Assignment
Assignment
Assignment
Sales forecasts are common and essential tools used for business planning, marketing,
and general management decision making. A sales forecast is a projection of the
expected customer demand for products or services at a specific company, for a
specific time horizon, and with certain underlying assumptions.
A separate but related projection is the market forecast, which is an attempt to gauge
the size of the entire market for a certain class of goods or services from all companies
serving that market. Sales and market forecasts are often prepared using different
methods and for different purposes, but sales forecasts in particular are often
dependent at least somewhat on market forecasts. Although the focus of this discussion
will be on sales forecasting, a brief summary of market forecasting will help provide
context.
A special term in studying sales and market forecasts is the word "potential." This refers
to the highest possible level of purchasing, whether at the company level or at the
industry or market level. In practice, full potential is almost never reached, so actual
sales are typically somewhat less than potential. Hence, forecasts of potential must be
distinguished from forecasts that attempt to predict sales realized.
For your type of business, what is the average sales volume per square foot for similar
stores in similar locations and similar size? This isn't the final answer for adequate sales
forecasting, since a new business won't hit that target for perhaps a year. But this
approach is far more scientific than a general 2 percent figure based on household
incomes.
If you offer say, three types of goods plus two types of extra cost services, estimate
sales revenues for each of the five product/service lines. Make an estimate of where
you think you'll be in six months (such as "we should be selling five of these items a
day, plus three of these, plus two of these.") and calculate the gross sales per day.
Then multiply by 30 for the month.
Now scale proportionately from month one to month six; that is, build up from no sales
(or few sales) to your six month sales level. Now carry it out from months six through 12
for a complete annual sales forecast.
I guess you can see that instead of estimating one big sales figure for the year when
sales forecasting, a more realistic monthly schedule of income and expenses gives you
far far more information on which to base decisions. That's what "keeping the books" is
designed to do: give YOU information you can make good decisions on.
So in effect, you prepare three cash flow projections, where you vary the percentage of
sales or other figures to arrive at three different scenarios: pessimistic, optimistic, and
realistic. The pessimistic view should be the "worst case" situation; plan to have enough
capital and patience to get through that scenario. If it turns out that the actual results are
better than that - great!
ADVERTISING RESEARCH
There are two types of research, customized and syndicated. Customized research is conducted
for a specific client to address that client’s needs. Only that client has access to the results of the
research. Syndicated research is a single research study conducted by a research company with
its results available, for sale, to multiple companies. [15] Pre-market research can be conducted to
optimize advertisements for any medium: radio, television, print (magazine, newspaper or direct
mail), outdoor billboard (highway, bus, or train), or Internet. Different methods would be applied
to gather the necessary data appropriately. Post-testing is conducted after the advertising, either a
single ad or an entire multimedia campaign has been run in-market. The focus is on what the
advertising has done for the brand, for example increasing brand awareness, trial, frequency of
purchasing.
PRE-TESTING
Pre-testing, also known as copy testing, is a form of customized research that predicts in-market
performance of an ad, before it airs, by analyzing audience levels of attention, brand linkage,
motivation, entertainment, and communication, as well as breaking down the ad’s Flow of
Attention and Flow of Emotion.[16] Measuring attention is very important in Pre-testing. The data
tells us where customers look at and which parts of the ad they ignore. Attention can be
measured with Eye tracking or AttentionTracking. Pre-testing is also used on ads still in rough
form – e.g., animatics or ripomatics. Pre-testing is also used to identify weak spots within an ad
to improve performance, to more effectively edit 60’s to 30’s or 30’s to 15’s, to select images
from the spot to use in an integrated campaign’s print ad, to pull out the key moments for use in
ad tracking, and to identify branding moments.[17]
CAMPAIGN PRE-TESTING
A new area of pre-testing driven by the realization that what works on TV does not necessarily
translate in other media. Greater budgets allocated to digital media in particular have driven the
need for campaign pre-testing. The first to market with a product to test integrated campaigns
was OTX in association with Sequent Partners with the introduction of MediaCEP. The latest
generation of this product incorporates one of the leading media planning tools developed by a
media modeling and software company Pointlogic. The addition of a media planning tool to this
testing approach allows advertisers to test the whole campaign, creative and media, and measures
the synergies expected with an integrated campaign.[18]
POST-TESTING
POSITIONING (MARKETING)
In marketing, positioning has come to mean the process by which marketers try to
create an image or identity in the minds of their target market for its product, brand, or
organization.
The original work on Positioning was consumer marketing oriented, and was not as
much focused on the question relative to competitive products as much as it was
focused on cutting through the ambient "noise" and establishing a moment of real
contact with the intended recipient. In the classic example of Avis claiming "No.2, We
Try Harder", the point was to say something so shocking (it was by the standards of the
day) that it cleared space in your brain and made you forget all about who was #1, and
not to make some philosophical point about being "hungry" for business.
