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Chapter 1 Marketing Research for Managerial Decision Making McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Marketing Research • Links an organization to its market through the gathering of information 1-2 The Growing Complexity of Marketing Research • Marketing research is a systematic process • Tasks include: – Designing methods for collecting information – Managing the information collection process – Analyzing and interpreting results – Communicating findings to decision makers 1-3 The Role and Value of Marketing Research • Marketing research draws heavily on the social sciences both for methods and theory • Marketing research methods: – Span a wide variety of qualitative and quantitative techniques – Borrow from disciplines such as psychology, sociology, and anthropology 1-4 The Role and Value of Marketing Research • Marketing research can be applied to a wide variety of problems involving the four Ps: – Price – Place – Promotion – Product 1-5 Marketing Research and Marketing Mix Variables • Product Decisions – New product development and introduction: What should we introduce and what features/benefits are important/desired? – Branding: How best to brand our product? – Positioning products: How best to position our product? 1-6 Marketing Research and Marketing Mix Variables • Place/Distribution Decisions • Include choosing and evaluating: – Locations – Channels – Distribution partners • Retailing research: Focus on trade area analysis, store image/perception, in-store traffic patterns, and location analysis 1-7 Marketing Research and Marketing Mix Variables • Behavioral targeting: Displays ads on a website based on the user’s previous surfing behavior • Shopper marketing: Marketing to consumers based on research of the entire process consumers go through when making a purchase 1-8 Marketing Research and Marketing Mix Variables • Promotion Decisions – Essential that companies know how to obtain good returns from their promotional budgets – Advertising effectiveness studies – Attitudinal research – Sales tracking 1-9 Marketing Research and Marketing Mix Variables • Price Decisions – – – – Pricing new products Establishing price levels in test marketing Modifying prices for existing products How large is the demand potential within the target market at various price levels? – How sensitive is demand to changes in price levels? – Are there identifiable segments that have different price sensitivities? – Are there opportunities to offer different price points to different target markets (i.e. price discriminate)? 1-10 Consumers and Markets – Segmentation Studies • Marketing Research helps inform “STP” efforts: – Developing a segmentation scheme – Creating customer profiles – Benefit and lifestyle studies: Understanding behavioral characteristics of the different segments (commonalities and differences) – Estimating target audience sizes – Testing positioning statements with targets 1-11 Skills Needed • Top five skills: – Ability to understand, analyze and interpret data – Presentation skills – Foreign-language competency – Negotiation skills – Computer proficiency 1-12 Ethical Challenges in Marketing Research 1-13 Ethical Questions in General Business Practices • Potential ethical pitfalls for research providers: – Unethical pricing – Unnecessary or unwarranted research services – Client confidentiality issues – Use of “black-box” methodologies • Branded “black-box” methodologies: Offered by research firms that are branded – Do not provide information about how the methodology works 1-14 Conducting Research Not Meeting Professional Standards • Reasons: – Fearful of losing clients’ business – Client pressure to perform research to prove a predetermined conclusion – Cost cutting – Interviewers working for research firms may also engage in unethical behavior • Curbstoning: Data collection personnel filling out surveys for fake respondents 1-15 Abuse of Respondents • Potential ways to abuse respondents in marketing research: – By not providing promised incentive to respondents for completing interviews or questionnaires – By stating that interviews are very short when in reality they may last an hour or more – By using “fake” sponsors 1-16 Abuse of Respondents • At the end of any study involving deception, subjects must be “debriefed” to explain deception – Subject debriefing: Fully explaining to respondents any deception that was used during research and why 1-17 Abuse of Respondents • Sugging/frugging: Claiming that a survey is for research purposes and then asking for a sale or donation • De-anonymizing data: • Linking info with participant’s identity, • Combining different publicly available information, usually unethically, to determine consumers’ identities, especially on the Internet 1-18 Unethical Activities of the Client/Research User • Requesting detailed research proposals from several competing research providers with no intention of actually selecting a firm to conduct the research • Promising a prospective research provider a long-term relationship or additional projects in order to obtain a very low price on the initial research project • Overstating results of a marketing research project 1-19 Unethical Activities by Respondents • Providing dishonest answers – Faking behavior / lying – Careless participation 1-20 Marketing Research Codes of Ethics • The ESOMAR code: – Conform to all national and international laws – Behave ethically – Be particularly careful with children and other vulnerable groups – Ensure respondents are cooperating voluntarily and are well informed of risks – Respect rights of respondents – Protect personal data and use only for intended purposes – Conduct projects with accuracy, transparency, objectivity, and quality – Conform to principles of fair competition 1-21