by another
organization - some organizations may deliberately manipulate
data - other organizations may have inadvertently
introduced bias - information is generally available to competitors
- secondary data and analysis can often be dated
because of the long time between carrying out the
research and publishing - the findings
11Primary data collection
- Primary data consist of original information
collected by an organization for a specific
purpose. - The data have not been published before.
- The organization conducting or commissioning the
research determines the research objectives and
research questions. - Data are collected directly to provide answers to
those questions. - Primary research is usually more costly than the
secondary research. - Advantages of primary research include the
following - The ability to frame the research questions to
the needs of the organization - Research is current and not dated
- Research is confidential
- Primary data can enable a hospitality company to
gain competitive advantage if competitors are not
carrying out similar research.
12Qualitative data
- Qualitative research aims to provide a deep
understanding of peoples contextualized
behaviour - It aims to explain how and why people behave in
certain ways - Qualitative research in hospitality uses
- Observation
- in-depth interviews,
- focus groups (also known as group discussions)
- qualitative questions in surveys
13Quantitative data
- Quantitative research uses a wide range of
methods to obtain and analyse numerical data - Quantitative research counts numbers, in terms of
either volume or value. For example - the number of customers, passengers, residents,
diners, room nights, room occupancy - restaurant units sales or a hotel chains room
sales. - If data are numeric then the research is
quantitative
14Quantitative research
- Quantitative research techniques are founded upon
statistical theory - Correct statistical methods are required to
reduce possible error and bias - Possible errors include
- Sampling errors
- Respondent errors
- Investigator errors
- Administrative errors
- In large surveys, statistical software packages
are used to process the quantitative research
data.
15Quantitative research methods
- exit surveys
- mystery customer audits
- telephone (including mobile phone) surveys
- online surveys
- omnibus surveys.
16Closed and open questions
- Closed questions provide a number of alternative
answers from which the respondent chooses one
answer, for example questions about - respondents age, sex, employment, income
- Closed questions use a structured format which
creates a data set that - can be efficiently analysed using statistical
methods. - Closed questions are essential if a quantitative
research method is used - Open-ended questions allow respondents to provide
their own answers, - Examples include Where would you stay tonight if
this hotel was fully booked? and How did you
feel about the quality of service? - Open question allows respondents to use their own
words to describe their experience, feelings and
opinions. - Qualitative research findings using open
questions provide rich data - Researchers usually ask a combination of both
closed and open questions - and combine qualitative and quantitative
analysis. - Compare Le Meridien and Malmaison in-room
customer questionnaires
17Le Meridien customer questionnaire
18Le Meridien customer questionnaire (2)
19Malmaison comment card
20Marketing research process
- There are six steps in the marketing research
process - Formulation of research objectives
- Development of a research plan
- Data collection
- Data analysis
- Assess the reliability and validity of data
- Presentation of findings
21Online research
- Advantages of online research include
- significant cost savings in the design and
administration of questionnaires and discussion
groups - the ability to accurately target surveys to
current, former or potential customers. - Often, customers are incentivized to participate
in online surveys - Post- consumption e-surveys provide customers
with a convenient tool to give feedback on
service quality and customer satisfaction. - Tools such as blogs and social networking sites
are useful to obtain unsolicited such for
customer- generated comment - The Internet is available to all sizes of
hospitality companies.
22Criticisms of Marketing Research
- Academics and practitioners have criticized
modern marketing research for a number of reasons - The focus on collecting data and performing
statistical analysis, which does not provide new
insights for the business or inform
decision-making - Flawed marketing research methodologies that
introduce unacceptable levels of bias or error - The emphasis on research stifles creativity in
marketing - Despite these criticisms, major hospitality
companies recognize the importance of marketing
research and carry out extensive customer and
competitor research on a continuous basis
23References and Further Reading
- Altinay , L. , Paraskevas , A. ( 2008 ).
Planning research in hospitality and tourism,
Oxford, UK Butterworth-Heinemann . - Bowie, D Buttle, F (2011), Hospitality
Marketing Principles and Practice, Oxford, UK
Butterworth-Heinemann - Brown , S. ( 2001 ). Marketing The retro
revolution . Sage . - Chaffey , D. , Ellis-Chadwick , F. , Johnston ,
K. , Mayer , R. ( 2009 ). Internet marketing
strategy, implementation and practice ( 4th ed.
). Pearson Education . - Daymon , C. , Holloway , I. ( 2002 ).
Qualitative research methods in public - relations and marketing communications .
Routledge . - Saunders , M. K. , Thornhill , A. , Lewis , P.
( 2009 ). Research methods for business students
( 5th ed.). Financial Times/Prentice Hall . - Usunier , J. C. , Lee , J. ( 2009 ). Marketing
across cultures ( 5th ed.). Financial
Times/Prentice Hall .