AMR Complete Notes 10 11
AMR Complete Notes 10 11
AMR Complete Notes 10 11
Semester-VI- TYBMM
OBJECTIVE OF RESEARCH
The purpose of research is to discover answers through the application of scientific procedures. The main
aim of research is to find out the truth which is hidden and which has not been discovered as yet. Though each
research study has its own specific purpose, we may think of research objectives as falling into number of
broad grouping:
• To gain familiarity with a phenomenon or to achieve new insights into it (studies with this object in
view are termed as exploratory or formulative research studies.
• To portray accurately the characteristics of a particular individual, situation or a group (studies
with this object in view are known as descriptive research studies);
• To determine the frequency with which something occurs or with which it is associated with
something else (studies with this object in view are known as diagnostic research studies).
• To test a hypothesis of a casual relationship between variables (such studies are known as
hypothesis-testing research studies).
Research process:
1. Define Research Problem/objective
2. Determine Expected value of perfect information
3. Research technique and Determine Data Collection method
4. Determine the measurement techniques
5. Research Design/ Sampling
6. Data Processing and Analysis
7. Determine Time And cost
8. Define the ethics of research
9. Prepare the research report
a. PROBLEM DISCOVERY
First thing a researcher should do is identifying the symptoms or signs which will point out the problem. A
symptom is a condition that indicates the existence of a problem, and we, must be careful not to confuse this
with a problem. Symptoms occupy an essential place in the problem-solving process, for the underlying
problem. A problem exists whenever one faces a question whose answer – or a need whose fulfilment –
involves doubt and uncertainty.
Business problems are not found by surprise or accidental circumstances. Always there are signs, and
evidence that reveals the existence of the problem. Our abilities can go beyond intuition or a sixth sense.
b. PROBLEM DEFINITION
The next step in any marketing research project is to define the problem. Problem definition involves
discussion with the decision-makers, interviews with industry experts, analysis of secondary data, and,
perhaps, some qualitative research, such as focus groups. Once the problem has been precisely defined, the
research can be designed and conducted properly.
c. RESEARCH OBJECTIVES
The research objective is a statement, in as precise terminology as possible, of what information is needed
what will be the practical utility of the research. The research objective should be framed so that obtaining the
information will ensure that the research purpose is satisfied.
D. HYPOTHESES DEVELOPMENT
A hypothesis is a proposed explanation for an observable phenomenon. A hypothesis is a tentative statement
that proposes a possible explanation to some phenomenon or event. A useful hypothesis is a testable statement
which may include a prediction. A hypothesis should not be confused with a theory. Theories are general
explanations based on a large amount of data.
Hypothesis Definition: Tentative theory or supposition provisionally adopted to explain certain facts and
guide the investigation of others.
Hypothesis is tentative and declarative statement formulated to be tested describing relationship between
concepts. A good hypothesis is set during exploratory research and tested during conclusive research.
However, their form is not particularly useful. Using the word may does not suggest how you would go about
proving it. If these statements had not been written carefully, they may not have even been hypotheses at all.
For example, if we say "Trees will change color when it gets cold." we are making a prediction. Or if we
If skin cancer is related to ultraviolet light, then people with a high exposure to uv light will have a higher
frequency of skin cancer.
If leaf color change is related to temperature, then exposing plants to low temperatures will result in changes
in leaf color.
Notice that these statements contain the words, if and then. They are necessary in a formalized hypothesis.
But not all if-then statements are hypotheses. For example, "If I play the lottery, then I will get rich." This is a
simple prediction. In a formalized hypothesis, a tentative relationship is stated. For example, if the frequency
of winning is related to frequency of buying lottery tickets. "Then" is followed by a prediction of what will
happen if you increase or decrease the frequency of buying lottery tickets. If you always ask yourself that if
one thing is related to another, then you should be able to test it.
Formalized hypotheses contain two variables. One is "independent" and the other is "dependent." The
independent variable is the one you, the "scientist" control and the dependent variable is the one that you
observe and/or measure the results. In the statements above the dependent variable is blue and the independent
variable is red.
The ultimate value of a formalized hypothesis is it forces us to think about what results we should look for in
an experiment.
Null Hypothesis Ho: represents the status quo, the conservative theory from previous experience that we
accept until proven false.
(Trial defendant assumed not guilty unless otherwise proved)
Ho always contains the = sign. We always assume that Ho is true. It states that there is no difference between
a parameter and a hypothesized value
Ho: : = : o or Ho: p = po
Alternative Hypothesis Ha: a theory that contradicts the null hypothesis, by specifying a DIFFERENCE
between the parameter and the hypothesized value. It contains the claim, or what the researcher wants to
prove.
Example: A chemical company claims its products will increase the life of car batteries. The mean lifetime of
cars’ batteries is 36 months........Test the company’s claim.
Basic Questions -
How much will the study cost?
Is the time frame acceptable?
Is outside help needed?
Will this research design attain the stated research objectives?
When should the research be scheduled to begin?
Qualitative research is used when it is important to understand why someone does something, such as respond
favorably to an advertisement. Quantitative research is used when you are seeking to learn how many people
in a population are likely to respond a certain way, such as vote.
A. Qualitative Research - uses words, rather than numbers, to explain research findings.
B. Quantitative Research - uses numbers in a form of mathematical analysis to explain research findings.
Data play an important role in research. Facts, information or premises systematically collected and formally
presented for the purpose of drawing inferences may be called data.
The Survey method is the technique of gathering data by asking questions to people who are thought to have
desired information. A formal list of questionnaire is prepared. Generally a non disguised approach is used.
The respondents are asked questions on their demographic interest opinion.
1. As compared to other methods (direct observation, experimentation) survey yield a broader range of
information. Surveys are effective to produce information on socio-economic characteristics, attitudes,
opinions, motives etc and to gather information for planning product features, advertising media, sales
promotion, channels of distribution and other marketing variables.
2. Questioning is usually faster and cheaper that Observation.
3. Questions are simple to administer.
4. Data is reliable
5. The variability of results is reduced.
6. It is relatively simple to analyze, quote and interrelate the data obtained by survey method
1. Unwillingness of respondents to provide information- This requires salesmanship on the part of the
interviewer. The interviewer may assure that the information will be kept secret or apply the technique
of offering some presents.
2. Inability of the respondents to provide information- This may be due to
a. Lack of knowledge
b. Lapse of memory
c. Inability to identify their motives and provide “reasons why?” for their actions
3. Human Biases of the respondents are there, for eg: “Ego”
Types of Surveys:
There are mainly 4 methods by which we can collect data through the Survey Method
1. Telephonic Interview
2. Personal Interview
3. Mail Interview
Telephone Interviewing stands out as the best method for gathering quickly needed information.
Responses are collected from the respondents by the researcher on telephone.
It is the most versatile of the all methods. They are used when props are required along with the verbal
response non-verbal responses can also be observed.
l. The person interviewed can ask more questions and can supplement the interview with
personal observation.
m. They are more flexible. Order of questions can be changed
Questionnaires are send to the respondents, they fill it up and send it back.
Electronic interviewing is a process of recognizing and noting people, objects, occurances rather than
asking for information. For example-When you go to store, you notice which product people like to
use. The Universal Product Code (UPC) is also a method of observing what people are buying.
2. OBSERVATION
• A wide ranging set of research techniques aimed at observing consumers interacting naturally with
their surroundings including products and services in use.
A wide ranging set of research techniques aimed at observing consumers interacting naturally with their
surroundings including products and services in use. A key advantage of observation research is that often the
respondent or consumer is unaware that they are being observed, allowing their behavior to be observed
naturally.
1. If the researcher observes and record events, it is not necessary to rely on the willingness and ability of
respondents to report accurately.
2. The biasing effect of interviewers is either eliminated or reduced. Data collected by observation are,
thus, more objective and generally more accurate.
1. The most limiting factor in the use of observation method is the inability to observe such things such
as attitudes, motivations, customers/consumers state of mind, their buying motives and their images.
2. It also takes time for the investigator to wait for a particular action to take place.
Ob
3. Personal and intimate activities, such as watching television late at night, are more easily discussed
with questionnaires than they are observed.
4. Cost is the final disadvantage of observation method. Under most circumstances, observational data
are more expensive to obtain than other survey data. The observer has to wait doing nothing, between
events to be observed. The unproductive time is an increased cost.
I. Human Observations
- refers to people (rather than machines) watching other people. Types include:
B. One-Way Mirror Observations - The practice of watching unseen from behind a one-way mirror. Often
used for product testing and with focus groups.
C. Shopper Patterns - refers to drawings that record the footsteps of a shopper through a store. They show
the flow of a representative sample of shoppers through a store.
[Also used to study the effect of music on shopper behavior. For instance, we know that slow music makes
them stay longer and buy more.]
D. Content Analysis - A technique used to study written material, usually advertising copy, by breaking it
into meaningful units, using carefully applied rules.
Content Analysis attempts to determine what is being communicated to a target audience by objectively and
systematically describing the communication's content.
E. Humanistic Inquiry - A method of inquiry in which the researcher is immersed in [becomes a part of] the
system or group under study, rather than using the scientific method of standing apart from the system being
studied.
There are two general categories: Retail audits measure sales to final consumers, and wholesale audits
determine the amount of product movement from warehouses to retailers. Retail distribution audits are similar
to store audits however these audits do not measure inventory sales: instead they are observational studies at
the retail level. Field agents enter stores unannounced and without permission. They observe and record the
brands present, price, shelf facings and other relevant data for selected product categories.
Audits provide relatively precise information on the movement of many different types of goods. Since most
products are not sold directly to the end user, but to retailers, wholesalers and distributors, the manufacturer
does not have information on sales at the retail level. Even though information on factory shipments are
available, warehouse stocks might be accumulating because of limited retail sales. Moreover, audits give
information on how competing products are faring in the marketplace.
A. Traffic Counters - Machines used to measure vehicular flow over a particular stretch of roadway.
B. Physiological Measurement - refers to measuring the level of involuntary change in a person's activation
based upon the stimuli of interest.
Activation is stimulated via a subcortical unit, called the reticular activation system (RAS), which is located in
the human brainstem.
3. EXPERIMENTATION
• Experiment -- refers to a research project Experiments are defined as studies in which conditions are
controlled so that one or more independent variable(s) can be manipulated to test a hypothesis about a
dependent variable(s).
constructed such that the researcher (experimenter) changes one element (an explanatory or independent
variable) to observe the effect of that change on another element (the dependent variable).
An experiment measures the change in the dependent variable created by a specific, controlled change in
another variable(s) which is called the independent variable(s).
This is done by controlling or holding constant the other independent variables while manipulating the
independent variable(s) of interest, and measuring the change created in the dependent variable.
Thus, the researcher is an active participant in the research process instead of a passive collector of data as
with the survey or observation methods of research.
Examples
i. The effect of price changes on sales volume of a particular product can be examined by actually
varying the price of the product
ii. Advertising Experiment: Will replacing commercial A with commercial B lead to a marked
increase in consumer preference for a company’s brand?
iii. Pricing Experiment: Can a company improve the profitability of its fashion clothing line by
increasing its price by 10 percent?
iv. Sales Productivity Experiment: Will an increase in the average number of sales calls per
customer from six to eight per year significantly improve sales?
1. Laboratory Experiments - Tests done in a sterile environment in which the researcher can control almost
all possible causal factors. However, while the laboratory allows the researcher to control the variables
involved, the lab may not accurately represent the real marketplace. Thus, the research results my not hold up
when transferred to (generalized to) the actual marketplace.
Thus, lab results are said to have good internal validity, but often lack external validity.
This suggests that lab results are more likely to be statistically correct than results from field experiments, but
less likely to be generalizable to the population of interest which is always located outside of the laboratory.
