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Chapter 6 Measuring Market Opportunities: Forecasting and Market Knowledge McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Every forecast is wrong! • The future is inherently uncertain, especially in today’s rapidly changing markets. • An evidence-based forecast, instead of a wild guess, is almost always called for, even if time and money are scarce. 6-2 A Forecaster’s Toolkit • An estimate of market potential often serves as a starting point for preparing a sales forecast. • The size of the currently penetrated market should also be ascertained. • Investors will also need a sales forecast. 6-3 A Forecaster’s Toolkit • Two broad approaches for preparing a sales forecast: – Top-down approach in which a central person or persons take the responsibility for forecasting and prepare an overall forecast. – Bottom-up approach in which each part of the firm prepares its own sales forecast, and the parts are aggregated to create the forecast for the firm as a whole 6-4 A Forecaster’s Toolkit • Statistical methods – These use past history and various statistical techniques, such as multiple regression or time series analysis, to forecast the future. – These generally assume that the future will look very much like the past. – Sometimes this is not the case. 6-5 A Forecaster’s Toolkit • Other quantitative methods: – Methods to mathematically model the diffusion of innovation process for consumer durables. – Conjoint analysis, a method to forecast the impact on consumer demand of different combinations of attributes that might be included in a new product. 6-6 A Forecaster’s Toolkit • Observation – Attractive method because it is based on what people actually do. • Surveys or focus groups • Analogy – The product is compared with similar historical data that are available. – Also used for new-to-the-world hightechnology products 6-7 A Forecaster’s Toolkit • Judgment – Sometimes forecasts are made solely on the basis of experienced judgment, or intuition. – Defending such forecasts against those prepared by evidence-based methods is difficult. • Mathematics entailed in forecasting – The chain ratio calculation. – The use of indices. 6-8 A Forecaster’s Toolkit • Market tests – May be done under controlled experimental conditions in research laboratories, or in live test markets. – Use of live test markets has declined for two reasons: • They are expensive to conduct. • Competitors can buy the data collected through scanners at the checkout and learn the results of the test market without bearing the expense. 6-9 Rate of Diffusion of Innovations • Diffusion of innovation theory seeks to explain the adoption of an innovative product or service over time among a group of potential buyers. • The adoption process involves the attitudinal changes experienced by individuals from the time they first hear about a new product, service, or idea until they adopt it. 6-10 Rate of Diffusion of Innovations • Speed of adoption depends on: – The risk. – The relative advantage over other products. – The relative simplicity of the new product. – Its compatibility with previously adopted ideas. – The extent to which its trial can be accomplished on a small-scale basis. – The ease with which the central idea of the new product can be communicated. 6-11 Diffusion of Innovation Curve 6-12 Rate of Diffusion of Innovations • Implications of diffusion of innovation theory – A good way to estimate how quickly an innovation is likely to move through the diffusion process is to construct a chart that rates the adoption on the six key factors influencing adoption speed. – Introducing a new product that delivers no real benefits or lacks competitive advantage is likely to face tough sledding. 6-13 Cautions and Caveats in Forecasting • Keys to good forecasting – Making explicit the assumptions on which the forecast is based. – Using multiple methods. 6-14 Cautions and Caveats in Forecasting • Common sources of error in forecasting – Forecasters are subject to anchoring bias. – Capacity constraints are sometimes misinterpreted as forecasts. – Incentive pay. – Instated but implicit assumptions can overstate a well-intentioned forecast. 6-15 Why Data? Why Marketing Research? • Without adequate market knowledge, marketing decisions are likely to be misguided. • Thoughtfully designed, competently executed marketing research can mitigate the chances of unpleasant outcomes. 6-16 Customer Relationship Management and Market Knowledge Systems • Four market knowledge systems: – Internal records regarding marketing performance – Marketing databases – Competitive intelligence systems – Systems to organize client contact • Taken together, these lie at the heart of the systematic practice of customer relationship management (CRM). 