The growth of high-tech marketing may have had much to do with the shift in definition
towards competitive positioning. An important component of hi-tech marketing in the
age of the world wide web is positioning in major search engines such as Google,
Yahoo and Bing, which can be accomplished through Search Engine Optimization , also
known as SEO. This is an especially important component when attempting to improve
competitive positioning among a younger demographic, which tends to be web oriented
in their shopping and purchasing habits as a result of being highly connected and
involved in social media in general.
Definitions
Although there are different definitions of Positioning, probably the most common is:
identifying a market niche for a brand, product or service utilizing traditional marketing
placement strategies (i.e. price, promotion, distribution, packaging, and competition).
Also positioning is defined as the way by which the marketers creates impression in the
customers mind.
What most will agree on is that Positioning is something (perception) that happens in
the minds of the target market. It is the aggregate perception the market has of a
particular company, product or service in relation to their perceptions of the competitors
in the same category. It will happen whether or not a company's management is
proactive, reactive or passive about the on-going process of evolving a position. But a
company can positively influence the perceptions through enlightened strategic actions.
1. Defining the market in which the product or brand will compete (who the relevant
buyers are)
2. Identifying the attributes (also called dimensions) that define the product 'space'
3. Collecting information from a sample of customers about their perceptions of
each product on the relevant attributes
4. Determine each product's share of mind
5. Determine each product's current location in the product space
6. Determine the target market's preferred combination of attributes (referred to as
an ideal vector)
7. Examine the fit between:
o The position of your product
o The position of the ideal vector
8. interest and started a conversation, you'll know you're on the right track.
POSITIONING CONCEPTS
1. Functional positions
o Solve problems
o Provide benefits to customers
o Get favorable perception by investors (stock profile) and lenders
2. Symbolic positions
o Self-image enhancement
o Ego identification
o Belongingness and social meaningfulness
o Affective fulfillment
3. Experiential positions
o Provide sensory stimulation
o Provide cognitive stimulation
This is especially true of small and medium-sized firms, many of which often lack strong
brands for individual product lines. In a prolonged recession, business approaches that
were effective during healthy economies often become ineffective and it becomes
necessary to change a firm's positioning. Upscale restaurants, for example, which
previously flourished on expense account dinners and corporate events, may for the
first time need to stress value as a sale tool.
.MOTIVATIONAL RESEARCH
Motivational research is most valuable when powerful underlying motives are suspected
of exerting influence upon consumer behavior. Products and services that relate, or
might relate, to attraction of the opposite sex, to personal adornment, to status or self-
esteem, to power, to death, to fears, or to social taboos are all likely candidates for
motivational research. For example, why do women tend to increase their expenditures
on clothing and personal adornment products as they approach the age of 50 to 55?
The reasons relate to the loss of youth’s beauty and the loss of fertility, and to related
fears of losing their husbands' love. It is also a time of life when discretionary incomes
are rising (the children are leaving the nest). Other motives are at work as well (women
are complicated creatures), but a standard marketing research survey would never
reveal these motives, because most women are not really aware of why their interest in
expensive adornments increases at this particular point in their lives.
Even benign, or low-involvement, product categories can often benefit from the insights
provided by motivational research. Typically, in low-involvement product categories,
perception variables and cultural influences are most important. Our culture is a system
of rules and “regulations” that simplify and optimize our existence. Cultural rules govern
how we squeeze a tube of toothpaste, how we open packages, how we use a bath
towel, who does what work, etc. Most of us are relatively unaware of these cultural
rules. Understanding how these cultural rules influence a particular product can be
extremely valuable information for the marketer.
It is easier to observe consumers in buying situations than in their homes, and here the
observation can be in-person or by video cameras. Generally, video cameras are less
intrusive than an in-person observer. Finding a representative set of cooperative stores,
however, is not an easy task, and the installation and maintenance of video cameras is
not without its difficulties. In-store observers can be used as well, so long as they have
some “cover” that makes their presence less obvious. But, observation by video or
human eye cannot answer every question. Generally, observation must be
supplemented by focus groups or depth interviews to fully understand why consumers
are doing what they do.
The focus group in the hands of a skilled moderator can be a valuable motivational
research technique. To reach its full motivational potential, the group interview must be
largely nondirective in style, and the group must achieve spontaneous interaction. It is
the mutual reinforcement within the group (the group excitement and spontaneity) that
produces the revelations and behaviors that reveal underlying motives. A focus group
discussion dominated by the moderator will rarely produce any motivational insights. A
focus group actively led by the moderator with much direct questioning of respondents
will seldom yield motivational understanding. But the focus group is a legitimate
motivational technique.
