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Title: Defining the Problem and Determining Research Objectives


1
Defining the Problem and Determining Research
Objectives
2
Differences Between Managers and Researchers
  • Marketing managers and researchers see the world
    differently because they have different jobs to
    perform and their backgrounds differ markedly.

3
Differences Between Managers and Researchers
4
Define the Marketing Managers Problem Questions
Researchers Should Ask
  • Discussions often take place between managers and
    researchers to determine the problem.
    Researchers should ask questions relating to
  • Symptoms of the problem?
  • Managers situation (history, products, mission,
    customer information, managers objectives,
    etc.)?
  • Suspected causes of the problem?

5
Define the Marketing Managers ProblemQuestions
cont.
  • Possible solutions to the problem?
  • Anticipated consequences of tentative solutions?
  • Managers assumptions about existing conditions
    and what will take place if solution is carried
    out?
  • Adequacy of info on hand to specify research
    objectives (quantity, quality of info)

6
Decide When Marketing Research Is Warranted
  • Four conditions when marketing research should
    likely be undertaken
  • If it clarifies problems or investigates changes
    in the marketplace that can directly impact your
    product responsibility
  • If it resolves your selection of alternative
    courses of marketing action to achieve key
    marketing objectives
  • If it helps you gain a meaningful competitive
    advantage
  • If it allows you to stay abreast of your markets

7
Online Research and Problem Definition
  • Managers sometimes must act fast, Online research
    could help
  • Positive Outcome Online systems aid in the
    process because information systems speed
    information delivery
  • Negative Outcomes
  • 1. Information Overload or
  • 2. Online environment also means that
    competitors and customers have better
    information

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Define the Marketing Management Problem and
Research Objectives
  • Marketing Management Problem
  • Symptoms of failure to achieve an objective are
    present. What should be done?
  • Symptoms of the likelihood of achieving an
    objective are present (opportunity
    identification). What should be done?
  • Marketing Research Objectives
  • Providing relevant, accurate, and unbiased
    information that managers can use to solve their
    marketing management problems

10
Defining the Marketing Management Problem
  • Assess Managers Situation
  • Background of the product/service company
    history, overall mission, marketing plans,
    managers objectives and her/his resources, etc.
  • Clarify Symptoms
  • Symptoms are changes in the level of key
    indicators of company success. Examples include
    changes in sales volume, market share, profits,
    or dealer orders, also complaints and/or
    competitor actions could be indicators

11
Define the Marketing Managers Problemcont.
  • Pinpoint suspected causes of the problem.
  • Eliminating a symptom does not solve the problem.
  • For every problem, an underlying cause can be
    found.
  • A probable cause differs from a possible cause.
    Important to list all possibilities first.
  • Specify actions that may alleviate the problem.
  • Solutions include any marketing action that may
    resolve the problem.

12
Define the Marketing Managers Problemcont.
  • Speculate on anticipated consequences of the
    action.
  • What will be the impact not only on the problem
    at hand but also throughout the marketing program
    if a specific marketing action is implemented?
  • What additional problems will be created if a
    proposed solution to the current problem is
    implemented?

13
Define the Marketing Managers Problemcont.
  • Identify the managers assumptions about the
    consequences.
  • Assumptions are beliefs that certain conditions
    exist or that certain reactions will take place
    if the considered actions are implemented.
  • Assumptions are the glue that holds the decision
    problem parts together.
  • Research may help eliminate or lessen a managers
    uncertainty.

14
Define the Marketing Managers Problemcont.
  • Assess the adequacy of information on hand to
    specify research objectives.
  • Information State quantity and quality of
    evidence a manager possesses for each assumption
  • Information Gaps discrepancies between the
    current information level and the desired level
    of information at which a manager feels
    comfortable resolving the problem at hand
  • Manager and researcher come to agree on research
    objectives based on the information gaps.

