Transcript Slide 1
Essentials of Marketing Research (Second
Edition)
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Instructor’s Presentation Slides
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Chapter Eight
Information from Respondents:
Issues in Data Collection
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Information From Surveys
Used to Capture a Wide Variety of Information
Attitude
Decisions
Focus on process and not the results
Measuring the relationship between actions & needs, desires,
preferences, motives and goals
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Sources of error in information from
respondents
Ambiguity of
question (see
chapter 11)
Interviewer
error
Sample
POPULATION
RESPONDENT
Questio
n
Answer
Non Response
due to refusal or Inaccuracy in response
not at home
• Inability to formulate
INTERVIEWER
Ambiguity of
answer
a response
Sampling error
(see Chapter 13)
• Unwillingness to
respond
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Sources of Survey Error
The Results Will Be Meaningful If
Population has been defined correctly
Sample is representative of the population
Respondents selected are able and willing to cooperate
Questions are understood by the respondents
Respondents have the knowledge, opinions, attitudes, or
facts required
Interviewer correctly understands and records the response
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Non-response Errors Due to Refusals
Refusals Could Occur Due to
Nature of questions and place
Subject of no interest to the respondent
Fear
Invasion of privacy
Hostility towards sponsor
Personal bias
Characteristics of the data collection procedure (e.g., Presidential
polls)
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Inaccuracy in Response
Inability to respond
Time lag between question asked and when it is answered
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Unwillingness to Respond Accurately
This Could Arise Due to the Following Reasons
Concern about invasion of privacy
Time pressure and fatigue
Prestige seeking and social desirability response bias
Courtesy bias
Uninformed response bias
Response style
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Interviewer Error
This Depends On
Attitude of the interviewer
Training to question, probe, and record
Fraud and deceit
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Methods of Data Collection
Personal Interview
Telephone Interview
Mail Survey
Fax Survey
E-mail Survey
Web-based Survey
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Basic Survey Methods
Personal Interview
Telephone Interview
Mail Survey
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Personal Interviews
There Are Four Entities Involved
Researcher
Interviewer
Interviewee
The Interview Environment
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Personal Interviews
Types
Door to Door Interviewing
Executive Interviewing
Mall Intercept Surveys
Purchase Intercept
Technique (PIT)
Omnibus Surveys
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Personal Interviews (Contd.)
Methods
Door to Door Interviewing
Executive Interviewing
Mall Intercept Surveys
Self Administered Interviews
Purchase Intercept Technique (PIT)
Omnibus Surveys
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Personal Interviews (Contd.)
Advantages
Can arouse and keep interest
Can build rapport
Ask complex questions with the help of visual and other
aids
Clarify misunderstandings
High degree of flexibility
Probe for more complete answers
Accurate for neutral questions
Do not need an explicit or current list of households or
individuals
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Personal Interviews (Contd.)
Disadvantages
Bias of Interviewer
Response Bias
Embarrassing/personal questions
Time Requirements
Cost Per Completed Interview Is High
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Telephone Interviewing
The Important Aspects of Telephone Interviewing Are
Selecting telephone numbers
Pre specified list
A directory
Random dialing procedure
Random digit dialing
Systematic random digit dialing (SRDD)
The introduction
When to call
Call reports
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Unlisted Phone Numbers in the US
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Telephone Interviewing (Contd.)
Advantages
Central location, under supervision, at own hours
More interviews can be conducted in a given time
Traveling time is saved
More hours of the day are productive
Repeated call backs at lower cost
Absence of administrative costs
Lower cost per completed interview
Intrusiveness of the phone and ease of call backs
Less sample bias
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Telephone Interviewing (Contd.)
Limitations
Inability to employ visual aids or complex tasks
Can't be longer than 5-10 min. Or they get boring
Amount of data that can be collected is relatively less
A capable interviewer essential
Sample bias
As all people do not have phones, or are not listed
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Mail Surveys
Requires a broad identification of the individuals to be sampled before
data collection begins
Some Decisions That Need to Be Taken Are
Type of Return Envelope
Postage
Method of Addressing
Cover Letter
The Questionnaire Length, Layout, Color, Format Etc
Method of Notification
Incentive to Be Given
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Mail Surveys (Contd.)
Advantages
Lower cost
Better results, including a shorter response time
Reliable answers as no inhibiting intermediary
Survey answered at respondents discretion
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Mail Surveys (Contd.)
Disadvantages
The identity of the respondent is inadequately controlled
No control over whom the respondent consults before
answering the questions
The speed of the response can't be monitored
No control on the order in which the questions are exposed
or answered
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Mail Surveys (Contd.)
Disadvantages (Contd.)