2. Field Experiments - Tests conducted outside the laboratory in an actual market environment. A test market
is a good example. This solves the problem of realism of the test environment, but factors other than the
For instance, the researcher cannot control nor even precisely measure the effects of competitive actions, the
weather, the economy, societal trends, the political climate, nor other elements of the uncontrollable
environment.
Thus, field experiments often lack internal validity, while having better external validity.
This suggests that the results have a better chance of being statistically wrong, but they are more likely
generalizable to other similar market situations, if they are statistically correct.
• A major difference between the two approaches is the degree of control available during the
manipulation and measurement process. A laboratory experiment clearly offers better control than a
field experiment with respect to extraneous factors capable of influencing consumer preferences.
• A laboratory experiment is a research study conducted in a contrived setting in which the effect of all,
or nearly all, influential but irrelevant independent variables is kept to a minimum.
• A field experiment is a research study conducted in a natural setting in which the experimenter
manipulates one or more independent variables under conditions controlled as carefully as the
situation will permit.
• The validity of experimental results is usually evaluated on two dimensions: external validity and
internal validity.
• Internal validity is the extent to which observed results are solely due to the experimental
manipulation.
• External validity is the extent to which observed results are likely to hold beyond the experimental
setting.
• An ideal experiment is one whose results will have high internal as well as external validity, although
there is usually a trade-off between these two forms of validity.
• Laboratory experiments generally have an advantage over field experiments in terms of internal
validity but not external validity.
• Field experiments generally have an advantage over laboratory experiments in terms of external
validity but not internal validity.
3. Continuous research:
A survey conducted on a regular and frequent basis among parallel samples within the same population or a
survey in which the interviews are spread over a long period of time.
In this way, a picture of market trends can be built up. This type of longitudinal research is often funded on a
syndicated basis. Syndicated research usually involves an independent research company collecting data and
supplying it simultaneously to a number of clients.
i. Consumer panels
Types of Panels
Sam e Different
people people
The discussion itself is “led” by a moderator. The moderator attempts to progress through three stages during
the interviewer: (1) establish rapport with the group, structure the rules of group interaction, and set
objectives; (2) provoke intense discussion in the relevant areas; and (3) summarize the group’s responses to
determine the extent of agreement. The general either the moderator or a second person prepares a summary
of each session after analyzing the session’s transcript.
Advantages
1. Each individual is able to expand and refine their opinions in the interaction with the other members.
This process provides more detailed and accurate information than could be derived from each
separately.
2. A group interview situation is generally more exciting and offers more stimulation to the participants
than the standard depth interviews.
3. The security of being in a crowd encourages some members to speak out when they otherwise would
not.
4. As the questions raised by the moderator are addressed to the entire group rather than an individual the
answer contains a degree of spontaneity that is not produced by other techniques.
5. Focus groups can be used successfully with children over five. They are also very useful with adults in
developing countries where literacy rates are low and survey research is difficult. 88
6. A final major advantage of focus groups is that executives often observe the interview (from behind
mirrors) or watch films of the interview.
Disadvantages
1. Since focus group interviews last 1.5 to 3 hours and take place at a central location, securing
cooperation from a random sample is difficult.
2. Those who attend group interviews and actively participate in them are likely to be different in many
respects from those who do not.
3. There are chances that participants may go along with the popular opinion instead of expressing their
own which may be contrary to the popular opinions.
4. The presence of a one-way mirror and /or an observer(s) has been found to distort participant’s
responses.
5. The moderator can introduce serious biases in the interview by shifting topics too rapidly verbally or
nonverbally encouraging certain answers, failing to cover specific areas, and so forth.
6. Focus groups are expensive on a per respondent basis.
Depth Interviews - (unstructured one-on-one interviews intended to discover deep seated motivations) --
One-on-one interviews that probe and elicit detailed answers to questions, often using clinical nondirective
techniques to uncover hidden motivations. Thus, psychologists and people with Doctorates in Marketing
(which is a combination of applied psychology and applied economics) are often called upon to conduct
Depth Interviews, as well as Nominal Grouping Sessions.
Individual depth interviews typically require 30-45minutes. The interviewer does not have a specific set of
pre-specified questions that must be asked according to the order imposed by a questionnaire. Instead, there is
freedom to create questions, to probe those responses that appear relevant, and generally to try to develop the
best set of data in any way practical. However the interviewer must follow one rule; one must not consciously
try to affect the content of the answers given by the respondents. The respondent. The respondent must feel
free to reply to the various questions, probes, and other, subtler, ways of encouraging responses in the manner
deemed most appropriate.
Subject of interest is discussed in detail.
There is no fixed pattern for eliciting information from the respondents.
Generally conducted by highly trained interviewers. They must be thorough in probing the
respondents.
The interviewee is asked about the subject of his choice, coffee, for example, and an attempt is made
to explore the respondents’ attitudes in depth by probing extensively into any other areas which may
come up.
Interviewers have a general series of topics that they will introduce – perhaps such topics as coffee, or
sleep, and will introduce them from time to time if the respondent does not bring them up.
Tone of the interview is permissive and the respondent is allowed to talk as much as he likes.
The interviewer must not influence the answers of the respondent.
The interpretation of the answers is very subjective and knowledge of human behavior is required to
analyze the information received.
1. Laddering: “The laddering method of interviewing is technique to understanding people’s core values
and beliefs. The technique is powerful, because it provides a simple and systematic way of
establishing an individual’s core set of constructs on how they view the world
Laderring Technique is use to describe the linkages between customers’ values and their overall purchasing
behavior: the Means End Chain theory. This theory provides both a framework for capturing qualitative
laddering research data in the consumer space and a model for assessing consumer values and behaviors.
According to the Means End Chain theory, there is a hierarchy of consumer perceptions and product
knowledge that ranges from attributes (A) to consumption consequences (C) to personal values (V), as
follows:
Purpose is to uncover the “network of meanings” associated with the product, brand, or concept.
2. Hidden-issue questioning focuses on individual respondents feelings about sensitive issues. Analysis
on focus on common underlying themes across respondents. These themes can then be used to guide
advertising development.
3. Symbolic questioning requires respondents to describe the opposites of the product/ activity of interest
or a specific attribute of the product/ activity.
Individual depth interviews have been found to generate more and higher quality ideas on a per respondent
basis than either focus or minigroups. They are particularly appropriate when:
Secondary data is data which has been collected by individuals or agencies for purposes other than those of
our particular research study. For example, if a government department has conducted a survey of, say, family
food expenditures, then a food manufacturer might use this data in the organisation's evaluations of the total
potential market for a new product.
No marketing research study should be undertaken without a prior search of secondary sources (also termed
desk research). There are several grounds for making such a bold statement.
Secondary data may be available which is entirely appropriate and wholly adequate to draw conclusions and
answer the question or solve the problem. Sometimes primary data collection simply is not necessary. It is far
S
cheaper to collect secondary data than to obtain primary data. For the same level of research budget a
thorough examination of secondary sources can yield a great deal more information than can be had through a
primary data collection exercise.
The time involved in searching secondary sources is much less than that needed to complete primary data
collection. Secondary sources of information can yield more accurate data than that obtained through primary
research. This is not always true but where a government or international agency has undertaken a large scale
survey, or even a census, this is likely to yield far more accurate results than custom designed and executed
surveys when these are based on relatively small sample sizes.
It should not be forgotten that secondary data can play a substantial role in the exploratory phase of the
research when the task at hand is to define the research problem and to generate hypotheses. The assembly
and analysis of secondary data almost invariably improves the researcher's understanding of the marketing
problem, the various lines of inquiry that could or should be followed and the alternative courses of action
which might be pursued.
Sources of information
Secondary sources of information may be divided into two categories: internal sources and external sources.
Sales data: All organizations collect information in the course of their everyday operations. Orders are
received and delivered, costs are recorded, sales personnel submit visit reports, invoices are sent out, and
returned goods are recorded and so on. Much of this information is of potential use in marketing research but
a surprising amount of it is actually used. Organizations frequently overlook this valuable resource by not
beginning their search of secondary sources with an internal audit of sales invoices, orders, inquiries about
products not stocked, returns from customers and sales force customer calling sheets. For example, consider
how much information can be obtained from sales orders and invoices:
• Sales by territory
• Sales by customer type
• Prices and discounts
• Average size of order by customer, customer type, geographical area
• Average sales by sales person and
• Sales by pack size and pack type, etc.
This type of data is useful for identifying an organization’s most profitable product and customers. It can also
serve to track trends within the enterprise's existing customer group.
Financial data: An organization has a great deal of data within its files on the cost of producing, storing,
transporting and marketing each of its products and product lines. Such data has many uses in marketing
research including allowing measurement of the efficiency of marketing operations. It can also be used to
estimate the costs attached to new products under consideration, of particular utilisation (in production,
storage and transportation) at which an organization’s unit costs begin to fall.
Transport data: Companies that keep good records relating to their transport operations are well placed to
establish which are the most profitable routes, and loads, as well as the most cost effective routing patterns.
Good data on transport operations enables the enterprise to perform trade-off analysis and thereby establish
whether it makes economic sense to own or hire vehicles, or the point at which a balance of the two gives the
best financial outcome.
Storage data: The rate of stockturn, stock handling costs, assessing the efficiency of certain marketing
operations and the efficiency of the marketing system as a whole. More sophisticated accounting systems
assign costs to the cubic space occupied by individual products and the time period over which the product
occupies the space. These systems can be further refined so that the profitability per unit, and rate of sale, are
added. In this way, the direct product profitability can be calculated.
Large numbers of organizations provide marketing information, including national and local government
agencies, quasi-government agencies, trade associations, universities, research institutes, financial institutions,
specialist suppliers of secondary marketing data and professional marketing research enterprises. Dillon et al
further advice that searches of printed sources of secondary data begin with referral texts such as directories,
indexes, handbooks and guides. These sorts of publications rarely provide the data in which the researcher is
interested but serve in helping him/her locate potentially useful data sources.
The main sources of external secondary sources are (1) government (federal, state and local) (2) trade
associations (3) commercial services (4) national and international institutions.
Government statistics These may include all or some of the following:
· Population censuses
· Social surveys, family expenditure surveys
· Import/export statistics
· Production statistics
· Agricultural statistics.
Trade associations Trade associations differ widely in the extent of their data collection and
information dissemination activities. However, it is worth checking with
them to determine what they do publish. At the very least one would
normally expect that they would produce a trade directory and, perhaps, a
yearbook.
Commercial services Published market research reports and other publications are available from
a wide range of organisations which charge for their information.
Typically, marketing people are interested in media statistics and consumer
information which has been obtained from large scale consumer or farmer
panels. The commercial organization funds the collection of the data,
which is wide ranging in its content, and hopes to make its money from
selling this data to interested parties.
National and international Bank economic reviews, university research reports, journals and articles
institutions are all useful sources to contact. International agencies such as World
Bank, IMF, IFAD, UNDP, ITC, FAO and ILO produce a plethora of
secondary data which can prove extremely useful to the marketing
researcher.
.
Step four: Select the Measurement Technique:
There are four basic measurement techniques used in marketing research:
A) Questionnaires Design
B) Attitude scales,
C) Projective techniques
Questionnaire construction
Questionnaires are frequently used in quantitative marketing research. They are a valuable method of
collecting a wide range of information from a large number of respondents. Good questionnaire construction
is critical to the success of a survey.
Inappropriate questions, incorrect ordering of questions, incorrect scaling, or bad questionnaire format can
make the survey valueless. A useful method for checking a questionnaire for problems is to pretest it. This
usually involves giving it to a small sample of respondents, then interviewing the respondents to get their
impressions and to confirm that the questions accurately captured their opinions.
Note : non disguised data collection is also called as direct method & disguised is also called as indirect
method .
The main advantage of this method is that, the information can be collected in a systematic and orderly
manner. However when it comes to personal questions, this method seems to be less effective.