6-17 Customer Relationship Management and Market Knowledge Systems • Internal records systems – Internal records systems help track what is selling, how fast, in which locations, to which customers, and so on. – Providing input on the design of such systems so that the right data are provided to the right people at the right time is a critical marketing responsibility in any company. 6-18 Customer Relationship Management and Market Knowledge Systems • The purpose of CRM is to develop a unified and cohesive view of the customer from every touch point within the company. – Databases created for CRM purposes typically capture information about:: • • • • Transactions Instances of customer contact Customer demographics Customer responses 6-19 Customer Relationship Management and Market Knowledge Systems • Database design considerations: – The cost of collecting the data. – The economic benefits of using the data. – The ability of the company to keep the data current in today’s mobile society. – The rapid advances in technology. • Data mining 6-20 Customer Relationship Management and Market Knowledge Systems • Implementing an effective CRM effort requires four key steps: – Gaining broad-based organizational support for creating and adopting a CRM strategy. – Forming a cross-functional CRM team with membership from all functions that have customer contact. – Conducting a needs analysis that identifies both customer and business needs. – Developing a CRM strategy to guide implementation. 6-21 Customer Relationship Management and Market Knowledge Systems • Major pitfalls to watch out for: – Implementing CRM without first developing a strategy. – Putting CRM in place without changing organizational structure and/or processes. – Assuming that more CRM is better. – Failure to prioritize which customer relationships are most worth investing in. 6-22 Customer Relationship Management and Market Knowledge Systems • Client contact systems – Salesforce automation software helps companies disseminate real-time product information to salespeople. • Competitive intelligence systems – A systematic and ethical approach for gathering and analyzing information about competitors’ activities and related business trends. – It is based on the idea that more than 80 percent of all information is public knowledge. 6-23 Marketing Research: A Foundation for Marketing Decision Making • Marketing research task is the design, collection, analysis, and reporting of research intended to gather data pertinent to a particular marketing challenge or situation. 6-24 Marketing Research: A Foundation for Marketing Decision Making • Step 1: Identify the managerial problem and establish research objectives – A good place to start is to ask what the managerial problem or question is that a proposed program of research might address. – Taking each of the managerial questions and applying appropriate analytical frameworks to each of them results in a set of research objectives that will drive the research. 6-25 Marketing Research: A Foundation for Marketing Decision Making • Step 2: Determine the data sources and types of data required – Primary or secondary sources? – Qualitative or quantitative data and research approaches? • Step 3: Design the research – Determine the data collection method and prepare the research instrument. – Determine the contact method. – Design the sampling plan. 6-26 Marketing Research: A Foundation for Marketing Decision Making • Step 4: Collect the data – Contributes more to overall error than any other step. – Collector bias. • Step 5: Analyze the data – Often, sophisticated statistical analyses are required. • Step 6: Report the results to the decision maker 6-27 What Users of Marketing Research Should Ask? • Questions: – What are the objectives of the research? Will the data to be collected meet those objectives? – Are the data sources appropriate? Is cheaper, faster secondary data used where possible? Is qualitative research planned to ensure that quantitative research, if any, is on target? – Are the planned approaches suited to the objectives of the research? – Is the research designed well? – Are the planned analyses appropriate? 6-28 Take-Aways • Every forecast and estimate of market potential is wrong! – Evidence-based forecasts and estimates, prepared using the tools provided in this chapter, are far more credible—and generally more accurate—than hunches or wild guesses. 6-29 Take-Aways • Forecasts have powerful influence on what companies do, through budgets and other planning procedures. • Superior market knowledge is not only an important source of competitive advantage, but it also results in happier, higher volume of, and more loyal customers. 6-30 Take-Aways • Much can go wrong in marketing research and often does. – Becoming an informed and critical user of marketing research is an essential skill for anyone who seeks to contribute to strategic decision making. 6-31