Chapter 7 - Types of Data
Chapter 7 - Types of Data
Types of Data
Secondary data
Primary data
Secondary Data
Data someone else has collected Are pieces of information that have already been collected for a different purpose, but may be relevant to the research problems at hand.
Importance / Usefulness
Secondary data are useful for addressing a number of research questions, for example:
Estimating market potential Analyzing competitors Sales forecasting Assessing industry trends Alerting the manager to potential problems Providing preliminary information to guide subsequent primary data collection
Trade Associations - Newsletters, special reports, annual state of the industry reports, etc.
Publication by research organisations Other publications - periodicals, annual reports Computer retrievable databases And your most Favorite your Godfor Everything None another than..
Internet
It will save you money. Even if you have to pay for access, often it is cheaper in terms of money than collecting your own data.
It will save you time. Primary data collection is very time consuming It may be very accurate. When especially a government agency has collected the data, incredible amounts of time and money went into it. Its probably highly accurate. It has great exploratory value. Exploring research questions and formulating hypothesis to test.
May be out of date for what you want to analyze. May not have been collected long enough for detecting trends. Is the data set complete?
Are the data consistent/reliable? Was the collecting agency biased ? Was the sample representative ? Were the enumerators capable and properly trained ? Was there an proper check on accuracy of field work ? Was the editing, tabulating and analysis carefully and conscientiously done ? What degree of accuracy was desired by the compiler ? Is the information exactly what you need? Whether the data are suitable for the purpose of inquiry ? Whether the nature and scope of investigation is covered ?
Secondary data are information previously gathered for a different purpose that may be relevant to the problem at hand.
Secondary data can come from sources internal to the organization or external.
The internet has, in many ways, enabled the gathering of secondary data. Secondary data are generally useful, low-cost, rapidly available sources of information. Always look for secondary data first
Primary Data
Demographic/Socioeconomic
Psychological/Lifestyle
Attitudes/Opinions
Awareness/Knowledge
Intentions
Motivations
Behavior
Focus groups
Questionnaires
Personal interviews Telephonic interviews Mail survey internet survey Experiments and observational study
Designing your collection instrument? Selecting your population or sample? Pre testing / piloting the instrument to work out sources of bias? Administration of the instrument? Entry/collation of data? Uniqueness May not be able to compare to other populations Researcher error Sample bias Other confounding factors
Communication Methods
Interacting with respondents Asking for their opinions, attitudes, motivations, characteristics
Observation Methods
No interaction with respondents Letting them behave naturally and drawing conclusions from their actions
Methods include:
Electronic media have made observation cheaper Activities, Interests, Personality Traits
Type of Interviews
Disadvantages
Probably highest response rate Allows any type of questions/questionnaires Easy to ensure representative sample Know who is completing questionnaire Mall intercept can be relatively quick
Generally narrow distribution Typically most expensive method Often tough to gain identity of respondent Can be time consuming in the case of in-home Tough to supervise
Relatively fast Relatively strong response rates, but getting worse Sequence of questions can be easily changed Data entry at time of completion is possible Ability of supervisor to oversee interviewers Can be recorded without embarrassing the respondent
Does not handle long interviews well Cannot use visuals Difficult to contact business respondents Unlisted numbers make sample frame questionable restricted to those who have phone facility
Demerits of Questionnaire
Low rate of return of duly filled in questionnaire Can be used only when respondents are educated and cooperative Control over questionnaire will be lost once it is sent Inflexible, cant be amended after dispatching Possible of ambiguous replies or omissions This method is the slowest Difficult to know whether the willing respondents are truly representative
Easy to generate stratified sample frame No interviewer bias Assures anonymity of respondent Wide distribution Best for sensitive or personal questions Generally least expensive
Little control over exactly who completes survey Low response rate Long response time No ability to probe on open-ended questions Cannot change sequence of questions
Typically low cost, especially marginal cost of additional responses Wide distribution possible Very quick (15 minutes-2 days) Fairly decent response rates Easy point-of-purchase feedback Automatic data entry
Limited sample frame representative ability to locate Expense of infrastructure and expertise SPAM backlash Legal problems
Physical Actions Shopping behavior, response latency, service quality, television viewing habits Verbal Behaviors Sales conversations, opinion leadership, tone of voice Expressive behaviors Facial expressions, body posture Special Relations and Locations Traffic patterns, store layout, efficiency
Methods include: Direct observation Contrived observation (laboratory) Content Analysis Physiological measurement Electronic methods
Limited in terms of what can be observed Expensive method unforeseen factors can interfere with observational task
Structured Observation
What should be observed ? How the observations should be recorded ? How accuracy can be ensured ? The style of recording the observations standardized conditions of observation selection of pertinent data of observation
Unstructured Observation
Uncontrolled Observations
takes place in natural settings main aim is to get spontaneous picture of the situation tendency to supply naturalness and completeness of behaviour more time is to be devoted pitfall is subjective interpretations
Controlled Observations
take place as per definite pre-arranged plan & involves experimental procedure use of mechanical instruments as aids to accuracy and standardization supplies formalized data upon which generalizations can be built with some degree of assurance Generally undertaken in laboratories or under controlled conditions
Participant Observation
Observer makes himself a member of the group can experience what the group experiences natural behaviour is able to be recorded more information can be gathered can lose objectivity as attached emotionally to the group
Non-participant observation
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