Structured disguised: - in this case the researcher does not disclose the object of the interview, because he
feels that by revealing that the very purpose of the interview will get defeated.
Structured - nondisguised: - in this case the everything is pre- arranged and the researcher reveals the
objective of the survey to the respondent. This is the most widely followed approach in market research. This
is because it is generally felt that the respondent should be taken into confidence, so that he can realize the
relevance and give desired information.
Again here there are two main types of non-structured methods of data collection.
(1) Non structured disguised: - again here the objective of interview is not described to the respondent
(2) Non structured - non-disguised: - like in case of structured non- disguised, the respondent is taken into
confidence by revealing the purpose of the survey.
CONCLUSION: The researcher should use the already viable data only when he finds them reliable, suitable
and adequate. But he should not blindly discard the use of such data if they are readily available from
authentic sources and are also suitable and adequate for in that case it will not be economical to spend time
and energy in field surveys for collecting information. At times there may be wealth of usable information in
the already available data which must be used by an intelligent researcher but with due precaution.
1. The wording must be kept simple : no technical or specialized words. Use short sentences. Writing
style should be conversational, yet concise and accurate.
2. The meaning should be clear. Avoid ambiguous words and equivocal sentence structures. Avoid
double negatives. Even single negatives should be reworded as positives.
3. Avoid biasing the responses. A biased question or questionnaire encourages respondents to answer
one way rather than another. Avoid “loaded” questions.
4. Ask one question at a time. Avoid complex questions. If more than one question is hidden in a survey
question, the researcher will not know which one the respondent is answering.
5. Avoid personal or intimate questions. Most people will not answer them.
Qu
* Dichotomous questions - The respondent answers with a “yes” or a “no”.
* Multiple choice - The respondent has several option from which to choose.
5. Open ended questions - No options or predefined categories are suggested. The respondent
supplies their own answer without being constrained by a fixed set of possible responses.
Examples of types of open ended questions include:
6. Completely unstructured - For example, “What is your opinion of questionnaires?”
Question Sequence
1. Questions should flow logically from one to the next.
2. The researcher must ensure that the answer to a question is not influenced by previous questions.
3. Questions should flow from the more general to the more specific.
4. Questions should flow from the least sensitive to the most sensitive.
5. Questions should flow from factual and behavioural questions to attitudinal and opinion questions.
6. Questions should flow from unaided to aided questions
B Measurement Scales
Definition of attitude: Attitude has been defined by Gene F. Summers as a predisposition to respond to an
idea or an object.
In marketing, this refers to the consumer’s predisposition about the product or service. If it is favorable, then
the consumer is likely to purchase the product or service.
Attitudes about products or services are composed of three elements:
Beliefs such as the product’s strength or the economy of the product or service
Emotional feelings such as likes or dislikes
Readiness to respond to the product or service, i.e. to buy it.
These three elements combine together to form an image of the product or service in the mind of the
consumer. When the car manufacturer, the movie producer or the insurance company refers to the company’s
image, they are referring to some general averages of many individuals’ attitudes towards the company.
Attitude measurement is commonly referred to as scaling.
Measurement Scales
Scaling is the measurement of a variable in such a way that it can be expressed on a continuum. Rating your
preference for a product from 1 to 10 is an example of a scale.
Nominal Data
A set of data is said to be nominal if the values / observations belonging to it can be assigned a code in the
form of a number where the numbers are simply labels. You can count but not order or measure nominal data.
For example, in a data set males could be coded as 0, females as 1; marital status of an individual could be
coded as Y if married, N if single.
Ordinal Scales
They are the simplest attitude measuring scales use din marketing research.
They serve to rank respondents according to some characteristics such as favorabiliy to a certain
brand, or to rank items such as brands in order of consumer preference.
They do not measure the degree of favorability of the different rankings. All the scale tells is that the
individual or item has more, less, or the same amount of the characteristic being measured as some
other time.
They are the most widely used type of scales in marketing research.
A set of data is said to be ordinal if the values / observations belonging to it can be ranked (put in order) or
have a rating scale attached. You can count and order, but not measure, ordinal data. The categories for an
ordinal set of data have a natural order, for example, suppose a group of people were asked to taste varieties
of biscuit and classify each biscuit on a rating scale of 1 to 5, representing strongly dislike, dislike, neutral,
like, strongly like. A rating of 5 indicates more enjoyment than a rating of 4, for example, so such data are
ordinal. However, the distinction between neighboring points on the scale is not necessarily always the same.
Interval Scales
They separate individuals or items by rank order but measure the distance between rank positions in
equal units.
Such a scale permits the researcher to say that the position 4 is above position 3 on the scale, and also
the distance from position 5 to 4 is same as from 4 to 3.
Such a scale however does not permit conclusions that position 6 is twice as strong as position 3
because no zero position has been established.
An interval scale is a scale of measurement where the distance between any two adjacent units of
measurement (or 'intervals') is the same but the zero point is arbitrary. Scores on an interval scale can be
added and subtracted but cannot be meaningfully multiplied or divided. For example, the time interval
between the starts of years 1981 and 1982 is the same as that between 1983 and 1984, namely 365 days. The
zero point, year 1 AD, is arbitrary; time did not begin then. Other examples of interval scales include the
heights of tides, and the measurement of longitude.
Ratio Scales
If one measures the distance between two points as four feet and between two other points as two feet,
it is possible say that one distance is twice that of the other because each distance is measured from an
absolute zero. A scale that permits such measurements is called ratio scale.
While ratio scales are common in physical science, the measurement of attitudes is still so crude that
they are of little significance in marketing research.
Sorting might present the respondent with several concepts typed on cards and require that the respondent
arrange the cards into a number of piles or otherwise classify the concepts.
Attitude Measurement
Many of the questions in a marketing research survey are designed to measure attitudes. Attitudes are a
person's general evaluation of something. Customer attitude is an important factor for the following reasons:
1. Attitude helps to explain how ready one is to do something.
2. Attitudes do not change much over time.
3. Attitudes produce consistency in behavior.
4. Attitudes can be related to preferences.
Example of Ca
Example:
Likert Scale for Measuring Attitudes Toward Tennis
VERY
IMPORTANT
It is more fun to watch a tough, competitive 20/20 cricket match than to watch a test match.
___Strongly Agree
___Agree
___Not Sure
___Disagree
___Strongly Disagree
CLIMATE ___________
To analyze a Likert Scale, each response category is assigned a numerical value. These examples could be
assigned values such as Strongly Agree=1, through Strongly Disagree=5 or the scoring could be reversed., or
a –2 through +2 system could be used. They can be analyzed on an item-by-item basis, or they can be
COST OF TRAVEL
summed to form a single score for each individual.
___________
Advantages
FAMILY ORIENTED
1. It is relatively easy to construct and administer.
___________
EDUCATIONAL/
Prof. Avadhesh Yadav
2. Instructions that accompany the scale are easily understood; hence it can be used for mail surveys and
interviews with children.
Disadvantages
1. It takes a longer time to complete as compared to Semantic Differential Scales, etc.
2. Care needs to be taken when using Likert Scales in cross cultural research, as there may be cultural
variations in willingness to express disagreement.
4. Semantic Differential
It is a special type of graphic scale, which is increasingly being used, in marketing research.
It establishes a connection between the brand and company image studies and also permits the
development of descriptive profiles that facilitates comparison of competitive items.
The unique characteristics of semantic differential is the use of bipolar scales to rate any product,
company or concept of interest.
Respondents are given a group of these scales and asked to check on each one point that indicates
their opinion of the subject in question.
Each scales consist of two opposing adjectives such as good/bad, clean/dirty, most popular/ least
popular, etc. which are separated by a continuum divided into seven segments.
Respondents are asked to check the segment that represents the degree of the characteristics involved
that most closely coincided with their opinion of the product or item being rated.
It is best when used for image descriptive purposes and is not recommended for overall attitude
measurement.
The advantage of using semantic differential is its simplicity, while producing results comparable
with those of the more complex scaling methods
The method is easy and fast to administer, but it is also sensitive to small differences in attitude,
highly versatile, reliable and generally valid.
For e.g.:
1. Perception of national brands and private brands:
Attractive 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 Unattractive
Packaging Packaging
6. Stapel Scales
Modern versions of the Stapel scale place a single adjective as a substitute for the semantic differential when
it is difficult to create pairs of bipolar adjectives. The advantage and disadvantages of a Stapel scale, as well
as the results, are very similar to those for a semantic differential. However, the Stapel scale tends to be easier
to conduct and administer.
A Stapel Scale
for Measuring a Store’s Image
Department
Store Name
+3
+2
+1
Wide Selection
-1
-2
-3
Select a plus number for words that you think describe the store accurately. The more accurately you think
the work describes the store, the larger the plus number you should choose. Select a minus number for words
you think do not describe the store accurately. The less accurately you think the word describes the store, the
large the minus number you should choose, therefore, you can select any number from +3 for words that you
think are very accurate all the way to -3 for words that you think are very inaccurate.
Stapel Scale
The Stapel scale is a unipolar rating scale wit h ten categories
numbered from -5 to +5, without a neutral point (zero). This scale
is usually presented vertically.
SEARS
+5 +5
+4 +4
+3 +3
+2 +2X
+1 +1
HIGH QUALITY POOR SERVICE
-1 -1
-2 -2
-3 -3
-4 X -4
-5 -5
Advantages
It is important to note that there are 11 attitude positions because in a scale with odd number of parameters, it
is easier to identify a neutral position.
Disadvantages
1. Thurstone scales are not widely used for Marketing Research because the are time consuming during
preparation
2. The ratings may be influenced by the Judges’ personal attitude
3. Different individuals can obtain exactly the same score from agreeing with quite different items.
4. It does not obtain information about the intensity of agreement with the ratings
Price ____
9
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Ins tructions
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Below are eight attributes of bathing soaps. Please allocate 100points among
the attributes so that your allocation reflects the relative importance you attach to
each attribute. The more points an attribute receives, the more important the
attribute is. If an attribute is not at all important, assign it zero points. If an
attribute is twice as important as some other attribute, it should receive tw ic e as
many points.
Form
Now that you’ve had your automobile for about 1 year, please tell us how satisfied you are with its engine
S
power and pickup.
Please indicate how the amount of authority in your present position compares with the amount of authority
that would be ideal for this position.
How satisfied are you with the bookstore in the Student Union?
Description
A Guttman scale presents a number of items to which the person is requested to agree or not agree. This is
typically done in a 'Yes/No' dichotomous format. It is also possible to use a Likert scale, although this is less
commonly used.
Questions in a Guttman scale gradually increase in specificity. The intent of the scale is that the person will
agree with all statements up to a point and then will stop agreeing.
The scale may be used to determine how extreme a view is, with successive statements showing increasingly
extremist positions.
If needed, the escalation can be concealed by using intermediate questions.
Example
Place a check-mark against all statements` with which you agree
I like eating out [ ]
I like going to restaurants [ ]
I like going to themed restaurants [ ]
I like going to Chinese restaurants [ ]
I like going to Beijing-style Chinese restaurants [ ]
The researcher has an objective to achieve a high level of validity to assure that the information gathered and
measured actually is what was intended to be measured. This is also known as internal validity. The ability to
generalize the results and to be able to apply the results on a whole population is called external validity.
Reliability is a requirement for validity. If the reliability is low, one cannot know that one measures what one
intended to measure. High levels of reliability provide a fair and trustworthy portrait of reality.
This is achieved when the same answers and results are obtained from several independent sources.
Furthermore, how the research is conducted and the level of accuracy and precision while treating the
information influences the level of reliability. Would the same result be achieved if the research was
conducted again with the same problem? One way to achieve objectivity and reliability is by using structured
questionnaires with given and pre determined answer alternatives.
