Marketing Research The Marketing Research Process Dr. Zafer Erdogan.
Marketing Research Part 2
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Transcript of Marketing Research Part 2
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Part 2
Professor Conrad
The Basics of Marketing Research
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Establish the need for the
research
Define the problem
Establish Research Objectives
Determine Research Design
Info Types and
Sources
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Methods of Access
Design Data
Collection
Sample Size
Collect and
Analyze Data
Present Results
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Focus Groups Guide and Survey Designs 4
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• Review research problem and objectives
• Quantitative Research and Survey Design Defined
• Response Rate Calculations
• Survey Data Collection Methods
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Focus groups are small groups of people brought together and guided by a moderator through an unstructured, spontaneous discussion for the purpose of gaining information relevant to the research problem.
Traditional focus group: Select 6 to 12 persons and meet in a dedicated room with one-way mirror for client viewing.
Online focus group: the respondents and/or clients communicate and/or observe by use of the Internet
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Moderator: responsible for creating the correct atmosphere in the group and guiding discussion
Question Type: Main Questions – Open-ended
Follow-up Questions
Probing Questions
Prompted Questions
Focus group report: summarizes the information provided by the focus group participants relative to the research questions
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Advantages
Can generate fresh ideas
Allow clients to observe their participants
May be directed at understanding a wide variety of issues
Allow fairly easy access to special respondent groups
Disadvantages
Representativeness of participants
Dependence on the moderator
Interpretation sometimes difficult
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Focus groups should be used when the research objective is to describe rather than predict.
How do consumers describe a better package?
How would they describe their satisfaction with our service?
How could they describe their ideas for an ad campaign?
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Focus groups should not be used when the research questions require a prediction or when a major decision affecting the company’s livelihood rests on the research results.
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To generate ideas
To understand consumer vocabulary
To reveal consumer goods, motives, perceptions, and attitudes about products or services
To understand findings from quantitative studies
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How many focus groups should be conducted?
How many people should be in a focus group?
Who should be in the focus group?
How should focus group participants be recruited and selected?
Where should a focus group meet?
When should the moderator become involved in the research project?
How are focus group results reported and used?
What other benefits do focus groups offer?
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• Review research problem and objectives
• Quantitative Research and Survey Design Defined
• Response Rate Calculations
• Survey Data Collection Methods
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Difference from Qualitative Research Questions and answers are predesigned
Large number of respondents
Evolution
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PanelsInternet-based
Surveys
Computer-assisted
Telephone Interviews
Telephone-based Data Collection
Printed Questionnaires
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Cost for Survey Research
Sample Size Free if you use your own list
Panels can cost a few $1,000
Phone survey can cost >$100,000
Access to Sample General consumer population is less
Specialized populations can be expensive
Survey Length Longer surveys affects response rate
Analysis Sophisticated analysis can be expensive
Modest compared to other costs
Reasons for Survey Research
Customer Satisfaction
Segmentation Studies
Product Usage and Ownership
Purchase Intentions
Brand Image and Perceptions
Tracking Studies
Media Usage
Readership Studies
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Tells ‘what’ but not ‘why’
Inability to probe for more
Similar to interviews, may be limited and biased
Response rates are increasingly declining (Why?)
