Capturing Marketing Insights: 1. Collecting Information and Forecasting Demand
Capturing Marketing Insights: 1. Collecting Information and Forecasting Demand
Conducting
Marketing Research and
Questions
• What is the scope of marketing research?
• What steps are involved in conducting good marketing
research?
• What are the best metrics for measuring marketing
productivity?
What is Marketing Research?
Marketing research is the systematic design,
collection, analysis, and reporting of data and
findings relevant to a specific marketing situation
facing the company.
What is Marketing Research?
(American Marketing Association)
Marketing research is the function that links the
consumer, customer, and public to the marketer
through information- information used to
identify and define marketing opportunities and
problems; generate, refine, and evaluate
marketing actions; monitor marketing
performance; and improve understanding of
marketing as a process.
What is Marketing Research?
(American Marketing Association)
Marketing research specifies the information
required to address these issues, designs the
method for collecting information, manages
and implement the data collection process,
analyzes the results, and communicates the
findings and their implications.
The Role of Marketing Research
Customer Groups
• Consumers
• Employees
• Shareholders
• Suppliers Uncontrollable
Controllable Environmental
Marketing Factors
Variables
Marketing •Economy
•Product
Research •Technology
•Pricing
•Laws &
•Promotion Regulations
•Distribution •Social & Cultural
Assessing Marketing Factors
Providing
Information Information Decision •Political Factors
Needs Making
Marketing Managers
• Market Segmentation
• Target Market Selection
• Marketing Programs
• Performance & Control
Marketing Research Suppliers &
Services
RESEARCH
INTERNAL EXTERNAL
SUPPLIERS
Problem Problem
Identification Research Solving Research
Determine…
Types of distribution
Attitudes of channel members
Intensity of wholesale & resale coverage
Channel margins
Location of retail and wholesale outlets
The Marketing Research Process
Define the problem
Present findings
Step 1: Define the Problem, the Decision
Alternatives, Research Objectives
Analytical Specification
Objective/ Model: Verbal, Research Of Information
Theoretical Hypotheses
Graphical, Questions Needed
Foundations
Mathematical
OBJECTIVES
BUYER BEHAVIOR
LEGAL ENVIROMENT
ECONOMIC ENVIROMENT
Broad Statement
Specific Components
Development of Research Questions
and Hypotheses
Components of the
Marketing Research Problem
Objective/
Theoretical
Framework Research Questions
Analytical
Model
Hypotheses
Management Decision Problem Vs.
Marketing Research Problem
Management Decision Problem Marketing Research Problem
Should a new product be To determine consumer preferences
introduced? and purchase intentions for the
proposed new product.
Should the advertising To determine the effectiveness
campaign be changed? of the current advertising campaign.
Should the price of the To determine the price elasticity
brand be increased? of demand and the impact on sales
and profits of various levels of price changes.
Step 2: Develop the Research Plan
Data Research
Sources Design
Research Sampling
Approach Plan
Research Contact
Instruments Methods
Research Design: Definition
• A research design is a framework or blueprint
for conducting the marketing research project.
It details the procedures necessary for obtaining
the information needed to structure or solve
marketing research problems.
Data Sources
Secondary Data: Data that was collected for
another purpose, and already exists somewhere
Exploratory Conclusive
Research Design Research Design
Cross-Sectional Longitudinal
Design Design
Findings
Tentative. Conclusive.
/Results:
Outcome:
Generally followed by further Findings used as input into
exploratory or conclusive decision making.
Uses of Exploratory Research
• Formulate a problem or define a problem more precisely
• Identify alternative courses of action
• Develop hypotheses
• Isolate key variables and relationships for further
examination
• Gain insights for developing an approach to the problem
• Establish priorities for further research
Methods of Exploratory Research
• Survey of experts Pilot surveys
• Secondary data analyzed in a qualitative way
• Qualitative research
Use of Descriptive Research
• To describe the characteristics of relevant groups,
such as consumers, salespeople, organizations, or
market areas.
