Title: QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
1QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
2What is qualitative research?
- Is a term used loosely to refer to research
whose findings are not subject to quantification
or quantitative analysis. - Qualitative research could be used to examine
the attitudes, feelings and motivations of the
heavy user, essentially how to communicate with
them.
3Qualitative research VS quantitative research.
Qualitative Quantitative
Types of questions Probing Limited probing
Sample size Small Large
Amount of information from each respondent Substantial Varies
Requirements for administration Interviewer with special skills Interviewer with fewer skills or no interviewer
Type of analysis Subjective, interpretive Statistical, summation
Hardware Tape recorders, pictures, discussion guides Questionnaires, computer printout
Degree of explicability Low High
Researcher training Psychology, sociology, social psychology, Statistics, decision models, computer programming
Type of research Exploratory Descriptive o causal
4Why does the popularity of qualitative research
continue to grow?
- Qualitative research is usually much cheaper than
quantitative research. - There is no better way to understand the
motivation and feelings of consumers. - It can improve the efficiency of quantitative
research.
5- All marketing research is undertaken to increase
the effectiveness of decision making. Qualitative
research blends with quantitative measures to
provide a more thorough understanding of consumer
demand. Qualitative techniques involve
open-ended questioning and probing
6Limitations of qualitative research
- One drawback relates to the fact that marketing
successes and failures many times are based on
small differences in attitudes or opinions about
the marking mix, and qualitative research does
not distinguish those small differences as well
as large-scale quantitative research does. - The second limitation is that they are not
necessarily representative of the population of
interest to the researcher.
7THE IMPORTANCE ON FOCUS GROUPS
- Focus group consists of 8 to 12 participants who
are led by a moderator in the discussion on one
particular topic or concept. - The goal is to learn and understand what people
have to say and why . - The emphasis is on getting people to talk at
length and in detail about the subject . - The intent is to find out how they feel about
the product, concept, idea or organization how
it fits into their lives and their emotional
involvement with it.
8Popularity of focus groups
- Focus groups allow the research to experience
the emotional framework in which the product is
begin used. - In a sense, the researcher can go into a persons
life and relieve with him or her all the
satisfaction, dissatisfactions, rewards and
frustration experienced when the product is taken
home.
9Conducting focus groups
10Step 1. Prepare for the group
- Setting is often conference room, with a large
one-way mirror built into one wall. Microphones
are placed (usually on the ceiling) to record the
discussion. Behind the mirror is the viewing
room. - Participants for focus group are recruited from a
variety of sources. Two traditional procedures
are mall-intercept interviewing and random
telephone screening. Researches normally
establish criteria for the group participants. -
11STEP 2. Select a moderator
- Having qualified respondents and a good focus
group moderator are the keys to a successful
focus group. - A focus group moderator needs two sets of skills.
- 1. The moderator must be able to conduct a
group properly. - 2. He or she must have good business skills
in order to effectively interact with the client.
12STEP 2. Select a moderator
- Key attributes for conducting a focus group
include the following - Genuine interest in people, their behavior,
emotions - Acceptance for de differences in people.
- Good listening skills.
- Good observation skills.
- Good oral and written communication skills
- Objective
-
13STEP 2. Create a discussion guide.
- A discussion guide is a written outline of the
topics to be covered during the session. Usually
the guide is generated by the moderator based of
the research objectives and client information
needs. It serves as a checklist to ensure that
all salient topics are covered and in the proper
sequence.
14STEP 2. Create a discussion guide.
- The guide tents to lead the discussion though
three stages - Rapport is established, the rules group
interactions are explained are objectives are
given. - The moderator attempts to provoke discussion.
- Is used summarizing significant conclusions and
testing the limits of belief and commitment.
15STEP 3. Focus group length
- Many managers today prefer shorter (around an
hour)focus groups. Yet the average group today is
still about 90 minutes. - The group length issue is not an insulated one,
it is intertwined with a second key factor the
number of the discussion guide. - The managers should examine the interactions
between the length of the focus group and the
size of the discussion guide.
16STEP 4. Focus group report
- After the final of the group in a series is
completed, there will be a moderator debriefing,
sometimes called instant analysis. - A formal focus group report is typically a
PowerPoint presentation. The written report is
nothing more than a copy of the PowerPoint slides.