15
Examples
  • MANAGEMENT PROBLEM
  • New package design for an existing product
  •  Increasing store traffic
  •  
  •  Launching a new product
  •  
  • Determining the position of Boyner department
    stores among its equivalents,
  • Changing price strategy
  • Should we launch a new advertising campaign?
  • MARKETING RESEARCH PROBLEM
  • Evaluating the effectiveness of alternative
    packages
  • Measuring current store image
  • Designing a test market
  • SWOT analysis for Boyner,
  • Determining the factors for leadership in
    the department stores sector
  • Determining demand elasticity
  • What is the impact of different prices on
    sales and profit?
  • Determining the effectiveness of the current
    advertising programme

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Diagnosing the Problem
  • CBWe are losing market share in corporate
    banking
  • R Is it only happening in Istanbul?
  • CB No, it isnt. But we are more concerned since
    it is the city we have the largest transaction
    volume.
  • R Why do you think you are losing market share?
  • CB I wish I had known.....
  • R How are your competitors doing?
  • CB The other banks have similar problems too.
    However, foreign banks are gaining more market
    share.
  • R How do your clients evaluate the service
    quality?
  • CB We are very proud of the ISO9000
    certificate that we recently got.
  • R Very good. However, how do you evaluate your
    service quality compared to your competitors?

18
Example (cont.)
  • Specifically the following information is
    required
  • 1. Which criteria the firms use when they are
    choosing a corporate finance banking service for
    the first time?
  • 2. How do the firms allocate their financial
    service purchase among different banks?
  • 3. Which services do the firms buy from local and
    European banks?
  • 4.  How do the firms evaluate local and European
    banks service quality?
  • 5. What is the market share of X bank in Ireland
    compared to its competitors?
  • 6. What is the profile of X banks clients? How
    are they different from other banks clients?

 
19
Analytic Model
  • Analytic model defines the relationships among
    several variables as a process
  • Or as parts of a bigger model,
  • It can be verbal, mathematical or graphical
  • They serve as a basis for the research design and
    used as a guide for the rest of the research

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22
Example
Behavioural Loyalty
Emotional Attachment
H5a
H3
H1a
H5b
Purchase/ Repurchase Intention
H2
Other Customers Effect
Corporate Image
H5c
Consumer-company Identification
Customer Extra-Role Behaviours
H4
H1b
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24
Figure 2.5 Development of research questions and
hypotheses
25
The Role of Theory in Marketing Research
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29
Marketing Research QuestionsExamples
  • Determining psychographic profile of department
    store customers
  •  
  • What is the level of store loyalty of customers?
  • What sort of activities the customer engage in
    after the purchase?
  • What shopping means to customers other than
    getting what is needed?

30
Operationalized Definitions
  • How can we understand when store cards or credit
    cards are used for transaction?
  • Do the customers have store cards?
  • How frequently do the customers use store cards?
  • What is the amount of purchase with the store
    cards in a specific period of time?

31
Hypotheses
  • Hypothesis is a statement that asserts the
    assumed (but not supported in reality yet)
    relationships between the variables of interest
  • Examples
  • H1 The loyal customer are more aware than less
    loyal ones in terms of store atmosphere
    qualities.
  • H2 The loyal customers are more willing to bare
    risk in purchase than less loyal ones. 

32
Example
  • The Factors Affecting Purchase Intention
  • Brand awareness and Brand trust
  • General Problem Definition-Aim of the Research
  • What can affect purchase intention?
  • ?
  • Preliminary Literature Review
  • ?
  • Objectives
  • ????
  • ?
  • Depth Literature Review
  • Trust has two aspects
  • Trust on the basis of prior knowledge
  • Trust at the time of decision-making


33
Main Variables
  • Attitude Towards Brand
  • Trust about the brand
  • Attitude towards other brands
  • Awareness about the brand
  • Purchase intention

34
Operationalised Definitions
  • Brand awareness The degree of prior awareness
    while asserting a preference
  • Trust The degree of self-assurance while
    evaluating the brand and other brands
  • Attitude The degree of liking or satisfaction
    about the preferred brands
  • Purchase intention The degree of likelihood of
    buying the same brand in the next ten shopping
    exercises.