• To estimate the percentage of units in a specified
population exhibiting a certain behavior.
• To determine the perceptions of product
characteristics.
• To determine the degree to which marketing
variables are associated.
• To make specific predictions
Methods of Descriptive Research
• Secondary data analyzed in a quantitative as
opposed to a qualitative manner
• Surveys Panels
• Observational and other data
Cross-sectional Designs
• Involve the collection of information from any given sample of
population elements only once.
• In single cross-sectional designs, there is only one sample of
respondents and information is obtained from this sample only
once.
• In multiple cross-sectional designs, there are two or more
samples of respondents, and information from each sample is
obtained only once. Often, information from different samples is
obtained at different times.
• Cohort analysis consists of a series of surveys conducted at
appropriate time intervals, where the cohort serves as the basic
unit of analysis. A cohort is a group of respondents who
experience the same event within the same time interval.
Longitudinal Designs
• A fixed sample (or samples) of population elements
is measured repeatedly on the same variables
• A longitudinal design differs from a cross-sectional
design in that the sample or samples remain the
same over time
Uses of Casual Research
• To understand which variables are the cause (independent
variables) and which variables are the effect (dependent
variables) of a phenomenon
• To determine the nature of the relationship between the
causal variables and the effect to be predicted
• METHOD: Experiments
Research Approaches
Observation
Observation
Ethnographic
Ethnographic
Focus
Focus Group
Group
Survey
Survey
Behavioral
Behavioral Data
Data
Experimentation
Experimentation
Research Instruments
Questionnaires
Qualitative Measures
Technological Devices
Questionnaire Do’s and Don’ts
• Ensure questions are free of • Avoid negatives
bias • Avoid hypotheticals
• Make questions simple • Avoid words that could be
• Make questions specific misheard
• Avoid jargon • Use response bands
• Avoid sophisticated words • Use mutually exclusive
• Avoid ambiguous words categories
• Allow for “other” in fixed
response questions
Question Types—Dichotomous
In arranging this trip, did you contact American
Airlines?
Yes No
Question Types—Multiple Choice
With whom are you traveling on this trip?
No one
Spouse
Spouse and children
Children only
Business associates/friends/relatives
An organized tour group
Question Types—Likert Scale
Word
Word Association
Association
Projective
Projective Techniques
Techniques
Visualization
Visualization
Brand
Brand Personification
Personification
Laddering
Laddering
Question Types—Word Association
Tachistoscope
Eye cameras
Audiometers
GPS
Sampling Plan
Telephone
Interview
Personal
Interview
Online
Interview
Pros and Cons of Online Research
Advantages Disadvantages
• Inexpensive • Small samples
• Fast • Skewed samples
• Accuracy of data, even for • Technological problems
sensitive questions • Inconsistencies
• Versatility
Measuring Marketing Productivity
• 1. Marketing Metrics: to assess marketing effects.
• 2. Marketing-Mix Modeling: to estimate causal
relationships and measure how marketing activity
affects outcomes.
What is Marketing Metrics?
Marketing metrics is the set of measures that
helps marketers quantify, compare, and
interpret marketing performance.
Marketing Metrics
External Internal
• Awareness • Awareness of goals
• Market share • Commitment to goals
• Relative price • Active support
• Number of complaints • Resource adequacy
• Customer satisfaction • Staffing levels
• Distribution • Desire to learn
• Total number of customers • Willingness to change
• Loyalty • Freedom to fail
• Autonomy
What is Marketing-Mix Modeling?
Marketing-mix models analyze data from a
variety of sources, such as retailer scanner data,
company shipment data, pricing, media, and
promotion spending data, to understand more
precisely the effects of specific marketing
activities.
Marketing Dashboards
• A customer-performance scorecard records how
well the company is doing year after year on
customer-based measures.