Types of Validity:
• Construct validity addresses the question of what construct or characteristic the scale is, in fact,
measuring. Construct validity includes convergent, discriminant, and nomological validity.
• Convergent validity is the extent to which the scale correlates positively with other measures of the
same construct.
• Discriminant validity is the extent to which a measure does not correlate with other constructs from
which it is supposed to differ.
• Nomological validity is the extent to which the scale correlates in theoretically predicted ways with
measures of different but related constructs.
C. Projective Techniques
Projective Techniques are based on the theory that the description of vague objects requires interpretation and
this interpretation can only be based on the individual’s own background, attitudes, and values. The more
vague or ambiguous the object to be described the move one must reveal of oneself in order to complete the
description.
The following general categories of projective techniques are described: association, completion, construction
and expression.
1. Association Techniques
Association techniques require the subject to respond to the presentation of a stimulus with the first things that
come to mind.
a. Word association: The word association technique requires the respondent to give the first word or
thought that comes to mind after researcher presents a word or phrase. In free association only the first
word or thought is required.
b. Successive word association: In successive word association, the respondent is asked to give a series
of words or thoughts that occur after hearing a given word. The respondent is generally read a number
of relatively neutral terms to establish the technique. Then the words of interest to the researcher are
presented, each separated by several neutral terms. The order of presentation of the key words is
randomized to prevent any position or order bias from affecting the results. The most common
approach to analyzing the resulting data is to analyze the frequency with a particular word or category
or word is given in response to the word of interest to the researcher.
Word association techniques are used in testing potential brand names and occasionally for measuring
attitudes about particular products, product attributes, brands, packages or advertisements.
2. Completion Techniques
This technique requires the respondent to complete an incomplete stimulus. Two types of completion are of
interest to marketing researchers- sentence completion and story completion.
a. Sentence completion, as the name implies, involves requiring the respondent to complete a sentence. In
most sentence completion tests the respondents are asked to complete the sentence with a phrase. Generally
they are told to use the first thought that comes to their mind or “anything that makes sense”. Because the
individual is not required directly to associate himself or herself with the answer conscious or subconscious
defenses are more likely to be relaxed and allow a more revealing answer.
The respondent is given a number of incomplete sentences and asked to complete them.
The rule here too, is that respondent must fill in the first thought that comes to mind.
Responses are timed.
Here the interviewer gets more information than the word association technique.
However, it is difficult to disguise the motive of the study from the respondent, who is usually able to
diagnose the investigator’s purpose of study.
For example, “a man who reads Sportstar is ------------------------------------------.”
The sentences can be worded in either first or third person. No evidence suggests that one of these
approaches could be better than the other.
b. Story completion is an expanded version of sentence completion. As the name suggests part of a story is
told and the respondent is asked to complete it.
3. Construction Techniques
This technique requires the respondent to produce or construct something generally a story, dialogue, or
description. They are similar to completion techniques except that less initial structure is provided.
a. Third- person techniques allow the respondent to project attitudes onto some vague third person. This third
person is generally “an average woman”, “your neighbors”, “the guys where you work”, “most doctors” or the
like. Thus instead of asking the respondent why he or she did something or what he or she thinks about
something the researcher asks what friends, neighbors or the average person thinks about the issue.
b. Picture response, another useful construction technique, involves using pictures to elicit stories. These
pictures are usually relatively vague, so that the respondent must use his or her imagination to describe what is
occurring.
These are similar to story completion method, except that here pictures are used as the stimuli. The
two main methods used here are
i. Thematic Apperception Tests (TAT)
ii. Cartoon method
i. TAT
Clinical psychologists have long used this method.
Here the respondent is shown many ambiguous pictures and he is asked to spin stories about them.
The interviewer may ask questions to help the respondent to think. For example “what is happening
here?” makes the answer focused towards an action. Or “which one is the aggressor?” makes the
respondent think about the picture as one of aggression. The reason that respondents must be asked
such prompting questions is that the pictures are very abstract and general and as such are open to very
broad and irreverent interpretations. So some amount of focus is needed to channel the respondent’s
thinking.
Each subject in the pictures is a medium through which the respondent projects his feelings, ideas,
emotions and attitudes. The respondent attributes these feelings to the characters because he sees in the
picture something related to himself.
Responses differ widely and analysis depends upon the ambiguity of the picture, the extent to which
the respondent is able to guess the conclusions and the vagueness of the support questions asked by the
interviewer.
c. Fantasy scenario requires the respondent to make up a fantasy about the product or brand.
d. Personification asks the respondent to create a personally for the products or brands. With the pictures and
words technique, the subjects are given a number of words and pictures and are asked to choose those they
associate with a brand or product and to explain their choice.
This allows the researcher to discover the more emotional responses to brands and imagery.
The product or brand becomes a person (or vice versa)
• Helps bring brands to life
• Feeling, thought, character etc (like brand values)
• Or respondents can project themselves into the roles of user and non-users
• Making up eulogies or obituaries can help
4. Expressive Techniques
a. Role-playing is the only expressive technique utilized to any extent by marketing researchers. In role
playing the consumer is asked to assume the role or behavior of an object or another person, such as a sales
representative for a particular department store. The role-playing customer can then be asked to try to sell a
given product to a number of different “consumers” who raise varying objections. The means by which the
role player attempts to overcome these objections can reveal a great deal about his or her attitudes. Another
version of the technique involves studying the role-player’s attitudes on what type of people ”should” shop at
the store in question.
b. Third-person technique:
The respondent is presented with a verbal or visual situation and the respondent is asked to relate the beliefs
and attitudes of a third person rather than directly expressing personal beliefs and attitudes. This third person
may be a friend, neighbor, colleague, or a “typical” person
2. Helpful when the issues to be addressed are personal, sensitive, or subject to strong social norms.
3. Helpful when underlying motivations, beliefs, and attitudes are operating at a subconscious level.
4. Disadvantages of Projective Techniques
5. Suffer from many of the disadvantages of unstructured direct techniques, but to a greater extent.
6. Require highly trained interviewers.
7. Skilled interpreters are also required to analyze the responses.
8. There is a serious risk of interpretation bias.
9. They tend to be expensive.
The research work will be conducted (i.e. data collection, etc) as per the research design prepared.
Research design means to prepare detailed plan and procedures for the conduct of the research project.
It is like preparing a master plan/blue print for the conduct of formal investigation.
It is the basic plan that guides researcher in the execution of the research project undertaken. It is like road
map which enables the researcher to conduct various activities for the completion of research project.
2. Descriptive Research
The goal of descriptive research, as the name implies, is essentially to describe something.
It is intended to generate data describing the composition and characteristics of relevant groups of
units such as customers, salespeople, organizations, and market areas.
Data collected can provide valuable information about the study units along relevant characteristics
and about associations among those characteristics.
• Types of Panels
– OMNIBUS PANEL: different subjects are pulled from the panel for each time period
• Drawbacks: data is not as reliable
– TRUE PANEL: the same subjects are used for the panel every time data is collected
• Drawbacks: members sometimes evolve out of the desired study group or are induced
by the study to change their practices thus tainting the data
Step Description
1. Define the population The population is defined in terms of a) element, b)
units, c) extent and d) time.
2. Specify sampling frame The means of representing the elements of the
population – for example telephone book, map, or city
directory – are described.
3. Specify sampling unit The unit for sampling – for example, city block,
company, or household – is selected. The sampling unit
may contain one or several population elements.
4. Specify sampling method The method by which sampling units are to be selected
is described.
5. Determine sample size The number of elements of the population to be sampled
is chosen.
6. Specify sampling plan The operational procedures for selection of the sampling
units are selected.
7. Select the sample The office and fieldwork necessary for the selection of
the sample are carried out.
It may be pointed out that these four criteria come into conflict with each other in most of the cases, and the
researcher should carefully balance the conflicting criteria so that he is able to select a really good sample
design.
Advantages of Sampling
1. Sampling is cheaper than a census survey. It is obviously more economical, for instance, to cover a
sample of households than all households in a territory although the cost per unit of study may be higher
in a sample survey than in a census.
2. Since magnitude of operations involved in a sample survey is small, both the execution of the fieldwork
and the analysis of the results can be carried out speedily.
3. Sampling results in greater economy of effort as relatively small staffs is required to carry out the survey
and to tabulate and process the survey data.
4. A sample survey enables the researcher to collect more detailed information than would otherwise be
possible in a census survey. Also, information of a more specialised type can be collected, which would
not be possible in a census survey on account of availability of a small number of specialists.
5. Since the scale of operations involved in a sample survey is small, the quality of interviewing,
supervision and other related activities can be better than the quality in a census survey.
Limitations of Sampling
1. When the information is needed on every unit in the population such as individuals, dwelling units or
business establishments, a sample survey cannot be of much help for it fails to provide information on
individual count.
2. Sampling gives rise to certain errors. If these errors are too large, the results of the sample survey will be
of extremely limited use.
3. While in a census survey it may be easy to check the omissions of certain units in view of complete
coverage, this is not so in the case of sample survey.
Sampling Techniques
Sampling techniques may be broadly classified as non-probability and probability sampling techniques.
Sampling techniques
Advantages
• Convenience sampling is the least expensive and least time consuming of all sampling techniques.
• The sampling units are accessible, easy to measure and co-operative.
• This technique is used in exploratory research for generating ideas, insight or hypothesis.
Disadvantages
• Convenience samples contain unknown amounts of both variables and systematic selection errors.
• These errors can be very large when compared to the variable error in a simple random sampling of the
same size.
Convenience samples are not representatives of any definable population. So they are not recommended for
descriptive or casual research.
Judgmental sampling
Definition
A form of convenience sampling in which the population elements are purposively selected based on the
judgment of the researcher.
Explanation
A judgment sample is one in which there is an attempt to draw a representative sample of the population using
judgmental selection procedures. Judgment samples are common in industrial market research.
Example
A sample of addresses taken by the municipal agency to which questionnaires on bicycle riding habits were
sent. A judgment sample was taken after researchers looked at traffic maps of the city, considered the tax
assessment on houses and apartment buildings (per unit), and kept location of schools and parks in mind.
Advantages
• Judgmental sampling is low cost, convenient and quick.
• Judgmental sampling is subjective and its value depends entirely on the researchers judgment,
expertise and creativity.
• It is useful if broad population inferences are not required.
Disadvantage
• It does not allow direct generalization to a specific population, usually because the population is not
defined explicitly.
Definition
A non probability sampling techniques that is a two stage restricted judgmental sampling. The first stage
consists of developing control categories or quotas of population elements. In the second stag,
sample elements are selected based on convenience or judgment.
Explanation
• It is a form of Non-Probability sampling.
• In Quota Sampling, the samples are selected in such a way that the interest parameters represented in the
sample are in the same proportion as they are in the universe/ population.
• Quota Sampling is widely used in consumer panels.
• The following aspects must be kept in mind while choosing the control variables:
− The variables must be available and should be recent.
− They should be easy for the interviewer to classify.
− They should be closely related to the variable being measured in the study.
− The number of variable must be kept to a reasonable number so as to avoid confusion while analyzing
the data
The cost of sample per unit is directly proportional to the number of control variables.
In order to have a check mechanism about the quality of samples taken so as to reduce the selection errors,
Quota Samples are “validated” after they are taken.
The process of validation involves a comparison of the sample and the population with respect to
characteristics not used as control variables. For e.g. in a quota sample taken from a consumer panel for which
income, education, and age group are used as control variables. If the comparison of this panel and the
population might be made with respect to such characteristics as average number of children, occupation of
the chief wage earner and home ownership. Then if the panel differed significantly from the population with
respect to any of these characteristics, it would be an indication of the potential bias in the selection
procedures. It should be noted that the similarity does not necessarily mean the absence of bias.
