Title: Marketing Research
1Marketing Research
2Marketing Information Management
- How are decisions made to introduce new products
and delete old ones?
34.04 Vocabulary
- Attitude Research
- Data Analysis
- Database Marketing
- Database
- Experimental Method
- Forced-choice Questions
- Market Intelligence
- Marketing Research
- Marketing Information System
- Media Research
- Observation Method
- Open-ended Questions
- Point-of-sale Research
- Primary Data
- Problem Definition
- Product Research
- Quantitative Research
- Qualitative Research
- Reliability
- Sample
- Secondary Data
- Survey Method
- Validity
44.04 EssentialQuestion
- How does marketing information and research
affect business and marketing decisions?
5Essential Question 1 Marketing Research
- What is the role of marketing information
management?
6What is Marketing Research?
- Obtaining information about the preferences,
opinions, habits, trends, and plans of potential
customers. - Helps to determine what customers want and need.
7Marketing Research
- the systematic gathering, recording and
analysing of data about problems relating to the
marketing of goods and services - American Marketing Association
8Why is Research Important?
- Businesses that do not pay attention to what
consumers are buying, are likely to make costly
mistakes. - Information obtained from research helps
businesses to plan for the future.
9Why is Research Important?
- Helps to anticipate or solve problems in the
marketplace. - Helps a company keep track of what is happening
in its markets.
10Purpose
11Essential Question 2 Marketing Research
- How does each type of research differ from each
other?
12Types of Marketing Research
Advertising Research
- Focuses on the effectiveness of the advertising
message and the effectiveness of media placement.
13Types of Marketing Research
- Product Research
- Used to evaluate product design and acceptance,
competitive products, package design, and product
usage.
14Types of Marketing Research
- Market Research
- Studies customer behavior (customer analysis) to
gather information about customer attitudes.
15Types of Marketing Research
- Market Research
- Studies the behavior of a consumer market (market
analysis) to investigate the potential markets
for a product and to define the target market.
16Types of Marketing Research
- Sales Research
- The study of sales data to determine the
potential sales for a product and to solve
problems related to future sales.
17Essential Question 3 Marketing Research
- What are the steps in the marketing research
process?
18The Marketing Research Process
- Step 1 - Defining the Problem
- Identify and clearly state what the problem is
and what can be done to solve the problem. - Determine which problems are the most important
to solve at a given time.
19The Marketing Research Process
- Step 2 - Obtaining Data
- Collect and examine information in terms of the
problem being studied. - Primary data can be used and/or
- Secondary data can be used.
20The Marketing Research Process
- Step 3 - Analyzing the Data
- Compiling, analyzing, and interpreting the
results of primary and secondary data. - The results of each question can be clearly read
and interpreted.
21The Marketing Research Process
- Step 4 - Recommending Solutions to the Problem.
- Solutions are usually presented in a well written
report. - Recommendations must be clear and supported by
the research data.
22The Marketing Research Process
- Step 5 - Applying the Results
- The required form of action is decided upon and
put into place.
23The Marketing Research Process
- Set objectives
- Define research Problem
- Assess the value of the research
- Construct a research proposal
- Specify data collection method
- Specify techniques of measurement
- Select the sample
- Data collection
- Analysis of results
- Present in a final report
24Essential Question 4 Marketing Research
- What are the differences in primary and secondary
data?
25Types of Data
- Primary data Data obtained for the first time
and used specifically for the particular problem
or issue under study collected firsthand. - Secondary data Data already collected for some
purpose other than the current study already
exists, desk research.
26Primary Research
27Market Research
- Primary Research
- First hand information
- Expensive to collect, analyse and evaluate
- Can be highly focussed and relevant
- Care needs to be taken with the approach and
methodology to ensure accuracy - Types of question closed limited information
gained open useful information but difficult
to analyse
28Secondary Research
29Internal Sources
- Company Accounts
- Internal Reports and Analysis
- Stock Analysis
- Retail data - loyalty cards, till data, etc.
30External Sources
- Federal Government Statistics (i.e. census, labor
dept, etc.) - Local Chamber of Commerce, Economic Development,
City County Government, etc. - Trade publications
- Commercial Data - Gallup, Mintel, etc.
- Household Expenditure Survey
- Magazine surveys
- Other firms research
- Research documents publications, journals, etc.
31Essential Question 5 Marketing Research
- What methods are used to collect primary and
secondary data?