17Benefits and Drawbacks of Focus Groups
- The benefits and drawbacks of qualitative
research in general also apply to focus groups.
But focus groups have some unique pros and cons
that deserve mention. - Advantages of Focus Groups The interactions
among respondents can stimulate new ideas and
thoughts that might not arise during one-on-one
interviews. And group pressure can help challenge
respondents to keep their thinking realistic.
Energetic interactions among respondents also
make it likely that observation of a group will
provide firsthand consumer information to client
observers in a shorter amount of time and in a
more interesting way than will individual
interviews. - Another advantege focus groups offer is the
opportunity to observe customers or prospects
from behind a one-way mirror. In fact, there is
growing use of focus groups to expose a broader
range of employees to customer comments and
views. - One more advantege of focus grops is that they
can be executed more quickly than many other
research techniques. In addition, findings from
groups tend to be easier to understand and to
have a compelling immediacy and excitement. I
can get up and show a client all the charts and
graphs in the world, but it has nowhere near the
impact of showing 8 or 10 customers sitting
around a table and saying that the companys
service isnt good. By Jean-Anne Mutter
(director of marketing research at Ketchum
Advertising).
18- Disadvanteges of Focus Groups Unfortunately,
some of the stengths of focus groups also can
become disadvantages. For example, the immediacy
and apparent understandability of focus group
findings can cause managers to be misled instead
of informed. Mutter says, Even though youre
only getting a very small slice, a focus group
gives you a sense that you really understand the
situation. She adds that focus groups can
strongly appeal to peoples desire for quick,
simple answers to problems, and i see a
decreasing willingness to go with complexity and
to put forth the effort needed to really think
through the complex data that will be yielded by
a quantitative study. - Other disadvantages relate to the focus
group process. For example, focus group
recruiting may be a problem if the type of person
recruited responds differently to the isues being
discussed than do other target segments. White
middle-class individuals, for example,
participate in qualitative research in numbers
disproportionate to their presence in the
marketplace. Also, some focus group facilities
create an impersonal feeling, making honest
conversation unlikely. Corporate or formal
setting with large boardroom tables and
unattractive or plain decor may make it difficult
for respondents to relax and share their
feelings. - Video Transmission of Focus Groups Live video
transmissions of focus groups has occurred for
the past 20 years. The advantage for researchers
and clients is that not everyone has to travel to
every focus group to participate. A survey found
that users of video focus groups were typically
quite pleased. Sixty-seven percent rated the
experience excellent or good. Approximately 22
percent of all U.S. focus groups involve video
transmissions.
19Other Qualitative Methodologies
- Most of this chapter has been devoted to focus
groups because of their pervasive use in
marketing research. However, several other
qualitative techniques are also used, albeit on a
much more limited basis.
20Other Qualitative Methodologies
- Individual Depth Interviews (IDI) are relatively
unstructured one-on-one interviews. The
interviewer is thoroughly trained in the skill of
probing and eliciting detailed answers to each
question. IDIs are the second most popular form
of qualitative research. - Advantages of depth interviews over focus groups
are as follows - Group pressure is eliminated, so the respondent
reveals more honest feelings, not necessarily
those considered most acceptable among peers. - The personal one-on-one situation gives the
respondent the feeling of being the focus of
attention- that his or her thoughts and feelings
are important and truly wanted. - The respondent attains a heightened state of
awareness because he or she has constant
interaction with the interviewer and there are no
group members to hide behind. - The longer time devoted to individual respondents
encourages the revelation of new information. - Respondents can be probed at length to reveal the
feelings and motivations that underlie
statements. - Without the restrictions of cultivating a group
process, new directions of questioning can be
improvised more easily. Individual interviews
allow greater flexibility to explore casual
remarks and tangential issues, which may provide
critical insights into the main issue. - The closeness of the one-on-one relationship
allows the interviewer to become more sensitive
to nonverbal feedback. - A singular viewpoint can be obtained from a
respondent without influence from others. - The interview can be conducted anywhere, in
places other than a focus group facility. - Depth interviews may be the only viable technique
for situations in which a group approach would
require that competitors be placed in the same
room. For example, it might be very difficult to
do a focus group on systems for preventing bad
checks with managers from competing deparment
stores or retaurants. -
21- Disadvantages of depth interviews relative to
focus groups are as follows - The total cost of depth interviews can be more
expensive than focus groups, but not on a cost
per respondent minute. - Depth interviews do not generally get the same
degree of client involvement as focus groups. It
is difficult to convince most client personnel to
sith through multiple hours of depth interviews
so as to benefit firsthand from the information. - Because depth interviews are physically
exhausting for the moderator, they do not cover
as much ground in one day as do focus groups.