ADVANTAGES
Provides large sample precision
Standardization
Easy and cost-efficient
Analysis is easy with technology
Reveal complex, multi-level distinctions among groups
Can compare segments/subgroups
DISADVANTAGES
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The higher the response rate, the more accurate the results
SurveyGizmo.com (2017) Internal surveys (to employees/staff) typically receive 30-40% on
average
External surveys (to customers) will average a 10-15% response rate
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Survey Design Keep your survey short (10
minutes max)
Keep your language simple
Let respondents skip open-ended questions
Test before full deployment
Focus on the Audience Use a qualifying question to
eliminate the wrong people
20Source: SurveyMonkey.com and SurveyGizmo.com
Encourage Responses Offer survey results
Offer incentive (e.g. drawing for gift card)
Survey Deployment Keep contact info up-to-date
E-mail + Social Media + Print
Customize the invite
Send out reminders
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Person-administered and computer-assisted
• In-home survey
• Mall-intercept survey
• In-office survey
• Telephone survey
Computer-administered
• Fully automated survey
• Online survey
Self-administered
• Group self-administered survey
• Drop-off survey
• Mail survey
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Nominal
• Categorizes respondents into subgroups
• Descriptive characteristic
• Demographics: Age, income, occupation, education
• Answers are standard
Ordinal
• Profiles the respondents
• Relative size difference: Greater than/less than
• Natural order of object: 1st, 2nd or 3rd
• Exact differences are unknown
Scale
• Measures the level of something: satisfaction
• Ratio scale: has a true zero origin (dollars, miles, years)
• Interval scale: subjective (More likely, likely, less likely) 22
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Likert Scale Measures the intensity of the respondent’s feelings
Lifestyle inventory uses Likert scales
Purchase behaviors such as usage of a product, visits to a store or other customer types
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Statement Strongly
Agree
Agree Neutral Disagree Strongly
Disagree
Vans shoes are good lookingO O O O O
Vans shoes are reasonably pricedO O O O O
You next pair of shoes will be VansO O O O O
Vans make you look coolO O O O O
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Using each of the following student activities, write the statement that would appear on a college student lifestyle inventory questionnaire.
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Statement Strongly
Disagree
Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly
Agree
Studying1 2 3 4 5
Going Out1 2 3 4 5
Working1 2 3 4 5
Exercising1 2 3 4 5
Shopping1 2 3 4 5
Dating1 2 3 4 5
Spending Money1 2 3 4 5
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Semantic Differential Scale Properties of an object are measured
by indicating locations along its continuum
Measures the implied meanings of an object, person or experience to understand the attitude toward the object
After selecting a concept or object, choose bipolar pairs of words/phrases used to describer the object’s noticeable properties. Hot – Cold
High quality – Low quality
Convenient – Inconvenient
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Determine what and how
to measure
•Identify construct’s properties and type of measure for each
Decide on wording
•Word each question using dos and avoiding don’ts
Organize questionnaire
•Write introduction, put questions in order, use skip logic as needed
Finalize and launch
•Get client approval, pretest, code and launch
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1. Questions should be clear, simple, specific and relevant to the study
2. Focus on current attitudes and very recent behavior
3. Start with general questions and move into more specific questions
4. Avoid vague words (pretest)
5. Use 5 – 8 response options for Likert-type response scales
6. Include neutral/no opinion option on scale questions if possible
7. Numeric labels should be shown to respondents
8. Numeric/verbal scale endpoints should be explicit
9. Use lower numbers to represent “Disagree,” higher for “Agree”
10. Off a “Don’t Know” response
11. Place demographic questions at the end of the questionnaire30
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Develop research questions
that measure…
Attitudes
Beliefs
Behaviors
Demographics
Your research questions
should measure
• Attitudes
• Beliefs
• Behaviors
• Demographics
That are relevant to the
research being conducted
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Stay focused on a single topic
Keep it brief
Keep it grammatically simple
Keep it crystal clear
X “Lead” the respondent
X Use “loaded” questions
X Use ‘double-barreled” questions
X Use words that overstate the case
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Introduction Who is doing the survey?
What is the survey about?
How did you select the participants?
Motivate them to respond.
Use incentives (Intrinsic and extrinsic)
Ensure anonymity
Ensure confidentiality
Qualify the participant with screening questions
Take great care writing the introduction – first impression of the research project for the participant. The intro could be what persuades them to respond to or ignore your questionnaire.
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Screening ??
Have you shopped at JCPenneys before?
Is this your first visit to the store?
Used to select the right respondent for the survey.
Warm-up ??
How often do you shop at JCPenneys?
On what days of the week do you usually shop for
dress clothes?
Easy to answer, generates interest
Transition Statements
For the next few questions, we will provide
several statements for which you will rate your
level of satisfaction.
Notifies respondent that format or subject of questions is going to
change.
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Complicated ??
Rate each department on a friendliness of salespersons on
a scale of 1 to 10.
Respondent is committed by now. They need to be told or see that they’re nearing the
end.
Classification ??
What is your gender?
What is your annual income?
Personal (and possibly offensive) are placed at the
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