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The Marketing Research Process Mark Rosenbaum,Ph.D. University of Hawaii

The Marketing Research Process Mark Rosenbaum,Ph.D. University of Hawaii. The Marketing Research Process: 11 Steps. Step One: Establishing the Need for Marketing Research Step Two: Defining the Problem Step Three: Establishing Research Objectives

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The Marketing Research Process Mark Rosenbaum,Ph.D. University of Hawaii

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  1. The Marketing Research Process Mark Rosenbaum,Ph.D. University of Hawaii

  2. The Marketing Research Process: 11 Steps • Step One: Establishing the Need for Marketing Research • Step Two: Defining the Problem • Step Three: Establishing Research Objectives • Step Four: Determining Research Design • Step Five: Identifying Information Types and Sources • Step Six: Determining Methods of Accessing Data

  3. The Marketing Research Process: 11 Steps cont… • Step Seven: Designing Data Collection Forms • Step Eight: Determining Sample Plan and Size • Step Nine: Collecting Data • Step Ten: Analyzing Data • Step Eleven: Preparing and Presenting the Final Research Report

  4. The Marketing Research Process Step One: Establish the Need for Marketing Research • When Marketing Research is not needed • The information is already available • Decisions need to be made now • You can’t afford research • Costs outweigh the value of the research

  5. The Marketing Research Process Step Two: Define the Problem • The most important step in the marketing research process is defining the problem. • What is your team’s problem?

  6. The Marketing Research Process Step Three: Establish Research Objectives • What information is needed in order to solve the problem? • Primary • Secondary • Both

  7. The Marketing Research Process Step Four: Determine Research Design • Exploratory Research: collecting information in an unstructured and informal manner • Descriptive Research: refers to a set of methods and procedures describing marketing variables • Causal Research (experiments and other approaches): allows isolation of causes and effects via use of experiment or surveys.

  8. The Marketing Research Process Step Five: Identify Information Types and Sources • Secondary Data: information that has been collected for some other purpose other than the research at hand • Primary Data: information that has been gathered specifically for the research objectives at hand

  9. School or University of Hawaii Library http://www.hawaii.edu/emailref/business/mktg.htm#journals Lexis-Nexis: Must show industry data Demographic Info: http://www.census.gov/ More specific: http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/SAFFFacts?_sse=on http://www.census.gov/census2000/states/hi.html Sites that you should use

  10. Claritas http://www.clusterbigip1.claritas.com/claritas/Default.jsp You are your zip code Reference USA Only available at University of Hawaii at Manoa The goal: Present facts and figures in your marketing plans. Other sites

  11. The Marketing Research Process Step Six: Determine Methods of Accessing Data • Secondary Data: accessing data through sources such as the Internet and library • Primary Data: collecting data through methods such as telephone, mail, online, and face-to-face (quantitative) and observation studies and focus groups (qualitative) • Both are excellent! Use both in your projects!

  12. The Marketing Research Process Step Seven: Design Data Collection Forms • The design of the data collection form that is used to ask or observe and record information in marketing research projects is critical to the success of the project. It is easy to write a set of questions but very difficult to construct a questionnaire. • Questionnaires • Observation Studies

  13. The Marketing Research Process Step Eight: Determine Sample Plan and Size • Sample plan: refers to the process used to select units from the population to be included in the sample • Sample size: refers to determining how many elements of the population should be included in the sample

  14. The Marketing Research Process Step Nine: Collect Data • Data collection is very important because, regardless of the data analysis methods used, data analysis cannot “fix” bad data. 12 • Nonsampling errors may occur during data collection. These are related to poor design and/or execution of the data gathering. • Sampling errors may occur based purely on chance • Trying to make a decision on a population from a sample

  15. The Marketing Research Process Step Ten: Analyze Data • Data analysis: involves entering data into computer files, inspecting data for errors, and running tabulations and various statistical tests • Data cleaning: process by which raw data are checked to verify that the data have been correctly input from the data collection form to the computer software program

  16. The Marketing Research Process Step Eleven: Prepare and Present the Final Research Report • The last step is one of the most important phases of marketing research. • Its importance cannot be overstated because it is the report, or its presentation, that properly communicates the results to the client.

  17. Interpreting the Data • Provide Frequencies and Descriptives for each variable. • Provide Frequencies for all • Provide mean & standard deviation for interval and ratio variables

  18. Is there a significant difference between an independent variable (nominal/ordinal) and the response to a dependent variable (nom/ord)? What were asking is “are the proportions the same?” The dependent variable is your variable of interest. Crosstabulation

  19. It looks like this….

  20. Dependent Variable Independent Variable

  21. The results Chi-Square Tests

  22. If you have a dependent variable that is interval or ratio, you must perform an analysis of variance. Dependent variable is nominal or ordinal. For additional statistics

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