The Depth Interview
The heart and soul of motivational research is the depth interview, a lengthy (one to two
hours), one-on-one, personal interview, conducted directly by the motivational
researcher. Much of the power of the depth interview is dependent upon the insight,
sensitivity, and skill of the motivational researcher. The interviewing task cannot be
delegated to traditional marketing research interviewers—who have no training in
motivational techniques.
During the personal interview, the motivational researcher strives to create an empathic
relationship with each respondent, a feeling of rapport, mutual trust, and understanding.
The researcher creates a climate in which the respondent feels free to express his
feelings and his thoughts, without fear of embarrassment or rejection. The researcher
conveys a feeling that the respondent and his opinions are important and worthwhile, no
matter what those opinions are. The motivational researcher is accepting,
nonthreatening, and supportive. The emotional empathy between motivational
researcher and respondent is the single most important determinant of an effective
interview.
During the interview, the researcher watches for clues that might indicate that a
“sensitive nerve” has been touched. Long pauses by the respondent, slips of the
tongue, fidgeting, variations in voice pitch, strong emotions, facial expressions, eye
movements, avoidance of a question, fixation on an issue, and body language are some
of the clues the motivational researcher keys on. These “sensitive” topics and issues
are then the focus of additional inquiry and exploration later in the interview.
The Analysis
The motivational researcher reads and rereads the hundreds of pages of verbatim
respondent dialogue. As she reads, the researcher looks for systematic patterns of
response. She identifies logical inconsistencies or apparent contradictions. She
compares direct responses against projective responses. She notes the consistent use
of unusual words or phrases. She studies the explicit content of the interview and
contemplates its meaning in relation to the implicit content. She searches for what is not
said as diligently as she does for what is said. Like a detective, she sifts through the
clues and the evidence to deduce the forces and motives influencing consumer
behavior. No one clue or piece of evidence is treated as being very important. It is the
convergence of evidence and facts that leads to significant conclusions. In the scientific
tradition, empiricism and logic must come together and make sense.
The analysis begins at the cultural level. Cultural values and influences are the ocean in
which we all swim and, of which, most of us are completely unaware. What we eat, the
way we eat, how we dress, what we think and feel, and the language we speak are
dimensions of our culture. These taken-for-granted cultural dimensions are the basic
building blocks that begin the motivational researcher’s analysis. The culture is the
context that must be understood before the behavior of individuals within the context
can be understood. Every product has cultural values and rules that influence its
perception and its usage.
Once the cultural context is reasonably well understood, the next analytic step is the
exploration of the unique motivations that relate to the product category. What
psychological needs does the product fulfill? Does the product have any social
overtones or anthropological significance? Does the product relate to one’s status
aspirations, to competitive drives, to feelings of self-esteem, to security needs? Are
masochistic motives involved? Does the product have deep symbolic significance? And
so on. Some of these motives must be inferred since respondents are often unaware of
why they do what they do. But the analysis is not complete.
The last major dimension that must be understood is the business environment,
including competitive forces, brand perceptions and images, relative market shares, the
role of advertising in the category, and trends in the marketplace. Only part of this
business environment knowledge can come from the respondent, of course, but
understanding the business context is crucial to the interpretation of consumer motives
in a way that will lead to useful results. Understanding the consumer’s motives is
worthless unless somehow that knowledge can be translated into actionable marketing
and advertising recommendations.
RESEARCH DESIGN
Research designs are concerned with turning the research question into a testing project. The
best design depends on your research questions. Every design has its positive and negative sides.
Research design can be divided into fixed and flexible research designs (Robson, 1993). Others
have referred to this distinction with ‘quantitative research designs’ and ‘qualitative research
designs’. However, fixed designs need not be quantitative, and flexible design need not be
qualitative. In fixed designs the design of the study is fixed before the main stage of data
collection takes place. Fixed designs are normally theory-driven; otherwise it’s impossible to
know in advance which variables need to be controlled and measured. Often these variables are
quantitative. Flexible designs allow for more freedom during the data collection. One reason for
using a flexible research design can be that the variable of interest is not quantitatively
measurable, such as culture. In other cases, theory might not be available before one starts the
research.
Experimental design
See also Design of experiments.
In an experimental design, the researcher actively tries to change the situation, circumstances or
experience of participants (manipulation), which leads to a change in behaviour of the
participants of the study. The participants are assigned to different conditions, and variables of
interest are measured. All other variables are controlled Experiments are normally highly fixed
before the data collection starts. Read more about experiental research designs here Experiment.
Non-experimental research is almost the same as experimental research, the only difference is
that non-experimental research does not involve a manipulation of the situation, circumstances or
experience of the participants. Non-experimental research designs can be split up in three
designs. First, relational designs, in which a range of variables is measured. These designs are
also called correlational studies, since the correlation is most often used analysis. The second
type is comparative designs. These design compare two natural groups. The third type of non-
experimental research is a longitudinal design. See Longitudinal study.
