Marketing Research

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Transcript Marketing Research

Marketing Research
Primary vs.
secondary data

Advantages and
disadvantages of
each
Marketing research
tools
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MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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Marketing Research
An “investment” to
reduce uncertainty
Can help guide
decisions on
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Whether to enter
Product
characteristics
Promotional strategy
Positioning
Must weigh costs
and benefits of
research
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Money
Time spent
No perfect method—
tradeoffs between
methods
MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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Two Research Methods
Secondary: use of
existing research already
done
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Government
Consulting firms
Newspaper and magazine
articles
Primary: creation of
specific studies to answer
specific questions
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MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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Some Sources of Secondary
Data
U.S. Governent
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http://StatUSA.gov
Government Department
web sites
Government periodicals
in libraries
 E.g., Statistical
Abstracts
Trade organizations
Consultants
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Be weary of web sites
Books, periodicals,
newspapers
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E.g., Information
Resources International
(IRI), Nielsen
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Company sites are
glorified advertisements!
Anyone can publish a
web site.
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Primary Research Methods
Surveys
Experimentation
Observation
Focus groups
In-depth interviews
Projective
techniques
Physiological
Measures
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MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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Surveys
Planned questions
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Problem questions
Open-ended
Closed-ended
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Need large sample sizes
for precise conclusions
Forms
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Mail
Telephone
Mall Intercept
Computer/Internet
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Leading
Ambiguous
Unanswerable
Two questions in one
Non-exhaustive question
Non-mutually exclusive
answers
Lars Perner, Instructor
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The Pentagon Declares War on Rush
Limbaugh: Misleading Research
Survey found that only 4.8%
of listeners to the Armed
Forces Radio Network
wanted to listen to “the
biggest hawk there is.”
How could a survey be made
to get these results?
Being on the watch for
misleading surveys.
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MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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Experimentation
Subjects in different
groups treated
differently
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E.g., for some, “target”
product is given better
shelf space
E.g., some get coupon
Can help isolate causes
Subject is biased by
questions—does not
know how others are
treated
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MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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My Simulated Store…
A shopper in the everyday low price condition…
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MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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Observation
Looking at consumes in the
field—e.g.,
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Searching for product category
area
Number of products inspected
and time spent on each
Involvement of others
Behavior under limiting
circumstances (e.g., time
constraints)
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Focus Groups
Groups of 8-12
consumers
assembled
Start out talking
generally about
context of product
Gradually focus in
on actual product
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Lars Perner, Instructor
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In-depth interviews
Structured vs.
unstructured
interviews
Generalizing to
other consumers
Biases
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Lars Perner, Instructor
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Projective Techniques
Measurement of
attitudes consumers
are unwilling to
express
Consumer discusses
what other
consumer might
think, feel, or do
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MARKETING RESEARCH
Lars Perner, Instructor
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Scanner Data
“Household Panel” members agree to
present card at purchase to link
demographics and media exposure
Possible to correlate conditions with
purchases made:
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Demographics
Exposure to advertising; number of
exposures
Sales promotion, premium, special display,
special conditions for competing brand
Past purchasing behavior
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