Example
If one wants to select a Quota sample of persons for a test of flavored tea and wants to control (control
variables are the parameters based on which he would like to classify the universe) it by ethnic background,
income bracket, age group and geographical area. Then the sample taken would have the same proportion of
people in each ethnic background, income bracket, age group and geographical area as the population.
Disadvantages
• Scope for high variances
• Scope for sizable selection errors.
• Selection errors arise from the way interviewers select the persons/ variables to fill the quota. Incorrect
information of the proportions of the population in each of the control variables, biases in the
relationship of the control variables to the variables being measured, and from other sources.
Other types of non random samples:
4. Snowball Sampling
A variety of procedures. Initial respondents are selected by probability methods. Additional respondents are
obtained from information provided by the initial respondents.
Probability Techniques:
Probability sampling techniques vary in terms of sampling efficiency. Sampling efficiency is a concept that
reflects a trade-offs between sampling cost and precision. Precision refers to the level of uncertainty about the
characteristic being measured. The greater the precision, the greater the cost and most studies require trade-
off.
Definition
A probability sampling technique in which each element in the population has a known and equal probability
of selection is known as simple random sampling (SRS). Every element is selected independently of every
other element and the sample is drawn by a random procedure from a sampling frame.
Explanation
In random sampling, each element in the population has a known and equal probability of selection.
Furthermore, each possible sample of a given size (n) has a known and equal probability of being the sample
actually selected. This implies that every other element is selected independently of every other element. The
sample is drawn by a random procedure from a sampling frame. This method is equivalent to a lottery system
in which names are placed in a container, the container is shaken, and the names of the winners are then
drawn out in an unbiased manner.
To draw a simple random sample, the researcher first compiles a sampling frame in which each element is
assigned a unique identification number. Then random numbers are generated to determine which element to
include in the sample. The random numbers may be generated with a computer routine or a table.
Advantages
• It is easy to understand
• The sample result may be projected to the target population.
Disadvantages
• It is often difficult to construct a sampling frame that will permit a simple random sample to be drawn.
• SRS can result in samples that are very large or spread over large geographic areas, thus increasing the
time and cost of data collection.
• SRS often results in lower precision with larger standard errors than other probability sampling
techniques.
• SRS may or may not result in a representative sample. Although samples drawn will represent the
population well on average, a given simple random sample may grossly misrepresent the target
population. This more likely if the size of the sample is small.
Definition
A probability sampling technique in which the sample is chosen by selecting a random starting point and then
picking every ith element in succession from the sampling frame.
Explanation
In systematic sampling, the sample is chosen by selecting a random starting point and then picking every ith
element in succession from the sampling frame. The sampling interval, i, is determined by dividing the
population size N by the sample size n and rounding to the nearest integer.
Example
Suppose there are 100,000 elements in the population and a sample of 1000 desired. In this case the sampling
interval, i, is 100. A random number between 1 to 100 is selected. If say number 23 is selected, the sample
will then consists of elements 23, 123, 223, 323, 423, 523, and so on.
Systematic sampling is similar to SRS in that each population element has a known and equal probability of
selection. However, it is different from SRS in that only the permissible samples of size n that can be drawn
have a known and equal probability of selection. The remaining samples of size n have a zero probability of
being selected.
For systematic sampling, the researcher assumes that the population elements are ordered in some respect. In
some cases the ordering (alphabetic listing in a telephone book) is unrelated to the characteristic of interest. In
other instances, the ordering is directly related to the characteristic under investigation. (Credit card customers
may be listed in order of outstanding balances. If the population elements are arranged in a manner unrelated
to the characteristic of interest, systematic sampling will yield result quite similar to SRS.
On the other hand, when the ordering of the element is related to the characteristic of interest, systematic
sampling increases the representatives of the sample.
Advantages
• Systematic sampling is less costly and easier that SRS, because random selection is done only once.
• The random numbers do not have to be matched with individual element as in SRS. Since some lists
contains millions of elements, considerable time can be saved. This in turn again reduces the cost.
• If the information related to the characteristic of interest is available for the population, systematic
sampling can be used to obtain a more representative and reliable sample than SRS.
• Systematic sampling can even be used without knowledge of the composition (elements) of the sampling
frame.
Definition
A probability sampling technique that uses a two-step process to partition the population into subpopulations,
or strata is known as stratified random sampling. Elements are selected from each stratum by a random
procedure.
Explanation
Stratified Random Sampling emerges from the word Stratum. A Stratum in a population is a segment of that
population having one or more characteristics. E.g. people in the age strata of 35-40, people in the income
strata to Rs. 20000 p.m. etc
Example
If the head of the household age strata (18-34, 35-49, 50+) are of interest in a study on household spending
habits on household furnishings, then each of these groups would be taken separately for sampling purposes.
That is, the total population could be divided into age groups and a separate sample is drawn from each group.
Cluster Sampling
Definition
The target population is divided into mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive subpopulation called
clusters. Then a random sample of clusters is selected based on probability sampling techniques such as
simple random sampling. For each selected clusters, either all the elements are included in the sample or a
sample of elements is drawn probabilistically.
Explanation
• If all the elements in each selected cluster are included in the sample, the procedure is called one stage
cluster sampling.
• If a sample of elements is drawn probabilistically from each selected cluster, the procedure is called two-
stage cluster sampling.
• The key distinction between cluster sampling and stratified sampling is that in cluster sampling only a
sample of subpopulations (clusters) is chosen, whereas in stratified sampling all the subpopulations are
selected.
• The objective of the cluster sampling is to increase the sampling efficiency by decreasing costs.
Example
If the study requires studying the households in the city then in cluster sampling the whole city is divided into
Blocks and to take each household on each block selected. Thus to get a representative whole of the universe.
Advantages
• Low population heterogeneity / high population homogeneity
• Low expected cost of errors.
• The main advantage of cluster sampling is the low cost per sampling unit as compared to other sampling
methods.
Disadvantage
• High potential of sampling error as compared to other methods.
Step: Six:
Data Processing and Analysis
DATA PROCESSING
Data processing’s total task in carrying out the analytical program is to convert crude fragments of
observation and responses into orderly statistics for interpretation. There are three preparation stages
necessary in either manual or computer processing: editing, classifying and coding. An additional stage with
computers is card punching.
DATA ANALYSIS
After the data have been collected, the researcher turns to the task of analyzing them. The analysis of data
requires a number of closely related operations such as establishment of categories, the application of these
categories to raw data through coding, tabulation and then drawing statistical inferences. The unwieldy data
should necessarily be condensed into as few manageable groups and tables for further analysis. Thus,
researcher should classify the raw data into some purposeful and usable categories. Coding operation is
usually done at this stage through which the categories of data are transformed into symbols that may be
tabulated and counted. Editing is the procedure that improves the quality of the data for coding. With coding
the stage is ready for tabulation. Tabulation is a part of the technical procedure wherein the classified data are
put in the form of tables. The mechanical devices can be made use of at this juncture. Computers tabulate a
great deal of data, especially in large inquiries. Computers not only save time but also make it possible to
study large number of variables affecting a problem simultaneously.
Analysis work after tabulation is generally based on the computation of various percentages, coefficients etc.,
by applying various well-defined statistical formulae. In the process of analysis, relationships or differences
supporting or conflicting with original or new hypothesis should be subjected to tests of significance to
determine with what validity data can be said indicate any conclusions. For instance, if there are two samples
of weekly wages, each sample being drawn from factories in different parts of the same city, giving two
different values, then our problem may be whether the two mean values are significantly different or the
difference is just a matter of chance. Through the use of statistical tests we can establish whether such a
difference is a real one or is the result of random fluctuations. If the difference happens to be real, the
inference will be that the two samples come from different universes and if the difference is due to chance, the
conclusion would be that the two samples belong to the same universe. Similarly, the technique of analysis of
variance can help us in analyzing whether three or more varieties of seeds grown on certain fields yield
significantly different results or not. In brief, the researcher can analyze the collected data with the help of
various statistical measures.
Step: Eight:
Define the ethics of research
Ethics:
Moral principles or values generally governing the conduct of an individual or group.
Not a one-way relationship.
Guidelines researchers follow to protect the rights of humans who participate in studies. Some common
guidelines include:
• Protection from harm
• Informed consent
• Confidentiality
• Knowledge of results
• Deception, if used, must be explained fully
Abuse of respondents
1. Most common problem: lengthy interviews
2. Refusal rate now averages 60 percent.
3. Selling unnecessary research
4. Violating client confidentiality
Client Ethics
1. Requesting when a supplier has been predetermined
2. Obtaining free advice and methodology via bid requests
3. Making false promises
4. Unauthorized request for proposals
i. Title: Be specific. Tell what, when, where, etc. In one main title and a subtitle, give a clear idea of
what the paper investigated.
ii. Index
iii. Introduction: Sections may be combined in short reports.
iv. Statement of the Problem: This is a general introduction to the topic.
v. Data Collection technique
vi. Research design/ Sampling Method
Chapter 2
1. PRODUCT RESEARCH
The purpose of product research is to develop a product line which meets the needs of consumers in general.
Product research facilitates the process of making products more attractive, useful and agreeable to
consumers.
Meaning of Product Research:
Product research is one major area of MR. It is concerned with different aspects of a product which include
name, features, uses, package used, brand name given, price, consumer support and so on.
The term product research covers all aspects relating to manufacturing and marketing of a product. Product
planning and development, product innovation and modification, product pricing, product life cycle studies
branding, labelling, packaging, etc. are the different areas aspects) of product research
Packaging and branding are treated as two components of product research. This is because they are closely
connected with the product itself. Moreover, sale depends on the product as well as on its packaging and
branding. In product research, existing products of the company are made superior (in quality) and agreeable
to consumers.
In addition, new products with promising market demand are developed. This is called new product research.
Product research is directly related to product-mix which is one component of basic marketing mix.
This suggests that marketing research should start at the product promotion stage.
The researcher should suggest the details of product (nature, features, packaging, etc.) which can be marketed
effectively. This creates proper background for success in marketing efforts
This test is very natural in character as in actual life also a consumer uses one product and forms his opinion.
Thereafter, he may shift to another product if he is not satisfied with the first one. However, he will certainly
not like to use two identical products at one and the same time.
Staggered comparison test is useful for knowing the views of respondents accurately. However, this method is
rather costly.
Secondly, consumers’ views may be bias as they may not be fully away from the influence of the product
used previously.
Paired comparison test can be used to compare an experimental product with an existing product or for
evaluating several existing products with slight differences.
Here, two different products are compared by the consumer.
If more than two products are to be evaluated, the products are paired off for the purpose of study.
Paired comparison method of product testing has certain limitations. Here, the respondent participating in a
test may behave differently from the way he normally would. If these tests are repeated in order to verify
results, it becomes visible that there is considerable instability among the respondents. However, this test is
useful in identifying those individuals who have no real preference for any of the products actually tested
(3) Non-directive Method (Test): In the non-directive method, information is collected from the
respondents without giving them any idea before hand as regards the research work undertaken. For example,
a housewife is given a pair of identically wrapped products and is asked to use them.
In due course i.e. after about two week’s duration, the respondent (housewife) is called on again and asked
whether she has used both the products. In case of actual use of the products, a brief interview is taken which
will give adequate information about product differences. Direct questions may be asked to the respondent to
collect adequate information, if she fails to give information in the conversation. This method is better than
the previous two methods as it represents real market situation. The information supplied can be used
effectively for drawing certain conclusions.
Define target markets, customers, competitive strengths, and a competition strategy (e.g., competing
head-on or finding a market niche);
Position planned products relative to competitive products and identify what will differentiate or
distinguish these products from the competition;
Rationalize these competing development projects and establish priorities for development projects;
Estimate development resources and balance project resource requirements with a budget in the
overall business plan.
Few companies have a formal new product planning process, let alone a rigorous process. While a new
product plan is generally prepared on an annual basis, it should be reviewed and updated at least quarterly, if
not monthly. Market conditions will change, new product opportunities will be identified, and new product
technology will emerge all causing a potential impact to the product plan.