Quasi experiment
Quasi research designs are research design that follow the experimental procedure, but do not
randomly assign people to (treatment and comparison) groups. See Quasi-experiment and natural
experiment for more details.
Examples of flexible (qualitative) research designs
Case study
In a case study, one single unit is extensively studied. This case can be a person, organization,
group or situation. Famous case studies are for example the descriptions about the patients of
Freud, who were thoroughly analysed and described. Read more on case study. Bell (1999) states
“a case study approach is particularly appropriate for individual researchers because it gives an
opportunity for one aspect of a problem to be studied in some depth within a limited time scale”.
Ethnographic study
This type of research is involved with a group, organization, culture, or community. Normally
the researcher shares a lot of time with the group. Read more on Ethnography.
The aim of grounded theory studies is to make theories that can explain certain events. Read
more about this on Grounded theory
Market segmentation
Market segmentation is a concept in economics and marketing. A market segment is a sub-set
of a market made up of people or organizations with one or more characteristics that cause them
to demand similar product and/or services based on qualities of those products such as price or
function. A true market segment meets all of the following criteria: it is distinct from other
segments (different segments have different needs), it is homogeneous within the segment
(exhibits common needs); it responds similarly to a market stimulus, and it can be reached by a
market intervention. The term is also used when consumers with identical product and/or service
needs are divided up into groups so they can be charged different amounts.The people in a given
segment are supposed to be similar in terms of criteria by which they are segmented and different
from other segments in terms of these criteria. These can broadly be viewed as 'positive' and
'negative' applications of the same idea, splitting up the market into smaller groups.
Examples:
Gender
Price
Interests
While there may be theoretically 'ideal' market segments, in reality every organization engaged
in a market will develop different ways of imagining market segments, and create Product
differentiation strategies to exploit these segments. The market segmentation and corresponding
product differentiation strategy can give a firm a temporary commercial advantage.
Market segmenting is dividing the market into groups of individual markets with similar wants
or needs that a company divides into distinct groups which have distinct needs, wants, behavior
or which might want different products & services. Broadly, markets can be divided according to
a number of general criteria, such as by industry or public versus private. Although industrial
market segmentation is quite different from consumer market segmentation, both have similar
objectives. All of these methods of segmentation are merely proxies for true segments, which
don't always fit into convenient demographic boundaries.
[edit] Positioning
Once a market segment has been identified (via segmentation), and targeted (in which the
viability of servicing the market intended), the segment is then subject to positioning. Positioning
involves ascertaining how a product or a company is perceived in the minds of consumers.
This part of the segmentation process consists of drawing up a perceptual map, which highlights
rival goods within one's industry according to perceived quality and price. After the perceptual
map has been devised, a firm would consider the marketing communications mix best suited to
the product in question.
The basic approach to retention-based segmentation is that a company tags each of its active
customers with 3 values:
Tag #1: Is this customer at high risk of canceling the company's service? One of the most
common indicators of high-risk customers is a drop off in usage of the company's service. For
example, in the credit card industry this could be signaled through a customer's decline in
spending on his or her card.
Tag #2: Is this customer worth retaining? This determination boils down to whether the post-
retention profit generated from the customer is predicted to be greater than the cost incurred to
retain the customer. Managing Customers as Investments. [1] [2]
Tag #3: What retention tactics should be used to retain this customer? For customers who
are deemed “save-worthy”, it’s essential for the company to know which save tactics are most
likely to be successful. Tactics commonly used range from providing “special” customer
discounts to sending customers communications that reinforce the value proposition of the given
service.
Process for tagging customers
The basic approach to tagging customers is to utilize historical retention data to make predictions
about active customers regarding:
The idea is to match up active customers with customers from historic retention data who share
similar attributes. Using the theory that “birds of a feather flock together”, the approach is based
on the assumption that active customers will have similar retention outcomes as those of their
comparable predecessor.
Price Discrimination
Where a monopoly exists, the price of a product is likely to be higher than in a competitive
market and the quantity sold less, generating monopoly profits for the seller. These profits can be
increased further if the market can be segmented with different prices charged to different
segments charging higher prices to those segments willing and able to pay more and charging
less to those whose demand is price elastic. The price discriminator might need to create rate
fences that will prevent members of a higher price segment from purchasing at the prices
available to members of a lower price segment. This behavior is rational on the part of the
monopolist, but is often seen by competition authorities as an abuse of a monopoly position,
whether or not the monopoly itself is sanctioned. Examples of this exist in the transport industry
(a plane or train journey to a particular destination at a particular time is a practical monopoly)
where business class customers who can afford to pay may be charged prices many times higher
than economy class customers for essentially the same service