35
Hypotheses
  • H1 The more the brand awareness, the more the
    prior-knowledge based trust about that brand.
  • H2 The consumers positive attitude towards a
    brand is positively affected by brand awareness.
  • H3 There is a positive relationship between
    purchase intention and prior-knowledge based
    trust
  • H4 The purchase intention of a consumer is
    positively affected by attitude toward the brand
    but is negatively affected by the attitude
    towards competing brands


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37
The Invitation to Bid and the Marketing Research
Proposal
  • A marketing research proposal flows from an
    invitation to bid (ITB) or request for
    proposal ( RFP)
  • Both define the marketing management problem
  • Both specify the research objectives
  • The bid details the research method proposed by
    the researcher to accomplish the research
    objectives

38
The Invitation to Bid and the Marketing Research
Proposal
  • The problem statement for both identifies
  • the company, division, or principals involved
  • the symptoms
  • the possible causes of the symptoms
  • the anticipated uses of the research information
  • The research proposal ensures that the researcher
    and the manager see the problem in the same way.

39
The Invitation to Bid and the Marketing Research
Proposal
  • The proposal itemizes the information objectives
    agreed by the manager and researcher.
  • Constructs and operational definitions are
    specified.
  • A construct is a marketing term or concept that
    is involved in the marketing management problem
    (e.g. brand awareness, product knowledge,
    attitude, loyalty, satisfaction).
  • An operational definition describes how the
    researcher will measure a construct.

40
Formulate the Marketing Research
ProposalTranslate the Research Objectives to Be
Researchablecont.
  • Relationships are identified.
  • A relationship is a meaningful link believed to
    exist between two constructs (lower price is
    related to greater sales, higher exposure is
    related to greater awareness, etc.).
  • A model is decided.
  • A model connects constructs with understandable
    logic

41
The Invitation to Bid and the Marketing Research
Proposal
  • The proposed research method identifies data
    collection mode, questionnaire design, sample
    plan, and other aspects of the anticipated
    marketing research.

42
Figure 2.1 Components of the marketing research
brief
43
The Marketing Research Report
  • Executive summary
  • Background
  • Problem definition
  • Research objectives
  • Research design
  • Fieldwork/data collection
  • Data analyses
  • Recommendations
  • Cost and timetable
  • Research organisation and researchers
  • Appendices
  • Agreement

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Research Design
46
Research Design
  • The research design is the master plan specifying
    the methods and procedures for collecting and
    analyzing the needed information.

47
Types of Research Design
  • Although every problem and research objective may
    seem unique, there are usually enough
    similarities among problems and objectives to
    allow decisions to be made in advance about the
    best plan to resolve the problem.
  • There are some basic marketing research designs
    that can be successfully matched to given
    problems and research objectives.

48
Types of Research Design
  • Three traditional categories of research design
  • Exploratory
  • Descriptive
  • Causal
  • The choice of the most appropriate design depends
    largely on the objectives of the research and how
    much is known about the problem and these
    objectives.

49
Research Design Some Observations
  • The overall research design for a project may
    include one or more of these three designs as
    part(s) of it.
  • Further, if more than one design is to be used,
    typically we progress from Exploratory toward
    Causal.