As opportunities are identified, appropriate techniques are used to capture the voice of the customer. The
techniques used will depend on the nature of the customer relationship as illustrated below. There is no one
monolithic voice of the customer. Customer voices are diverse. In consumer markets, there are a variety of
different needs. Even within one buying unit, there are multiple customer voices (e.g., children versus
parents). This applies to industrial and government markets as well. There are even multiple customer voices
within a single organization: the voice of the procuring organization, the voice of the user, and the voice of the
supporting or maintenance organization. These diverse voices must be considered, reconciled and balanced to
develop a truly successful product.
Traditionally, Marketing has had responsibility for defining customer needs and product requirements. This
has tended to isolate Engineering and other development personnel from the customer and from gaining a first
hand understanding of customer needs. As a result, customer's real needs can become somewhat abstract to
other development personnel.
Product development personnel need to be directly involved in understanding customer needs. This may
involve visiting or meeting with customers, observing customers using or maintaining products, participating
in focus groups or rotating development personnel through marketing, sales, or customer support functions.
This direct involvement provides a better understanding of customer needs, the customer environment, and
product use; develops greater empathy on the part of product development personnel, minimizes hidden
knowledge, overcomes technical arrogance, and provides a better perspective for development decisions.
These practices have resulted in fundamental insights such as engineers of highly technical products
recognizing the importance to customers of ease of use and durability rather than the latest technology.
Where a company has a direct relationship with a very small number of customers, it is desirable to have a
customer representative(s) on the product development team. Alternately, mechanisms such as focus groups
should be used where there are a larger number of customers to insure on-going feedback over the
development cycle. Current customers as well as potential customers should be considered and included. This
customer involvement is useful for initially defining requirements, answering questions and providing input
during development, and critiquing a design or prototype.
During customer discussions, it is essential to identify the basic customer needs. Frequently, customers will
try to express their needs in terms of HOW the need can be satisfied and not in terms of WHAT the need is.
This limits consideration of development alternatives. Development and marketing personnel should ask
WHY until they truly understand what the root need is. Breakdown general requirements into more specific
requirements by probing what is needed. Challenge, question and clarify requirements until they make sense.
Document situations and circumstances to illustrate a customer need. Address priorities related to each need.
Not all customer needs are equally important. Use ranking and paired comparisons to aid to prioritizing
customer needs. Fundamentally, the objective is to understand how satisfying a particular need influences the
purchase decision.
In addition to obtaining an understanding of customer needs, it is also important to obtain the customer's
perspective on the competition relative to the proposed product. This may require follow-up contact once the
New Markets/ Existing Products research help collect information on potential customers and markets
wherever they are in the world. With this knowledge a company can build growth and value more quickly and
more securely than by working from guesswork.
A bit more persuasion and they may buy more. However, how many companies know their customer so well
that they know if they have every available piece of business? Ask yourself the following questions:
a. How much is each customer buying of the products (or services) I sell to them?
b. What share do my competitors and I have of each customer's account?
c. What does the customer think of me against the other suppliers it could or does use?
d. What would make each customer buy more
Existing Markets/Existing Products research answer these questions. This can be achieved by relatively
straightforward research. All that require is a customer list and a good briefing. An appropriate questionnaire
is designed; interviews are carrying out and report on how to win more business.
In the research researcher find the opportunities for new products or services with existing customers as part
of its new markets programme. In this method researcher take a brief during which he would discuss the
products company want to sell and learn about their current customer.
Researcher would then design a programme of interviews that could include face to face and telephone
contacts to determine how much business company could win and at what price.
Product specification:
Organizing Customer Needs
Once customer needs are gathered, they then have to be organized. The mass of interview notes, requirements
documents, market research, and customer data needs to be distilled into a handful of statements that express
In addition to "stated" or "spoken" customer needs, "unstated" or "unspoken" needs or opportunities should be
identified. Needs that are assumed by customers and, therefore not verbalized, can be identified through
preparation of a function tree. Excitement opportunities (new capabilities or unspoken needs that will cause
customer excitement) are identified through the voice of the engineer, marketing, or customer support
representative. These can also be identified by observing customers use or maintain products and recognizing
opportunities for improvement.
Comprehensive Specification
These customers needs then have to be translated into a set of product requirements (more technical
expressions of customer needs) that can be acted upon by Engineering. Quality function deployment (QFD) is
an excellent methodology to support this objective while considering the competitive situation. QFD is a
structured planning and decision-making methodology for capturing customer needs and translating those
requirements into product requirements, part characteristics, process plans and quality/production plans
through a series of matrices.
These product requirements are often expressed in the form of a product specification, functional
specification, or marketing requirements specification. The degree of formality in expressing these
requirements will vary depending on the complexity of the product, the size of the development project, and
the organization structure and its communication requirements. With a less complex item, the QFD product
planning matrix is usually sufficient. With a more complex item, a larger development project, and critical
interfaces between multiple teams responsible for individual subsystems, the need for a formal specification
increases. In addition to performance requirements and technical characteristics, a comprehensive
specification would also address ease of use; ergonomics; styling and aesthetics; robustness, reliability and
servicing; the product operating environment or conditions of use; life cycle costs; and packaging.
Several issues can arise with a product specification that can delay time-to-market: an incomplete, ambiguous,
or conflicting specification and/or development proceeding prior to completion of a specification. In these
situations, development often proceeds with assumptions made about requirements that may or may not be
valid. If the assumptions are not valid, the product may be off-target or there may be further product definition
and redesign iterations. When specification ambiguity or conflicts are recognized before design proceeds,
there are further product definition iterations that require additional time before development proceeds. This is
the lesser of the two evils. It is more appropriate to take additional time than risk a product that misses the
mark in meeting customer needs.
However, to the degree that all team members are involved with capturing the voice of the customer and with
translating those needs into technical characteristics or requirements with QFD, it is less likely that the
resulting specifications will be incomplete, ambiguous, or conflicting. Team members will more readily
recognize these situations and recognize the additional information that must be obtained or the issues that
must be resolved much earlier. Further, if there is a well-defined development process with this team-based
environment, it is less likely that development will proceed until specifications are completed.
Once requirements for a product are defined, they must be managed and kept stable. When requirements are a
moving target, the redesign iterations severely impact time-to-market. To minimize the impact on time-to-
The classic approach to product development involves significant effort defining requirements up front
followed by customer evaluation and feedback of prototypes to refine the requirements and design. An
alternative approach of "evolutionary product development" has emerged, largely based on the results of some
Japanese companies. This approach involves regular, on-going assessment of customer needs and customer
feedback, shorter development cycles with a more limited set of new requirements or capabilities, and planned
evolutionary upgrades or improvements based on customer feedback.
2. Branding Research:
Manufacturers, traders and consumers support branding practice as it is useful to them in different ways.
Large number of products is sold in the market by brand name as consumers develop affinity to such brands
and refer to them when they visit retail shops.
In order to secure these advantages, brand selected should be promising. An ideal brand needs certain
qualities.
For example, it should be brief, simple and easy to remember and pronounce.
Similarly, it should be suggestive, decent, attractive and as per the current tests and fashions accepted by
consumers. Research department suggests appropriate brand names to the products of the company.
For this, surveys are conducted and information is collected through interviews, etc.
Such studies offer suitable guidance to management for the introduction of appropriate brand name for the
product.
The research team will provide necessary information on the basis of which the management will have to take
final decision regarding brand name. This decision is critical as the results (good or bad) will be available
only when the brand is actually introduced in the market.
Branding Research can be done at every stage of Brand building process, the various researches related to
Brands are:
1. Brand Character Research: The brand character research can be done using both qualitative and
quantitative techniques.
Qualitative research involves the understanding of:
Personality of each option
Fit with the name of each option
Fit with the brand association of each option
Fit on the pack
Fit with the proposed role in advertising of each option
Comparison among the character options
Evaluation of logo in isolation looks at its likeability, distinctiveness, comprehension of message conveyed,
by logo options, preference among logo options, and preference of logo among key competition. Evaluation
of logo on the pack also looks at the same alternatives along with the speed with which the respondent would
identify the test logo pack among a clutter of other similar packs. This helps to evaluate how the logo would
stand out in the shelf.
Latent Association
What thoughts come to mind upon hearing this name?
What negative and positive associations exist with new corporate name, product name or service
name? What barriers have to be overcome with negative latent associations? How does sound
symbolism or phonosemantics (the meaning of sounds) affect the evaluation of a name's latent
association?
What does the name mean to you?
How would you pronounce this name?
What do you particularly like/dislike about this name?
Which product the name suit? Or not suit?
Which name you like the most and why?
After the ascertaining the responses to these, a preference ranking is done of the names and the best among
them is chosen. This methood also helps in ascertaining the names ability to communicate to the respondent,
the barriers to comprehension, descriptiveness of the name etc.
5. Brand Loyalty Research: Brand Loyalty research explore the relationship among brand trust, brand affect,
and brand performance outcomes (market share and relative price) with an emphasis on understanding the
linking role played by brand loyalty.
Brand Loyalty research generate both statistical and qualitative data — benchmarked, comparative and
evaluative measures. These, combined with specific diagnostic data, provide the tools to effect improvements:
Overall satisfaction
Ratings of performance on specific aspects of the product/service
Reasons for lack of satisfaction/poor ratings
Salience and hierarchy of needs/preferences/expectations
Gap Analysis/Strategic Priority Analysis
Loyalty and propensity to recommend/re-purchase
Drivers of satisfaction and loyalty
Reputation/image of the brand
Value for money
Customer Segmentation
and include, where feasible, lapsed and potential customers
Based on understanding of the company’s direction how do it perceive its position over the next 12–24
months?
3. Pricing Research
Pricing research involves first a pricing strategy assessment supported by strong pricing research capabilities.
Sound pricing market research requires a broad strategic perspective together with a focus on your pricing
decision options.
Pricing research finds optimum price-product-feature configurations in the context of market positioning
opportunities. Pricing studies, we employ both qualitative research and quantitative research tools.
Pricing research usually concentrates on customers' sensitivity to pricing. This price sensitivity is driven by
the nature of the market, the target within that market, the differentiation level of product or service, and the
value of brand.
Pricing is one of the more technical areas of market research.
1. Gabor-Granger pricing research: is named after the economists who invented it in the 1960s. Customers
are asked to complete a survey where they are asked to say if they would buy a product at a particular price.
The price is changed and respondents again say if they would buy or not.
From the results we can work out what the optimum price is for each individual.
By taking a sample of customers we can work out what levels of demand would be expected at each price
point across the market as a whole (the demand curve in the following graph).
Using this estimate of demand, the price elasticity (or expected revenue) can be calculated and so the
optimum price-point in the market established.
A weakness of Gabor Granger is that customers may understate the price they will pay (there are also
circumstances in which they will overstate the price).
Consequently the phrasing of the "would you buy" question is extremely important as are other contextual
questions to place the customer in the buying frame of mind.
Typically, Gabor Granger is only used when considering one product in isolation, whereas in real life they
would face a choice about which product to buy.
3. Conjoint Analysis
In a world of complex product lines and service offerings, value is lost because sellers cannot accurately
determine what customers are willing to pay for product features and attributes.
Companies cannot capture their market with random and haphazard pricing strategy decisions. The winning
firms will be those who develop and price their products, especially those with new or highly desired features,
according to market demand after scientifically collecting data from target customers.
Conjoint Analysis techniques compute mathematical values to explain consumer behavior with respect to
Price - how much value is placed on price, or location, or features, etc. and then correlates this data to
demographic, lifestyle, or other consumer profiles.
A software-driven regression analysis of data obtained from actual customers makes this possible. As a result
of conjoint, the current product offerings or price can be tweaked to match consumer behavior and
expectations. Also, vulnerabilities, like weak brand or uncompetitive prices, can be exposed with conjoint
analysis.