The respondent may not clearly understand the question
and no opportunity to clarify
No long questionnaires
Subject to availability of a mailing list
Response rate is generally poor
Number of problems such as obsolescence, omissions,
duplications, etc
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Factors Affecting the Choice of a Survey
Method
Sampling
Type of Population
Question Form
Question Content
Response Rate
Costs
Available Facilities
Length of Data Collection
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Factors Affecting the Response Rate
Perceived amount of work required, and the length of the
questionnaire
Intrinsic interest in the topic
Characteristics of the sample
Credibility of the sponsoring organization
Level of induced motivation
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Combination of Survey Methods
The Telephone Pre-notification Approach
The Lockbox Approach
The Drop-off Approach
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Trends in Survey Methods
Computer Interactive Interviewing
Fax Surveys
Electronic Mail Surveys
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
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Comparative Evaluation
Diversity of questions
Use of physical stimuli
Sample control
Field force control
Quantity of data per interview
Perceived anonymity
Potential for interviewer bias
Speed
Cost
Door-to door Mall
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Phone
Mail
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Internet Marketing Research
Primary Data
E-Mail surveys
Online focus groups
Online questionnaires
Online experiments
Online panel
Discussion groups
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
The Power of E-Mail
Send out questionnaires via electronic mail and
receive responses via electronic mail
No per-item charge
Written trail of communication
No intrusion
Time to intelligently compose
Instantaneous reach
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 1996 09:35:00 -0700
From: "Paul R. Messinger" <[email protected]>
Subject: Marketing College Values Your Opinion!
To: [email protected]
The College on Marketing business meeting at the Fall INFORMS Conference in Atlanta voted to try a QUICK e-mail survey on two questions. Please take
a moment to answer.
1. What are your preferences regarding the timing of the Spring Marketing Science Conference?
Prefer
Wouldn't Attend
a. Conference held in March
__________ _______________
b. Conference held in May/June
__________ _______________
c. Held Outside U.S. & Canada Every 3 Years
__________ _______________
d. Held Outside U.S. & Canada Every 4 Years
__________ _______________
2. Unlike the Spring Conference, where attendence has never been larger, participation in the Marketing Track at the Fall INFORMS Conference has
diminished in the last several years. Do you favor repositioning the Marketing Track at the Fall INFORMS conference somehow (e.g., as a
specialized mini-conference), leaving the Track as is, or abolishing the Track altogether? Please answer in no more than two sentences.
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
Happy Holidays! Ho Ho!
*******************************************************
Paul R. Messinger
403-492-3954; fax 403-492-3325
Department of Marketing; Faculty of Business; Univ. of Alberta Edmonton AB T6G 2R6; Canada
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
E-Mail Survey
Pro’s
Greater speed of delivering and receiving
Tremendous cost savings over regular mail
No intermediaries - usually read only by recipient
Asynchronous communication
Con’s
Not completely confidential
Limited to actual E-Mail users
Creative Impulses (e.g. re-write scales)
Typographical issues: ñ ¿
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Advantages of On-line Surveys
Extremely cost efficient
High-speed
No geographic boundaries
Pre-screening of respondents possible
Multimedia stimuli
Automatic data entry check
Sophisticated skip and branching patterns
Instantaneous data access
Easy to update
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Limitations of On-line Surveys
Only Internet demographics
(strong sample bias)
Strong selection bias for respondents who are not prescreened
User identity not ensured
Users must find site
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Surveys in the International Context
Personal
Dominant mode of data collection outside the US
Telephone
Low levels of telephone ownership in some countries
Poor communication network in some countries
Absence of mailing lists
Poor mail services in some countries
Mail
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Ethical Issues in Data Collection
Misrepresentation of Data Collection Process Stems From
Representation of a marketing activity other than research as research
Abuse of respondents rights during the data collection process, under
the rationale of providing better quality research. E.G.,
Use of survey for selling purposes
Use of survey to obtain names and addresses
of prospects for direct marketing
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Ethical Issues in Data Collection (Contd.)
The Rights of the Respondents Can Be Violated By
Disguising the purpose of a particular measurement
Deceiving the prospective respondent as to the true
duration of the interview
Misrepresenting the compensation in order to gain
cooperation
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day
Ethical Issues in Data Collection (Contd.)
The Rights of the Respondents Can Be Violated By
Not mentioning to the respondent that a follow up interview will be
made
Using projective tests and unobtrusive measures to circumvent the
need for a respondents consent
Using hidden tape recorders
Not debriefing the respondent
Conducting simulated product tests in which identical product is tried
by respondent except for variations in color
Essentials of Marketing Research, Second Edition
Kumar, Aaker & Day