50
Basic Research Objectives and Research Design
Research Objective Appropriate Design
To gain background information, to define terms,
to clarify Exploratory problems and develop
hypotheses, to establish research priorities,
to develop questions to be answered To describe
and measure marketing phenomena at a
point Descriptive in time To determine
causality, test hypotheses, to make if-then
Causal statements, to answer questions
51
Research
  • Quantitative research research involving the use
    of structured questions in which response options
    have been predetermined and a large number of
    respondents are involved
  • Qualitative research collecting, analyzing, and
    interpreting data based on what people do and say
    with smaller samples
  • Pluralistic research combination of both
    quantitative and qualitative research methods in
    order to gain the advantages of both

52
Research Design Exploratory Research
  • Exploratory research is most commonly
    unstructured, informal research that is
    undertaken to gain background information about
    the general nature of the research problem.
  • Exploratory research is usually conducted when
    the researcher does not know much about the
    problem and needs additional information or
    desires new or more recent information.

53
Research Design Exploratory Research
  • Exploratory research is used in a number of
    situations
  • To gain background information
  • To define terms
  • To clarify problems and hypotheses
  • To establish research priorities

54
Research Design Exploratory Research
  • A variety of methods are available to conduct
    exploratory research
  • Secondary Data Analysis
  • Experience Surveys
  • Case Analysis
  • Focus Groups
  • Projective Techniques

55
Observation, Focus Groups, and Other Qualitative
Measures
56
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
  • Types of observation (will explain later)
  • Direct versus indirect
  • Disguised versus undisguised
  • Structured versus unstructured
  • Human versus mechanical

57
Observation Techniquescont. Direct 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 (written records)
  • Physical traces (erosion or accumulation/accretion
    )

58
Observation Techniquescont. Disguised versus
Undisguised
  • Disguised observation subject is unaware that he
    or she is being observed
  • Undisguised observation respondent is aware of
    observation

59
Observation Techniquescont. Structured versus
Unstructured
  • Structured observation researcher identifies
    beforehand which behaviors are to observed and
    recorded
  • Unstructured observation No restriction is
    placed on what the observer would note all
    behavior in the episode under study is monitored

60
Observation Techniquescont. Human versus
Mechanical
  • Human observation person or persons observe
    behavior (person hired by the researcher,
    clients, or perhaps the observer is the
    researcher)
  • Mechanical observation human observer is
    replaced with some form of static observing
    device(audio and or visual recording)

61
Observation Techniquescont. Appropriate
Conditions for the Use of Observation
  • Short duration
  • Public
  • Faulty recall (difficult for person to remember
    accurately what was done) conditions
  • Person is unaware of behavior

62
Observation Techniquescont. Advantages of
Observational Data
  • Insight into actual, not reported, behaviors
  • No chance for recall error
  • Better accuracy (versus self-reporting)
  • Less cost

63
When to Use?
  • Limited information about the market conditions
  • When new insights are needed
  • To understand customer behaviour
  • To understand what motivated customer
    satisfaction and
  • to discover customer habits, jargon, myths,
    desires and
  • expectations

64
Examples
  • Technology and media usage at home
  • Setting a brand community
  • Sub-cultural consumption habits and behaviours

65
Activities Involved
  • Dairy keeping
  • Recording behaviour, daily routine and opinions
  • Video and photographs
  • Providing those to support their oral or
    behavioural actions
  • Projective techniques
  • Online observation

66
Example
  • Subject
  • Hygenic and cosmetic products usage among
    Americans, English and Turks
  • Sample characteristics Moderate and Intensive
    users
  • Methodology
  • Taking pictures of the products at their location
    and asking respondents to describe the photos
  • Keeping dairy about their daily usage of these
    products
  • Describing their shopping experience about those
    products in detail
  • Keeping health and beauty advertisements content
    analysis
  • Doing in-depth interviews on the following
    questions
  • How do you define beauty?
  • What motivates you for dermatological health
    care?
  • If your most liked dermatological product
    disappears from the market how would you feel?
  • How much time do you allocate for dermatological
    health care?
  • Which brands do you like most? Why?