Most moderators will not do more than four or
five depth interviws in a day, wheras they can
involuve 20 people in a day in two focus groups. - Focus groups give the moderator an ability to
leverage the dynamics of the group to obtain
reactions that might not be generated in a
one-on-one session. - The success of any depth interview depends mainly
on the skills of the interviewer. And classic
applications of depth interviews include - Communication checks such as (review of print,
radio, or TV advertisements or other written
materials) - Sensory evaluations such as (reactions to varied
formulations for deodorants or hand lotions) - Exploratory research such as (defining baseline
understanding or a product, service, or idea) - New prduct development, prototype stage
- Packging or usage research as (when clients want
to mirror personal experience and obtain key
language descriptors) -
22- A variation of the depth interview is
called customer care research (CCR). The basic
idea is to use depth iterviewing to understand to
dynamic of the purchase process. The following
seven questions are the basis for CCR - What started you on the road to making this
purchase? - Why did you make this purchase now?
- What was the hardest part of this process? Was
there any point where you got stuck? - When and how did you decide the price was
acceptable? - Is there someone else with whom i should talk to
get more of the story behind this purchase? - If youve purschased this product before, how
does the story of your last purchase differ from
this one? - At what point did you decide you trusted this
organization and this person to work with in you
best interests? - Cost of Focus Groups versus IDI In a standard,
eight-person, 90-minute focus group, there are
nine people (eight participants plus moderator)
sharing the floor. On average, therefore, each
respondent is allotted 10 minutes of talk time
across those 90 minutes (90 minutes divided by
nine people). - The cost of a focus group of this type is about
6.000. That number includes every-thing
recruiter, moderator, participant stipend, food,
facility, report write-up, and the cost of
getting a few observers to the event. Divide 80
minutes of participant talk time (the moderator
doesnt count) into the 6000 expense, and your
cost per respondent minute in this case is 75
(6000/80) - If, however, a typical in-depth interview runs
30 minutes and costs between 400 and 500
(including recruiting, interviewing, participant
stipend, and reporting), the cost per respondent
minute is in the range of 16 to 25. The big
difference results from the amount of time the
respondent spends talking, which is typically
about 20 to 25 of those 30 minutes in an in-depth
phone interview. - Thus, when considering the cost per respondent
minute, in-depth interviews can provide much
greater value. Of course, the quality of both the
focus groups and the IDI determines the real
value of the research.
23- Using Hermeneutics Some IDI researchers use a
technique called hermeneutic research to achieve
their goals. Hermeneutic research that focuses on
interpretation through conversations. - For example, a reseacher and consumer in
conversation about why that individual purchased
a high-end home theater system may discuss the
reasons for making the purchase, such as holding
movie parties, enjoying a stay-at-home luxury, or
immersing one-self in sporting events. The
researcher may interpret holding movie parties
as a reason for purchase to mean that without the
system, the consumer would not hold the parties
at all, and so the researcher will return to the
consumer for additional information. Upon
reviewing the data and talking more, the
researcher and consumer determine that why the
item was purchased and why it is used (which may
or may not be the same) are not as telling as how
the product makes its owner feel. In this case,
the owner may feel confident as an entertainer,
more social, powerful, wealthy, relaxed, or
rejuvenated. Talking and probing more about the
use of the home theater, the researcher uncovers
both new data and new issues to address or
consider moving forward. - Using the Delphi Method The Delphi Method is
often used in new product development when firms
are looking for creative new ideas to incorporate
in products or services. In conclusion this
method rounds of individual data collection from
knowledegeable people results are summarized and
returned to participants for further refinement. - The purpose of anonymity in a Delphi study is to
exclude group interaction, which can cause a
number of problems, such as group conflict and
individual dominance. Dlphi relies on a
structured, indirect approach to group decision
making that is, participants dont meet, relying
instead on statistical aggregation of individual
predictions and ideas.
24Projective Tests
- This is a technique for tapping respondents
deepest feelings by having them project those
feelings into an unstructured situation. These
techniques are for penetrating a persons defense
mechanisms to allow true feelings and attitudes
to emerge.