Pricing new products is perhaps one of the most complicated tasks marketers face. A good product priced too
high or too low can fail. Marketers often price to market or price based on cost, neither of which guarantees a
maximized consumer price.
Various forms of conjoint analysis shed new light on consumer perceptions. Conjoint analysis is a “trade-off”
methodology in which the participant trade product attributes with price to arrive at their maximized
product/price scenario. Analyzing those scenarios in aggregate, provide direction on price in total and by
consumer segment (“discount buyers” versus “premium buyers”, “generation Y buyers” vs. “boomers”, etc.).
This approach can often lead to multiple products instead of one – perhaps a basic product and a premium
product.
This approach can also be used to determine how to insert a new product into a line of existing products in a
way that minimizes internal cannibalization of total company market share.
Using conjoint analysis, also tell how much of the companies total share of market is likely to rise or fall with
the introduction of one or more products.
4. Packaging Research
MEANING OF PACKAGING RESEARCH: Packaging research is one aspect of product research. It
deals with the needs and expectations of consumers about the package (size, shape,colour combination,
durability, material used, etc.) used.
Packaging research is useful for making product packages secured, attractive and agreeable to consumers.
Moreover, the advantages of packaging (as noted above) indicate the importance and need of packaging and
packaging research. For large-scale marketing, attractive packaging is a must. It should be used for
established as well as for new products. In addition, renovations should be made in the packages after some
interval.
For this package research is useful. Manufacturers, in India, now take active interest in package research. As a
result, we observe new packages of varied sizes, shapes and colour combinations in the market for all types of
products particularly consumer items such as soaps, cosmetics and oils.
Packaging research has special significance in export marketing as packaging of export items needs to be safe,
secured, and also attractive to foreign buyers. Packaging needs to be as per the standard packaging norms used
in different countries. In addition, packaging of export items needs to be as per the legal provisions made in
different countries. Moreover, packaging rules and procedures are very strict in European countries.
Package graphics and copy are critical marketing variables in many product categories, particularly for non
advertised or under advertised brands in self-serve shopping environments.
The package on a retail shelf is the last opportunity to influence consumers before they decide to buy. It’s the
final sales pitch at the “moment of truth,” when the brand-choice decision is made. The better the package
design and copy, the greater the likelihood that consumers will choose that brand. Any new package design,
or significant change in an existing package, should always be subjected to the scrutiny of objective consumer
feedback.
1. Package Screen
the package design process typically begins with the creation of a large number of “rough” or early-stage
designs. Ten to twenty package designs, or more, are common at this beginning stage. The research objective
is to identify the package designs that resonate with consumers, so that creative efforts can be focused on
further development of the better designs. Package Screen is an Internet-based system to accomplish this
winnowing task.
2. Package Check
Diagnostic Feedback
The next step in the design process is to learn more about the better designs so that further improvements can
be made. Package Check is, designed to provide this diagnostic feedback.
The report includes answers to standard questions, compared to the organizations action standards, as well as
verbatim responses to open-ended questions. The verbatim detail is valuable to creative teams as they strive to
improve the graphic design, as well as the copy, on the package. A typical PackageCheck study is based on 75
completed interviews
3. Package Test
Finished Or Near-Finished Package Designs
As packages near the end of the design process, a more complete evaluation is required, with comprehensive
measurements to assess all of the important elements of package design.
Package Test is comprehensive, testing system to evaluate finished (or near-finished) package designs. A
representative sample is recruited from one of our worldwide Internet the panels, and qualified respondents
are invited to evaluate the package design.
5. Shelf Impact
Does the average consumer notice the package on the shelf?
To evaluate shelf impact, we typically build representative displays of the test package in a competitive
environment.
These displays are photographed from angles representative of the consumer’s perspective. The test package
is rotated within the display.
The best photographs (with correct rotations) are shown to a representative sample of consumers, at various
time exposures (1/200 of a second, 1/100 of a second, and so on) with a tachistoscope. The respondents are
questioned about what they see and what they understand, as the length-of-time exposure increases. This
methodology helps determine the visibility (or attention value) of a test package, relative to competitive
packages.
6. Simulated Display
The ultimate test of a package is whether it stimulates trial of a product.
To measure a package’s trial potential, a representative display of a product category (with all major
competitive brands) is assembled. Matched samples of consumers are instructed to “shop” the display.
Their brand decisions, and the reason for those decisions, are explored in post-shopping interviews.
Simulated display allows us to measure a package’s trial potential and helps us learn how to improve its trial
potential.
Chapter 3
Copy Research
It starts with the beginning of creation process. Account team wants assurance that the ad does what it is
supposed to do. The client wants to see how well a particular ad scores against the average commercial of
its type. Copy research is a good idea most of the time--it can yield important data that management can
use to determine the suitability of an ad concept and basic idea.
1. Concept Testing
Concept testing
Concept testing is used to generate communication designed to alter consumer attitudes toward existing
products. These methods involve the evaluation by consumers of product concepts having certain rational
benefits, such as "a detergent that removes stains but is gentle on fabrics," or non-rational benefits, such as "a
shampoo that lets you be yourself."
Such methods are commonly referred to as concept testing and have been performed using field surveys,
personal interviews and focus groups, in combination with various quantitative methods, to generate and
evaluate product concepts.
The concept generation portions of concept testing have been predominantly qualitative. Advertising
professionals have generally created concepts and communications of these concepts for evaluation by
consumers, on the basis of consumer surveys and other market research, or on the basis of their own
experience as to which concepts they believe represent product ideas that are worthwhile in the consumer
market.
The quantitative portions of concept testing procedures have generally been placed in three categories:
(1) concept evaluations: where concepts representing product ideas are presented to consumers in verbal or
visual form and then quantitatively evaluated by consumers by indicating degrees of purchase intent,
likelihood of trial, etc.,
(2) Positioning: which is concept evaluation wherein concepts positioned in the same functional product class
are evaluated together, and
(3) product/concept tests: where consumers first evaluate a concept, then the corresponding product, and the
results are compared.
b. Poster test: This is similar to card test but expands illustrations and copy and places them on a large
poster instead of a white card.
c. Layout test: Layout test involves showing a rough copy of a print ad or artwork for a TV ad. Layout tests
are more finished than a poster tests in that they use the total copy and illustration as they will appear in the
finished ad. Additionally, whereas a card or poster test measures the appeal of the basic concept, the purpose
of the layout test may e to measure more subtle effects such as communication, understanding and confusion.
2. Name testing
Starting with the right name (and logo) is the cornerstone of brand building. A good name to identify a
company or distinguish its products from others must be unique and original, yet capable of carrying a
favorable message to motivate the customer to have dealings with that company. Creating such a name is an
art as well as a science with rules and guidelines rooted in sociology, psychology, semantics, and the law.
Simply put, a good brand name gives a good first impression and evokes positive associations with the brand.
3. Slogan testing:
• Good slogans can
• Be an integral part of brand’s image
• Act as shorthand identification for the brand
• Provide information about the brand’s benefits
The purpose of the slogan testing is to find out whether the slogan achieves the following:
1. Aid memory recall: It should be easy and pleasant to remember.
2. To describe the use of a product.
3. To suggest the product’s special advantage or unique benefit.
Copy testing
Copy testing start at the end of creation process and before the production start. Copy testing is a general class
of tests that evaluate and diagnose the communication power of an advertisement – either broadcast
(television, radio), print (newspapers, magazines), or more recently, the Internet.
When Used
Copy tests are an integral part of the creative development process, and (of necessity) always follow the
development of one or more advertising alternatives. These alternatives attempt to embody an advertising
strategy that has been identified through previous phases of research.
Copy Testing definition: Research that measures responses to marketing communication copy in a test
environment to evaluate the copy's effectiveness in fulfilling the intended objectives.
Copy testing is a method used by advertisers to see whether or not an ad will work once it is produced. The
premise is that exposure to an ad should affect the way a consumer perceives a product or service.
By conducting copy testing, advertising campaigns can be revised and sometimes corrected. It is believed that
by using copy testing an advertising agency will be able to lower the chances that their advertising campaign
will be unsuccessful.
(2) After qualitative research (focus groups, in-depths) has been used in the creative development process; or
(3) After tracking research has indicated that the current campaign is no longer building awareness or image.
Practically speaking, copy tests can be conducted at any time there is new advertising that needs to be
evaluated.
Stimuli
The single biggest category of copy testing is for TV, where the stimuli are usually 30- or 60- second spots.
(c)"steal-o-matic or Live-Action Rough " (live sound and motion, but stock footage)
Live motion
Stand-in/nonunion talent
Nonunion crew
Limited props/minimal opticals
Location settings
(d) or "rough cuts" (agency footage before editing or cleanup). For final on-air testing, only finished (ready-
to-air) executions are used. Similar, but fewer, alternatives are used in radio or print.
Live motion/animation
Highly paid union talent
Full union crew
Exotic props/studio sets/special effects
Commercials can be tested in animatic form
(b) On-air tests: On-air tests are executed on an unused cable TV channel among people who have been
recruited to view a fictitious ½-hour pilot TV show. Respondents see ads for other categories, but see only one
test ad. On-air tests excel at evaluating copy performance in a real-world setting, and whether the
advertisement "broke through" (i.e., was recalled).
Because of the high cost associated with the production of an ad or commercial, advertisers are increasingly
spending more monies testing a rendering of the final as at early stages. Slides of the artwork posted on a
screen or animatic and photomatic roughs may be used to test at this stage.
The test is of little value if it does not provide relevant, accurate information. Rough tests must indicate how
the finished commercial would perform.
Some studies have demonstrated that these testing methods are reliable and the results typically correlate well
with the finished ad.
Most of the tests conducted at the rough stage involve lab settings, although some on- air field tests are also
available. Popular tests include comprehension and reaction tests and consumer juries. Again, the Internet
allows field settings to be employed.
Ask respondents to say what comes into their head when exposed to the copy
Then follow up with probes and amplifications
Initial reactions tend to be pragmatic but later ones show paths to emotional ideas
Verbal association tests help to obtain information about the attitude of a respondent to certain idea or
concepts named by the words of the respondent's native language. A typical procedure is as follows:
participants are asked to respond to a copy with the words that the stimulus evokes in their mind.
The heart and soul of copy research is the depth interview, a lengthy (one to two hours), one-on-one, personal
interview, conducted directly by the copy researcher. Much of the power of the depth interview is dependent
upon the insight, sensitivity, and skill of the researcher. The interviewing task cannot be delegated to
traditional marketing research interviewers—who have no training in motivational techniques.
Marketers test any part of direct mail package. One of the most commonly used direct mail test is split test: To
test for e.g. an envelope teaser, mailers are send to several hundred to one groups of names and another teaser
to another group.
The one that gets the best response is the one will most likely use in "Roll out".
Rolling out simply means mailing to the entire list instead of small, test groups of names. Remember, one can
test any part of Direct Mail package: the sales letter, the brochure, the lift letter, etc., so.
When testing any part of a direct mail package, one should only change one component at a time. Careful
analysis of results, identification of factors that can improve response, such as emphasizing better or different
product features and benefits, and fast correction and execution of new follow-up mailings often yields a
better result in subsequent mailing efforts.
4. Statement-comparison tests: In Statement comparison, respondents are given different sentences and
asked to give their opinion.
5. Qualitative interviews
At the most basic level, interviews are conversations. Qualitative research interviews can be defined as
"attempts to understand the world from the subjects' point of view, to unfold the meaning of peoples'
experiences, to uncover their views on the specific subject.
Unlike conversations in daily life, which are usually reciprocal exchanges, qualitative interviews involve an
interviewer who is in charge of structuring and directing the questioning.
