Solomon_6e_PPT_Student_04
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Chapter 4
Marketing Research:
Gather, Analyze, and Use
Information
Chapter Objectives
Explain the role of the marketing information
system and the marketing decision support
system in marketing decision making
Understand data mining and how marketers
can put it to good use
List and explain the steps and key elements
of the marketing research process
Appreciate the importance of high ethical
standards in marketing research
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Real People, Real Choices:
Decision Time at Plan-It Marketing
What marketing research strategy
would maximize results of the research
within a reasonable budget?
– Option 1: conduct exploratory qualitative
study
– Option 2: conduct quantitative survey of
700+ leisure and business travelers
– Option 3: conduct viability study with both
qualitative exploratory study and
confirmatory quantitative study
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Knowledge Is Power
Accurate, up-to-date, relevant
information is the fuel that runs the
marketing engine
Marketing information systems:
– Determine what information marketing
managers need, then gathers, sorts,
analyzes, stores, and distributes information
to system users
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Marketing Information Systems
Marketing information systems (MIS)
include multiple components:
– Data:
•
•
•
•
Internal company data
Marketing intelligence
Marketing research
Acquired database
– Computer hardware and software
– Information for marketing decisions
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Internal Company Data
Internal data:
Information from within the company
to produce reports on the results of
sales and marketing activities
Intranet:
Internal corporate communications
network that links company
departments, employees, and
databases
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Marketing Intelligence
Marketing intelligence systems:
Method by which marketers get
information about everyday
happenings in the marketing
environment
– Example: Monitoring the Internet and using
“mystery shoppers”
Futurists specialize in predicting
consumer trends
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Marketing Research
Market research:
Collecting, analyzing, and interpreting
data about customers, competitors,
and the business environment to
improve marketing effectiveness
– Syndicated research
– Custom research
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Acquired Databases
External databases can be used to
collect a variety of information from
different sources
– Non-competing businesses
– Government databases
Misuse of databases can be
problematic and has led to do-not-call
lists and antispam laws
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Marketing Decision Support
Systems
Marketing decision support systems:
Data plus analysis and interactive
software that allow managers to
conduct analyses and find the
information that they need
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Searching for Gold: Data Mining
Data mining:
Includes sophisticated analysis
techniques to take advantage of the
massive amount of transaction
information now available
Analysts sift through data to identify
unique patterns of behavior among
different customer groups for use in
behavioral targeting
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What Marketers Can Do with
Data Mining
Data mining applications in marketing:
– Customer acquisition
– Customer retention and loyalty
– Customer abandonment
– Market basket analysis
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Steps in the Marketing
Research Process
Step 1: Define the research problem
– Specifying research objectives
– Identifying consumer population of interest
– Placing the problem in an environmental
context
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Steps in the Marketing
Research Process
Step 2: Determine the research design
– Determine whether secondary data are
available
– Determine whether primary data are required
and if so, what type:
• Exploratory research
• Descriptive research
• Causal research
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Secondary and Primary
Research
Secondary data:
– Have been collected for some purposes other
than the problem at hand
Primary data:
– Information collected directly from
respondents to specifically address the
question at hand
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Exploratory (Qualitative)
Research
Exploratory research techniques
generate insights for future, more
rigorous studies
– Typically involve in-depth consumer probing
– Take many forms:
•
•
•
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Consumer interviews
Focus groups
Productive techniques
Case studies
Ethnography
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Descriptive (Quantitative)
Research
Descriptive research studies:
– Probe systematically into the problem
– Base conclusions on large numbers of
observations
– Typically expresses results in quantitative
terms (averages, percentages, other stats)
• Cross-sectional design
• Longitudinal design
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Causal Research
Cause-and-effect relationships:
A change in one thing causes a change
in something else
– Independent (cause) vs. dependent (change
in outcome) variables
– Experiments test predicted relationships
among variables in a controlled environment
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Steps in the Marketing Research
Process
Step 3: Choose the method for
collecting primary data
– Survey methods are used to interview
respondents
– Questionnaires:
• loosely, moderately, or completely structured
– Observational research methods
– Online research
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Questionnaires
Mail questionnaires
Telephone interviews
Face-to-face interviews
– Mall intercept
Online questionnaires
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Observational Methods
Observation:
Data collection method where the
researcher records consumers’
behaviors, often without their
knowledge
– Personal observation
– Mechanical observation
– Unobtrusive measures
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Online Research
Types of online research:
– Gathering information via consumer surfing
– Gathering information via Web site/
e-mail/chat room questionnaires/focus groups
Online research used as part of:
– New-product development
– Estimating market response
– Exploratory research
IM and focus groups
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Data Quality:
Garbage In, Garbage Out
How much faith should marketing
managers place in research? Three key
considerations include:
– Validity
– Reliability
– Representativeness
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Step 4: Design the Sample
Probability sampling:
– Each member of the population has some
known chance of being included
– Sample is representative of population, and
inferences about population are justified
Types of probability sampling:
– Simple random sampling
– Systematic sampling
– Stratified sampling
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Step 4: Design the Sample
Nonprobability sample
– Personal judgment used in selecting
respondents
– Some members of population have no
chance of being included so sample is not
representative of population
Types of nonprobability sampling
– Convenience sampling
– Quota sampling
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Step 5: Collect the Data
Challenges to gathering data in foreign
countries include:
– Differences in sophistication of research
operations
– Infrastructure/transportation challenges
– Lack of phones and/or low literacy rates
– Local customs and cultural differences
– Language translation difficulties
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Step 6: Analyze and Interpret the
Data
Data must be analyzed and interpreted
to be meaningful
Tabulation:
– Arranging data in a table or other summary
form to get a broad picture of overall
responses
Cross-tabulation:
– Examining the data by subgroups to see how
results vary between categories
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Step 7: Prepare the Research
Report
Research reports typically contain the
following sections:
– Executive summary
– Description of research methodology
– Discussion of results including tabulations,
cross-tabulations
– Limitations of study
– Conclusions and recommendations
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Ethics in Marketing Research
Marketing research ethics:
Taking an ethical and above-board
approach to conducting marketing
research that does no harm to the
participant in the process of
conducting the research
– Researchers must provide full disclosure of
confidentiality and anonymity options
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Real People, Real Choices:
Decision Made at Plan-It Marketing
Cindy chose option 3, conducting both
qualitative and quantitative research
– Implementation: Concept design was refined
using input from qualitative research;
quantitative study of 700 business and leisure
travelers confirmed viability of Priceline’s
business model concept
– Measuring success: Used total unduplicated
reach and frequency analysis
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Keeping It Real: Fast-Forward to
Next Class Decision Time at (RED)
Meet Julie Cordua, VP Marketing—(RED)
(RED) works with international brands to
make unique products and directs up to
50% of gross profits to the Global Fund
The decision to be made:
Is partnering with mass market
international brands the optimal way
to generate money for the
Global Fund?
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permissionCopyright
of the publisher.
Printed
in theEducation,
United States
of America.
© 2009
Pearson
Inc.
Publishing as Prentice Hall
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