25Why is projection important?
- Consumers may not tell us everything that
influences them. Three obstacles stand in the
way - Respondents may be unconscious or unaware of a
particular influence. - They may be aware of an ingluence, but feel it is
too personal or socially undesirable to admit
(e.g. prestige image or racial bias). - They may be aware that they perceive a product a
particular way, but they may not bother to
mention this because, in their view, it is not a
logical, rational reason for buying or not buying
the product. Some doctors. For example, are
adamant that what they prescribe has nothing to
do with the sound of a drugs name or the
attractiveness of the manufacturers logo, and is
based solely on decision-making factors such as
research findings, clinical experience, and
patient compliance.
26Most common forms of projective techniques
- But the most common forms of projective
techniques used in marketing research are word
association tests, sentence and story completion
tests, cartoon tests, photo sorts, consumer
drawings, storytelling, and third-person
techniques. Other techniques, such as psychodrama
tests and the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT),
have been popular in treating psychological
disorders but of less help in marketing research.
27Word Association Tests
- This is a projective test in which the
interviewer says a word and the respondent must
mention the first thing that comes to mind. - Word association tests are used to select brand
names, advertising campaign themes, and sologans.
28Analogies
- Analogies draw a comparison between two items in
terms of their similarities. - For example, a researcher investigating consumers
perceptions of Ford automobiles may ask Im
going to read you a list of stores, and then id
like you to tell me which of these is most
similar to Ford cars. If possible, try to give
the first answer that comes to mind. The stores
are Neiman Marcus, Wal-Mart, Macys, JC Penney,
Kmart, Nordstrom, Target, and Lord Taylor. As
a follow-up, the researcher would then ask What
is it about (Store X) that is most similar to
Ford cars? How are the qualities of Ford cars
similar to this store? This line of questioning
induces the respondent to talk (indirectly) about
his or her perceptions of Ford cars. - The use of analogies in this instance is not to
determine which store(s) people associate with
Ford cars but rather to get people to talk about
their perceptions of Ford cars in ways they might
otherwise be unable to do.
29Personification
- This involves drawing a comparison between a
product and a person. - Thus we can appreciate as the person is if that
people choose such kind of car.
30- Sentence and Story Completion Tests this is a
projective tests in which respondents complete
sentences or stories in their own words. - Best Buy is
- The people who shop at Best Buy are
- Best Buy should really
- I dont understand why Best Buy doesnt
- Sentence and story completion tests have been
considered by some researchers to be the most
usefutl and reliable of all the projective tests.
Decision Analyst is now offering both online
sentence completion and online word association
research to its clients.
31- Cartoon Tests consists of two characters with
balloons. Similar to those seen in comic books.
But more specifically its a test in which the
respondent fills in the dialogue of one of two
characters in a cartoon. - Photo Sorts consumers express their feelings
about brands by manipulating a specially
developed photo deck depicting different types of
people, from business executives to college
students. Respondents connect the individuals in
the photos with the brands they think they would
use. Then photo sorts is a technique in which a
respondent sorts photos of different types of
people, identifying those people who she or he
feels would use the specified product or service.
32- Consumer Drawings researchers somethimes ask
consumers to draw what they are feeling or how
they perceive an object. Then consumer drawings
can unlock motivations or express perceptions. - Storytelling this requires consumers to tell
stories about their experiences. It is a search
for subtle insights into consumer behavior. This
technique can be known as metaphor technique. - Third-Person Technique Perhaps the easiest
projective technique to apply, other than word
association, is this. Here the interviewer learns
about respondents feelings by asking them to
answer for a third party, such as your neighbor
or most people.
33Future of Qualitative Research
- The rationale behind qualitative research tests
is as follows - The criteria employed and the evaluations made in
most buying and usage decisions have emotional
and subconscious content, which is an important
determinant of buying and usage decisions. - Such content is adequately and accurately
verbalized by the respondent only through
indirect communicative techniques. - On the positive side, the use of focus groups
will grow. Focus group research can provide data
and insights not available through any other
techniques. Low cost and ease of application will
lend even greater impetus to use online focus
groups. Finally, the qualitative-quantitative
split will begin to close as adaptations and
innovations allow researchers to enjoy the
advantages of both approaches simultaneously.
34Thank you