67
Observation Techniquescont. Limitations of
Observational Data
  • Small number of subjects
  • Can only observe short-duration, frequently
    occurring events
  • Subjective interpretations (by observer)
  • Inability to understand what is beneath the
    behavior observed (why was the behavior carried
    out - motivations, attitudes, and other internal
    conditions are unobserved)

68
Focus Groups
  • Focus groups small group (6 12 people)
    discussions led by a trained moderator
    homogeneous group tightly bounded topic area
  • Objectives
  • Generate ideas
  • Understand consumer vocabulary
  • Reveal consumer benefits sought, needs, motives,
    perceptions, and attitudes on products and
    services
  • Understand findings from quantitative studies

69
Focus Groups Moderators Role and Responsibilities
  • Focus group moderator a person who conducts the
    session and guides the flow of group discussion
    across specific topics
  • Moderator characteristics
  • Experienced
  • Enthusiastic
  • Prepared
  • Involving
  • Energetic
  • Open-minded

70
Focus Groups Reporting and Use of Focus Group
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
  • Demographics and buyer behavior characteristics
    of focus group participants should be judged
    against the target market profile to assess what
    degree the group(s) represent(s) the target
    market
  • A focus groups analysis should identify major
    themes as well as salient areas of disagreement
    among the participants

71
Focus Groups Online Focus Groups
  • Online focus group one in which the respondents
    and/or moderator (and sometimes clients)
    communicate and/or observe by use of the
    Internet group members are at their own pc
  • 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

72
Focus Groups Online Focus Groupscont.
  • Disadvantages
  • Observation of participants body language is not
    possible
  • Participants cannot physically inspect products
    or taste food items
  • Participants can lose interest or become
    distracted

73
Focus Groups In General
  • Advantages
  • Generation of fresh ideas
  • Client interaction
  • Versatility (many topics, other research
    techniques may be used, product tests, etc.)
  • May tap special respondents (drs., lawyers )
  • Disadvantages
  • Representative of the population?
  • Interpretation is subjective
  • High cost-per-participant (150 - 200 each)

74
Other Qualitative Research Techniques
  • Depth interview a set of questions with probes,
    posed one-on-one to a subject by a trained
    interviewer 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 (step-by-step)

75
Other Qualitative Research Techniquescont.
  • Projective techniques involve situations in
    which participants are projected into another
    person, an inanimate object, or a simulated
    activity, with the hope that they will divulge
    things about themselves that they might not
    reveal under direct questioning.
  • Types include
  • Word association test
  • Sentence completion
  • Picture test (may include headline or
    statement)
  • Cartoon or balloon test
  • Role-playing activity

76
Physiological Measurements
  • Physiological measurements monitoring a
    respondents involuntary responses to marketing
    stimuli via the use of eye cameras, salinity
    detectors, blood pressure sensors, and other
    devices
  • Pupilometer (iris dilation/contraction)
  • Eye-tracking
  • Galvanometer
  • Voice Print Analysis (VOPAN)

77
Research Design Descriptive Research
  • Descriptive research is undertaken to provide
    answers to questions of who, what, where, when,
    and how but not why.
  • Two basic classifications
  • Cross-sectional studies
  • Longitudinal studies

78
Research Design Descriptive Research Cross-sectio
nal Studies
  • Cross-sectional studies measure units from a
    sample of the population at only one point in
    time.
  • Sample surveys are cross-sectional studies whose
    samples are drawn in such a way as to be
    representative of a specific population.
  • On-line survey research is being used to collect
    data for cross-sectional surveys at a faster rate
    of speed.

79
Research Design Descriptive Research Longitudinal
Studies
  • Longitudinal studies repeatedly draw sample units
    of a population over time.
  • One method is to draw different units from the
    same sampling frame.
  • A second method is to use a panel where the
    same people are asked to respond periodically.
  • On-line survey research firms recruit panel
    members to respond to online queries.

