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MARKET RESEARCH

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Your Business ... Guides the development of your plans of action. Determines market size ... science of managing all interactions and business with customers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MARKET RESEARCH


1
MARKET RESEARCH CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP
MANAGEMENT
  • Knowing Your Market
  • Who and Where Are Your Customers? What Do They
    Really Want?
  • Author Lorraine Allen, Ellen Silverman, Ed
    Kurocka
  • SBDC _at_ The College of New Jersey

2
Market Research Definition
  • Marketing research is the systematic gathering,
    recording and analyzing of data about problems
    relating to the marketing of goods and services.

3
Market Research Answers 2 Basic Questions
  • Your Customers B2C B2B
  • Who are they now? Who are your future targets?
  • What kind of people are they? (age, progressive,
    educated)
  • Where do they live? (demographics)
  • Can and will they buy? (income or sales level,
    trends)
  • When do they buy?
  • How do they buy?
  • Where do they buy?
  • What are the hot buttons that motivate them to
    buy? (emotion, not reason)
  • Why do/will they buy from YOU?
  • What do they think of my business? (do they know
    enough about you, how do you know)

4
Market Research
  • Your Business
  • How does your customer profile measure against
    your products/services and your marketing
    strategies?
  • Are you offering the kinds of goods services
    they want?
  • At the best place, time, amounts?
  • Are you priced consistent with your products
    perceived value? (would they pay more or want
    less)
  • Compare pros/cons with your competitors?
  • SWOT Analysis

5
Benefits of Market ResearchFocuses and organizes
timely information
  • Reduces business risks
  • Reveals key market trends
  • Helps you spot current and upcoming problems in
    the market
  • Identifies sales opportunities
  • Guides the development of your plans of action
  • Determines market size

6
Reasons for Market Research
  • Gather facts and opinions in an orderly way to
    find out what people want to buy, not just what
    you want to sell them!

7
Reasons for Market Research
  • Gather facts and opinions in an orderly way to
    find out what people want to buy, not just what
    you want to sell them!
  • Attempts to understand why your target markets
    buy a particular service or product.

8
Reasons for Market Research
  • Gather facts and opinions in an orderly way to
    find out what people want to buy, not just what
    you want to sell them!
  • Attempts to understand why your target markets
    buy a particular service or product.
  • Helps test your strategies for new products or
    services, or when trying to develop new markets.

9
Reasons for Market Research
  • Gather facts and opinions in an orderly way to
    find out what people want to buy, not just what
    you want to sell them!
  • Attempts to understand why your target markets
    buy a particular service or product.
  • Helps test your strategies for new products or
    services, or when trying to develop mew markets.
  • Identifies new and better ways of communicating
    your message to your consumer about your brand.

10
Reasons for Market Research
  • Gather facts and opinions in an orderly way to
    find out what people want to buy, not just what
    you want to sell them!
  • Attempts to understand why your target markets
    buy a particular service or product.
  • Helps test your strategies for new products or
    services, or when trying to develop mew markets.
  • Identifies new and better ways of communicating
    your message to your consumer about your brand.
  • Identifies decision making tools for service or
    product development, new packaging, positioning,
    promotions, pricing, etc.

11
Types of Market Research
  • Two types of research
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Four core areas of investigation
  • Consumer
  • Commercial
  • Social
  • International

12
Primary Market Research
  • Original Grassroots Information
  • Initiated and secured by you/your company for a
    specific purpose.
  • SIMPLE
  • asking customers or suppliers how they feel about
    your business
  • COMPLEX
  • surveys conducted by professional marketing
    research firms.

13
Primary Market Research
  • Common forms/examples of original information
    include
  • Direct mail questionnaires, telephone surveys,
    e-mail surveys, experiments, panel studies, test
    marketing, behavior observation.
  • Currently held information, such as, receipts,
    sales records, customer demographic/purchase data
  • Customer feedback how do you follow up?
  • Employees are an excellent source of original
    information

14
Secondary Market Research
  • Pre-existing Information
  • Already exists somewhere
  • Magazines, reports, articles
  • Usually faster and less expensive to obtain than
    primary research
  • May be as simple as making a trip to your local
    library or biz center or browsing the internet

15
Secondary Market Research
  • Sources of secondary material
  • Trade and business publications, newspapers
  • Trade associations and government agencies
  • Library Access to sites and databases such as Dow
    Jones Interactive, Hoovers Online, Lexis/Nexis,
    FISonline, Value Line, Investext, SPs Industry
    Surveys, GALES Directory
  • NJ Knowledge Initiative
  • njki.org (bonus for NJ businesses)
  • Others

16
Areas of Investigation
  • Consumer
  • assessing and measuring reaction to pricing,
    packaging, post-sales service
  • Commercial
  • products and services purchased for use within
    the industry, i.e., business to business.
  • Social
  • focuses on peoples views of social, economic or
    political concerns
  • International
  • challenges based on culture, language, political
    and social structures and values

17
Collecting, Organizing and Analyzing the Data
  • Look for information that speaks to your
    immediate market needs.
  • Analyze for denominators compare the results.
  • Compare market demographics from local outlets
    with your survey results.
  • Quantify the results.

18
Using Your Research Findings
  • Integrate Leverage your valuable data
  • Organize Synthesize results into a plan
  • Familiarize company employees with results
  • Monitor and provide feedback on plan progress

19
Customer Relationship Management(CRM)
  • The art and science of managing all interactions
    and business with customers
  • A high level strategy/mechanism for creating and
    maintaining lasting relationships with your
    customers
  • A holistic process and philosophy that places the
    emphasis on the customer
  • The importance of customer service
    understanding customer needs/wants

20
Customer Relationship Management
  • CRM is not just technology
  • Change occurs gradually
  • Policy and process changes must be implemented at
    all levels
  • Employee training is a priority
  • Emphasis on front line customer service
  • Information technology management
  • Process enables businesses to acquire, service,
    increase value to, retain and make specific
    determinations of customers.

21
Instituting an Effective CRM
  • Identify customer success factors (how they
    define quality)
  • Identify and create a customer based culture and
    individually designed service strategy.
  • Develop a beginning to end customer process
  • Institute customer problem solving training
    programs
  • Reward desired outcomes/behaviors
  • Walk the Talk

22
Building a Solid CRM Program
  • Automate three specific areas
  • of business operations
  • marketing
  • sales
  • support processes

23
Building a Solid CRM Program
  • Automate Enterprise Marketing
  • Examine the bigger picture to take into account
  • Competition
  • Business Environment
  • Customer Trends
  • Use of Internet

24
Building a Solid CRM Program
  • Automate Sales Force
  • Tracking and follow up systems for lead and
    contact management, quote management, customer
    preferences, buying habits, demographics, company
    executives, key personnel, etc.

25
Building a Solid CRM Program
  • Upgrade Customer Service/Support,
    Problem/Complaint Management
  • Provide fast, user-friendly mechanisms to
  • Registering all complaints
  • Handling and resolving all complaints
  • Correcting service deficiencies
  • Managing and scheduling maintenance, repair,
    on-going service/support
  • Consider automating requests/inquiries and
    instituting help desk

26
Building a Solid CRM Program
  • Analysis
  • continuing evaluation of customer behavior,
    using technology for business intelligence
  • Communication
  • coordination so all sources and types of contact
    are included and all users of the system see the
    same view of the customer
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