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Observation, Focus Groups, and Other Qualitative Measures

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Title: Observation, Focus Groups, and Other Qualitative Measures


1
Observation, Focus Groups, and Other Qualitative
Measures
2
Categories of Research
  • Quantitative research research involving the use
    of structured questions in which response options
    have been predetermined and a large number of
    respondents involved
  • Qualitative research research involving
    collecting, analyzing, and interpreting data by
    observing what people do and say

3
Categories of Research
  • Pluralistic research combination of both
    quantitative and qualitative research methods in
    order to gain the advantages of both

4
Observation Techniques
  • Observation methods techniques in which the
    researcher relies on his or her powers of
    observation rather than communicating with a
    person in order to obtain information

5
Observation Techniques
  • Types of observation
  • Direct versus indirect
  • Disguised versus undisguised
  • Structured versus unstructured
  • Human versus mechanical

6
Observation TechniquesDirect versus Indirect
  • Direct observation observing behavior as it
    occurs
  • Indirect observation observing the effects or
    results of the behavior rather than the behavior
    itself
  • Archives
  • Physical traces
  • Structured versus unstructured
  • Human versus mechanical

7
Observation TechniquesDisguised versus
Undisguised
  • Disguised observation subject is unaware that he
    or she is being observed
  • Undisguised observation respondent is aware of
    observation

8
Observation TechniquesStructured versus
Unstructured
  • Structured observation researcher identifies
    beforehand which behaviors are to be observed and
    recorded
  • Unstructured observation no restriction is
    placed on what the observer would note all
    behavior in the episode under study is monitored

9
Observation TechniquesHuman versus Mechanical
  • Human observation observer is a person hired by
    the researcher, or, perhaps the observer is the
    researcher
  • Mechanical observation human observer is
    replaced with some form of static observing
    device

10
Observation TechniquesAppropriate Conditions for
Use
  • Short duration
  • Public
  • Faulty recall conditions

11
Observation TechniquesAdvantages of
Observational Data
  • Insight into actual, not reported, behaviors
  • No chance for recall error
  • Better accuracy
  • Less cost

12
Observation TechniquesLimitations of
Observational Data
  • Small number of subjects
  • Subjective interpretations
  • Inability to pry beneath the behavior observed
  • Motivations, attitudes, and other internal
    conditions are unobservedwe dont know why?

13
Home Depot An Example of Direct Observation
Shopper/Store Use Profile Average time in
store 32.4 (minutes) Customer party size 1.2
(persons) Average expenditures 57.34
(dollars) Payment method 73.0 (credit
card) Number of aisles traveled 5.7 Requests for
assistance 0.5 Stops and looks at
items 5.4 Items handled per stop 2.1 Total
items handled 9.3 Items purchased 2.5
Product Categories of Purchases Appliances 10 H
and tools 22 Electrical 31 Plumbing 14 Roofi
ng 3 Garden 35 Other 26
We know WHAT
BUT, We dont know WHY!
14
Focus Groups
  • Focus groups are small groups of people brought
    together and guided by a moderator through an
    unstructured, spontaneous discussion for the
    purpose of gaining information relevant to the
    research problem.

15
Focus Groups
  • The moderators task is to ensure that open
    discussion is focused on some area of interest.
  • Focus groups are used to generate ideas, to learn
    the respondents vocabulary, to gain some
    insights into basic needs and attitudes.

16
Types of Focus Groups
  • Traditional Select 6 to 12 persons and meet in a
    dedicated room with one-way mirror for client
    viewing, for about two hours.

17
Types of Focus Groups
  • Nontraditional Online with client viewing from
    distant locations may have 25 or even 50
    respondents allow client interaction may take
    place in nontraditional locations.
  • Online focus groups are a form of nontraditional
    focus groups.

18
Focus GroupsOnline Focus Groups
  • Online focus group one in which the respondents
    and/or clients communicate and/or observe by use
    of the Internet

19
Focus GroupsOnline Focus Groups
  • Advantages
  • No physical setup is necessary
  • Transcripts are captured on file in real time
  • Participants can be in widely separated
    geographical areas
  • Participants are comfortable in their home or
    office environments
  • The moderator can exchange private messages with
    individual participants

20
Focus Group Facility Floor Plan
Source Market Trends (www.markettrends.com)
21
Pros of Focus Groups
  • Generate fresh ideas
  • Allow clients to observe their participants
  • May be directed at understanding a wide variety
    of issues
  • Allow fairly easy access to special respondent
    groups

22
Cons of Focus Groups
  • Representativeness of participants
  • Interpretation sometimes difficult
  • High cost per participant

23
The Proper Use of Focus Groups
  • Focus groups should not be used when the research
    objective is to predict a specific number based
    upon sample data.

24
The Proper Use of Focus Groups
  • Focus groups should be used when the research
    objective is to describe rather than predict.
  • How do consumers describe a better package?
  • How would they describe their satisfaction with
    our service?
  • How could they describe their ideas for an ad
    campaign?

25
Operational Issues of Focus Groups
  • Size 6 to 12
  • Who homogeneous
  • Recruiting use incentives
  • Selection what is purpose?
  • Where conducive to group discussion
  • When moderator gets involved early
  • Reporting results report qualitative data

26
Focus GroupsReporting and Use of Results
  • Factors to remember when analyzing data
  • Some sense must be made by translating the
    qualitative statements of participants into
    categories and then reporting the degree of
    consensus apparent in the focus groups

27
Focus GroupsReporting and Use of Results
  • Factors to remember when analyzing data
  • Demographics and buyer behavior characteristics
    of focus group participants should be judged
    against the target market profile to assess what
    degree the groups represent the target market

28
Focus GroupsReporting and Use of Results
  • A focus groups analysis should identify major
    themes as well as salient areas of disagreement
    among the participants

29
Other Qualitative Techniques
  • Depth interview is a set of probing questions
    posed one-on-one to a subject by a trained
    interviewer so as to gain an idea of what the
    subject thinks about something or why he or she
    behaves a certain way.
  • Protocol analysis involves placing a person in a
    decision-making situation and asking him or her
    to verbalize everything he or she considers when
    making a decision.

30
Other Qualitative Techniques
  • Projective techniques involve situations in which
    participants are placed in (projected into)
    simulated activities in the hopes that they will
    divulge things about themselves that they might
    not reveal under direct questioning
  • Word association test
  • Sentence completion
  • Picture test
  • Cartoon or balloon test
  • Role-playing activity

31
Sentence Completion Example
INSTRUCTIONS. Write in words to complete each of
the sentences below.
  • For college students, credit cards are
  • College students use credit cards to
  • When a college freshman gets a new credit card
    application, he/she
  • When a college student reaches the limit of
    his/her credit card he/she
  • When a college senior gets a new credit card
    application, he/she
  • If parents of college students learned about
    their childrens credit card situations, they
    would

32
Other Qualitative Techniques
  • Ethnographic research borrowed from
    anthropologydescriptive study of a group
  • Observing, interviewing, recording consumers
    behavior
  • Researchers must be present and known but not
    interfere with normal behavior.

33
Physiological Measurements
  • Physiological measurements involves monitoring a
    respondents involuntary responses to marketing
    stimuli via the use of electrodes and other
    equipment
  • Pupilometer
  • Galvonometer
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