32Data Collection
- Primary data can be obtained by
- - the survey method
- - the observation method
- - the experimental method
- Secondary data can be obtained by a number of
agencies. - - Internet Sources
- - US and Government Sources
- - Specialized Research Companies
- - Business Publications and Trade Organizations
33Essential Question 6 Marketing Research
- How are population, sample, bias, and error used
in marketing research?
34Data Sampling
- When designing a survey, marketers must determine
the number of people to include in their survey. - Population The entire target group of people
under study. - Sample Part of the target population that
represents it accurately. - Sampling - studying part of a population to
learn about the whole - Bias Inaccuracies introduced into the results
due to errors in measurement, coverage, and
nonresponsive. - Error Determined by the sample size with respect
to the population. The greater the
sample size, the lower the margin of error.
35Sampling Methods
36Market Research
- Sampling Methods
- Random Samples equal chance of anyone being
picked - May select those not in the target group
indiscriminate - Sample sizes may need to be large to be
representative - Can be very expensive
37Market Research
- Stratified or Segment Random Sampling
- Samples on the basis of a representative strata
or segment - Still random but more focussed
- May give more relevant information
- May be more cost effective
38Market Research
- Quota Sampling
- Again by segment
- Not randomly selected
- Specific number on each segment are interviewed,
etc. - May not be fully representative
- Cheaper method
39Market Research
- Cluster Sampling
- Primarily based on geographical areas or
clusters that can be seen as being
representative of the whole population - Multi-Stage Sampling
- Sample selected from multi-stage sub-groups
- Snowball Sampling
- Samples developed from contacts of existing
customers word of mouth type approach!
40Terminology of Marketing Research
- Quantitative research - statistical basis
- Qualitative research - subjective and personal
41Market Research
- Quantitative and Qualitative Information
- Quantitative based on numbers 56 of 18 year
olds drink alcohol at least four times a week -
doesnt tell you why, when, how - Qualitative more detail tells you why, when
and how!
42Essential Question 7 Marketing Research
- What are techniques are used in marketing
research?
43Marketing Research Techniques
- Interviews
- face-to-face
- telephone
- postal questionnaire
- Attitude measurement
- cognitive component (know/believe about an
act/object) - affective component (feel about an act/object)
- conative component (behave towards an object or
act)
44- Likert scale
- strongly agree
- agree
- neither agree nor disagree
- disagree
- strongly disagree
- Semantic differential scales - differences
between words e.g. practical v impractical - Projective techniques
- sentence completion
- psychodrama (yourself as a product)
- friendly martian (what someone else might do)
45- Group discussion and focus group
- Postal research questionnaires
- Diary panels - sources of continuous data
- In-home scanning - hand-held light pen to scan
barcodes - Telephone research
- Observation
- home audit
- direct observation
- In-store testing
46What is MKIS?
- MKIS (MIS) is a set of procedures and methods
for the regular, planned collection, analysis and
presentation of information for use in marketing
decisions - American Marketing Association
47The components of a computerised MKIS
Data Bank
Statistical Bank
MKIS
Display unit
Marketing Manager
Model Bank
48The components of a computerised MKIS
- Data bank - raw data e.g historical sales data,
secondary data - Statistical bank - programmes to carry-out sales
forecasts, spending projections - A model bank - stores marketing models e.g
Ansoffs matrix, Boston Matrix - Display unit - VDU and keyboard
49Essential Question 8 Marketing Research
- What are the advantages disadvantages of
marketing research?
50Market Research
- Advantages of Market Research
- Helps focus attention on objectives
- Aids forecasting, planning and strategic
development - May help to reduce risk of new product
development - Communicates image, vision, etc.
- Globalisation makes market information valuable
(HSBC adverts!!)
51Market Research
- Disadvantages of Market Research
- Information only as good as the methodology used
- Can be inaccurate or unreliable
- Results may not be what the business wants to
hear! - May stifle initiative and gut feeling
- Always a problem that we may never know enough to
be sure!
52Essential Question 9 Marketing Research
- What are the trends and limitations in marketing
research?
53Research Trends
- Trends in research
- Global Marketplace
- Due to increased international competition, US
companies must improve or change products
frequently to hold on to customers. - Product quality and customer satisfaction are
keys to business success and research that
measures these qualities are the fast form of
marketing research. - Business Management
- Many businesses are using internal and external
information to improve business operations.
54Research Limitations
- Limitations in research
- Money
- Time
- Customers saying one thing and doing another
55Market Research