80
Research Design Descriptive Research Longitudinal
Studies
  • Two types of panels
  • Continuous panels ask panel members the same
    questions on each panel measurement.
  • Discontinuous (Omnibus) panels vary questions
    from one time to the next.
  • Longitudinal data used for
  • Market tracking
  • Brand-switching
  • Attitude and image checks

81
Research Design Causal Research
  • Causality may be thought of as understanding a
    phenomenon in terms of conditional statements of
    the form If x, then y.
  • Causal relationships are typically determined by
    the use of experiments, but other methods are
    also used.

82
Experiments
  • An experiment is defined as manipulating
    (changing values/situations) one or more
    independent variables to see how the dependent
    variable(s) is/are affected, while also
    controlling the affects of additional extraneous
    variables.
  • Independent variables those over which the
    researcher has control and wishes to manipulate
    i.e. package size, ad copy, price.
  • Dependent variables those over which the
    researcher has little to no direct control, but
    has a strong interest in testing i.e. sales,
    profit, market share.
  • Extraneous variables those that may effect a
    dependent variable but are not independent
    variables.

83
Experimental Design
  • An experimental design is a procedure for
    devising an experimental setting such that a
    change in the dependent variable may be solely
    attributed to a change in an independent
    variable.
  • Symbols of an experimental design
  • O measurement of a dependent variable
  • X manipulation, or change, of an independent
    variable
  • R random assignment of subjects to experimental
    and control groups
  • E experimental effect

84
Experimental Design
  • After-Only Design X O1
  • One-Group, Before-After Design O1 X O2
  • Before-After with Control Group
  • Experimental group O1 X O2
  • Control group O3 O4
  • Where E (O2 O1) (O4 O3)

85
How Valid Are Experiments?
  • An experiment is valid if
  • the observed change in the dependent variable is,
    in fact, due to the independent variable
    (internal validity)
  • if the results of the experiment apply to the
    real world outside the experimental setting
    (external validity)

86
Types of Experiments
  • Two broad classes
  • Laboratory experiments those in which the
    independent variable is manipulated and measures
    of the dependent variable are taken in a
    contrived, artificial setting for the purpose of
    controlling the many possible extraneous
    variables that may affect the dependent variable
  • Field experiments those in which the independent
    variables are manipulated and measurements of the
    dependent variable are made on test units in
    their natural setting

87
Test Marketing
  • Test marketing is the phrase commonly used to
    indicate an experiment, study, or test that is
    conducted in a field setting.
  • Two broad classes
  • To test the sales potential for a new product or
    service
  • To test variations in the marketing mix for a
    product or service

88
Types of Test Markets
  • Standard test market one in which the firm tests
    the product and/or marketing mix variables
    through the companies normal distribution
    channels
  • Controlled test markets ones that are conducted
    by outside research firms that guarantee
    distribution of the product through prespecified
    types and numbers of distributors

89
Types of Test Marketscont.
  • Electronic test markets those in which a panel
    of consumers has agreed to carry identification
    cards that each consumer presents when buying
    goods and services
  • Simulated test markets those in which a limited
    amount of data on consumer response to a new
    product is fed into a model containing certain
    assumptions regarding planned marketing programs,
    which generates likely sales volume

90
Test Markets
  • Test marketing is used in both consumer markets
    and industrial or B2B markets as well.
  • Lead country test market test marketing
    conducted in specific foreign countries that seem
    good predictors for an entire continent

91
Criteria for Selecting Test Market Cities
  • Representativeness Do demographics match the
    total market?
  • Degree of isolation Phoenix and Tulsa are
    isolated markets Los Angeles is not isolated.
  • Ability to control distribution and promotion
    Are there preexisting arrangements to distribute
    the new product in selected channels of
    distribution? Are local media designed to test
    variations in promotional messages?

92
Test Marketing
  • Pros
  • Allows most accurate method of forecasting future
    sales
  • Allows firms the opportunity to pretest marketing
    mix variables
  • Cons
  • Does not yield infallible results
  • Are expensive
  • Exposes the new product or service to competitors
  • Takes time to conduct
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