In qualitative interviews, open-ended responses to questions provide the evaluator with quotations, which are
the main source of raw data. It reveals the respondents' levels of emotion, the way in which they have
organized the world, their thoughts about what is happening, their experiences, and their basic perceptions.
6. Focus Groups:
Definition: limited to those situations where the assembled group is small enough to permit genuine
discussion among all its members“.
Interviewing more than one person at a time sometimes proves very useful; some young people need
company to be emboldened to talk, and some topics are better discussed by a small group of people who know
each other.
Interviewer asks group members very specific questions about a topic after considerable research has already
been completed. Focus group can be define as a "carefully planned discussion designed to obtain perceptions
in a defined area of interest in a permissive, non-threatening environment"
Focus groups can be used at any point in a research program. Stewart and Shamdasani have summarized the
more common uses of focus groups to include:
1. obtaining general background information about a topic of interest;
2. generating research hypotheses that can be submitted to further research and testing using more
quantitative approaches;
7. Motivational research
Motivational research is a type of marketing research that attempts to explain why consumers behave as they
do. Motivational research seeks to discover and comprehend what consumers do not fully understand about
themselves.
Motivational research is most valuable when powerful underlying motives are suspected of exerting influence
upon consumer behavior. Products and services that relate, or might relate, to attraction of the opposite sex, to
personal adornment, to status or self-esteem, to power, to death, to fears, or to social taboos are all likely
candidates for motivational research.
For example, why do women tend to increase their expenditures on clothing and personal adornment products
as they approach the age of 50 to 55?.
The reasons relate to the loss of youth’s beauty and the loss of fertility, and to related fears of losing their
husbands' love. It is also a time of life when discretionary incomes are rising (the children are leaving the
nest). Other motives are at work as well (women are complicated creatures), but a standard marketing
research survey would never reveal these motives, because most women are not really aware of why their
interest in expensive adornments increases at this particular point in their lives.
The three major motivational research techniques are observation, focus groups, and depth interviews.
a. Observation can be a fruitful method of deriving hypotheses about human motives. Anthropologists have
pioneered the development of this technique. All of us are familiar with anthropologists living with the
“natives” to understand their behavior.
b. This same systematic observation can produce equally insightful results about consumer behavior.
c. Observation can be accomplished in-person or sometimes through the convenience of video. Usually,
personal observation is simply too expensive, and most consumers don’t want an anthropologist living in their
household for a month or two.
9. Consumer Juries:
This method uses consumer’s representatives of the target market to evaluate the probable success of an ad.
Consumer juries may be asked to rate a selection of layouts or copy versions presented in paste-ups on
separate sheets.
Pre-testing:
Pre-testing: This is the test of the copy before it is given to the media.
The purpose of pre-testing is as follows:
• To spot errors in the copy
• To make communication more effective
• To design the ad better
• To reduce wastage in advertising
• To ensure that the money is spent prudently.
Pre-testing is a type of research that involves gathering reactions to messages and materials prior to
widespread use. Pre-testing is the stage of advertising research in which a complete ad is tested. It is important
that the objectives of pre-testing research relate back to the agreed advertising strategy.
Pre-tests may occur at a number of points, from as early on as idea generation to rough execution to testing
the final version before implementing it. More than one type of pre-test may be used.
A number of variables can be evaluated in pre-testing, including the ability of the ad to attract attention,
comprehension by the reader/viewer, recall, persuasion, attitude toward the brand, credibility and irritation
level. Pretests should be used as guides and not as absolute predictors of winners or losers.
In pre-testing it is always best to use multiple measures to evaluate. In particular, the multiple
measures recommended are:
1. Impact: The ability of the advertising to be noticed and remembered.
2. Communication: The ability of the advertising to impart a message, which is clearly and uniformly
understood by the target market.
3. Relevancy: The ability of the advertising to persuade consumers that their needs will be met by the
product.
4. Affinity Building: The ability of the advertising to generate consumer affinity (liking) for both the
advertisement and the brand being advertised.
5. Call to Action: The ability of the advertising to motivate consumers to try or re-buy the brand being
advertised.
6. Brand Building Ability: The ability of the advertising to create, change or reinforce certain key
predetermined brand attributes ( features, benefits, feelings) as encompassed in the brand’s positioning
objectives and strategy.
8. Brand fit: The ability of the advertising to demonstrate brand fit, or keep him/her interested.
9. Creative Diagnostics: The pre-test should elicit a host of creative diagnostics to help answer the “whys?”
that always emerge from behind the above measures.
Print Pre-testing:
1. Direct questioning: The heart and soul of print advertising research is the depth interview, a lengthy (one
to two hours), one-on-one, personal interview, conducted directly by the researcher.
Much of the power of the depth interview is dependent upon the insight, sensitivity, and skill of the researcher
in the asking the right questions in the right time. The interviewing task cannot be delegated to traditional
marketing research interviewers—who have no training in motivational techniques.
3: Portfolio test: They are the Laboratory methodology designed to expose a group of respondents to a
portfolio consisting of both control and test ads. Respondents are then asked what information they recall
from the ads. The assumption is that the ads that yield the highest recall are the most effective..
While Portfolio tests offer the opportunity to compare alternative ads directly, a number of weaknesses limit
their applicability.
Factors other than advertising creatively and/or presentation may affect recall. Interest in the product or
product category, the fact that respondents know they are participating in a test, or interviewer instructions
(among others) may account for more differences than the ads itself.
Recall may not be the best. Some researchers argue that for certain types of products (those of low
involvement) ability to recognize the ads when shown may be better measures than recall. One way to
determine the validity of the portfolio method is to correlate its results with readership scores once the ads is
placed in the field.
4. Paired comparison test: Paired-comparison designs (in which the consumer is asked to use two copies and
determine which copy is better) appeal to our common sense.
The Paired-Comparison is a wonderful design if presenting evidence to a jury, because of its "face value" or
"face validity."
It can be a very sensitive testing technique (i.e., it can measure very small differences) between two copy.
Also, the paired-comparison test is often less expensive than other methods, because sample sizes can be
smaller in some instances.
Paired-comparison testing, however, is limited in value for a serious, ongoing copy testing program. The
paired-comparison test does not tell us when both copies are bad and does not lend itself to the use of
normative data.
It is heavily influenced by the "interaction effect" (i.e., any variations in the control copy will create
corresponding variance in the test copy 's scores).
5. Order-of-merit test: Here the ranking of the advertisements are done by a group of people called the
jurors. The point system is given to an average of 4-5 copies that they are given to rank. The order of merit is
the one, which determine which the best advertisement by the jurors is and which has been rated as the worst.
The points given by the jurors are then added together to determine which is the ad, which has got the
maximum points. This is the one that is the chosen one.
6.Mock (“dummy”) magazine test: Readers are told the magazines publisher is interested in evolutions of
editorial content and asked to read the magazines as they normally a would. In an improvement on the
portfolio test, ads are placed in “dummy” magazines developed by an agency or research firm.
The magazines combine regular editorial features of interest to the reader, as well as the test ads, and are
distributed to a random sample of homes in predetermined geographic arrears. Then they are interview-
generating capabilities of the ads are assessed.
The advantage of this method is that it provides a more natural setting than the portfolio tests. Readership
occurs in the participant’s own home, the test more closely approximates a natural reading situation, and the
reader any go back to the magazines, as people typically do.
Direct mail test: Direct mail is the most common form of direct marketing, advertising that conveys its
messages straight to the consumer or another business rather than using an intervening medium such as
television or print advertising.
There's only one rule in direct mail: Test! Find out how to track the response to your mailing and determine
if you have a winner or loser. Prospects from the mailing list randomly selected are sent different test ads and
the orders against each lot are noted.
Broadcast Pre-testing:
Television and radio advertising:
1. Trailer tests: A real life like shopping environment is created to measure consumer behavior. One group is
given coupons to purchase selective brands, and the other group is not given the coupons. The redemption rate
2. Theatre test: A set of captive audience is sent a questionnaire. Later they are sent free ads to view the test
ads in a theatre and then again are administered a questionnaire. It assesses product, brand and the ad theme.
4. Clutter test: It is the method of pre-testing in which commercials are grouped with noncompetitive control
commercials and shown to prospective customers to measure their effectiveness in gaining attention,
increasing brand awareness and comprehension, and causing attitude shifts. Commercials are shown with non
competing control ads to determine attitude shifts and detect weaknesses.
Voice response analysis is another high-research procedure. Inflections in the voice when discussing an ad
indicated excitement and other physiological states . Other less frequently used physiological measures record
brain wave activity , heart rate , blood pressure and muscle contraction .
Pupil dilation
– Instrument: pupilometer
Dilation assoc iated with action
Constriction indic ates disinterest
Subject Stimulus Object
Male
Female
2. Eye-movement camera
It is used in advertising research; this equipment tracks the movement of the eye over press advertisements,
showing the path which the eye takes and indicating the sequence of interest that the features arouse. It
measures the eye movement over the layout of test ads. The route taken by the eye is noted. The pauses are
noted. The areas of interest and attention can be judged.
Output:
– Relationships among what is . . .
Seen
Recalled
Comprehended
3. Galvanometric Response
It means change in skin conductivity due to changes in moisture content (perspiration); measured by current
flow as indicated on a galvanometer. This change may have a correlation with psychological stimuli (e.g. fear
or other emotion) and arguably may provide a measure of a respondent’s reaction to an advertisement
Factors other than advertising creatively and/or presentation may affect recall during pre-testing. Interest in
the product or product category, the fact that respondents know they are participating in a test, or interviewer
instructions (among others) may account for more differences than the ads itself.
Recall may not be the best. Some researchers argue that for certain types of products (those of low
involvement) ability to recognize the ads when shown may be better measures than recall.
Limitation of the juror: Jury selected may not be competent enough to evaluate the ad copy.
Limited concepts: Even the quantity of concepts exposed to the respondents is limited. Here creativity is
restricted.
Halo effect:
Halo effect is the greatest limitation of pretesting. When we consider a person good (or bad) in one category,
we are likely to make a similar evaluation in other categories. Thus the 'Halo effect' is when a person's
perception of another is influenced by their appearance.
Most commonly attractive people are judged as having a more desirable personality than someone of average
appearance. A common example of the halo effect is when a person is assumed to be smart because he or she
is wearing spectacles. Another is that good-looking schoolchildren (or a good looking person versus a more
plain looking person) are assumed to be more clever.
The halo effect may or may not have anything to do with the physical appearance of the person. It is equally
applicable to any attribute one holds as valuable. A person who is good at “X” is deemed to be good at “Y”
even if the two items are not related. Of course, the halo effect does not actually confer accuracy, it simply
addresses that the reasoning is flawed.
Of course, the reverse may also occur-rating an ad bad overall due to only a few bad attributes.
Subjective reaction on the part of consumers noticed by researchers when attempting to analyze consumer
attitudes and their relationship to the market structure, particularly in the area of advertising or brand
evaluation. For example, in theory, an individual should be able to evaluate each feature of a given brand
independently and should have no difficulty giving a high rating to one feature while giving another a low
rating. However, in practice, researchers have noticed that respondents have a tendency to give a high rating
to all the brand's features if they like the brand, and a low rating to all the features if they do not like the
brand. This is known as a halo effect.
The halo effect makes it difficult to evaluate brands in terms of their strengths and weaknesses. However, if a
brand name has a quality reputation in the marketplace, the halo effect may work to the brand's advantage,
particularly when the company is introducing a new product into the line.
1Chapter 8
2Post-testing:
3Post-testing: This is the testing, which is done after the ad copy has come out in the media and the
audience has seen the advertisement.
4Post-testing typically involves interviewing readers to determine how many remember seeing a particular
ad, if they read it, and what they remember about it.
5 Post-testing measures the following factors:
Has the advertisement campaign result in sales?
Has it created memorability for the brand name?
Has it created positive image and a favorable attitude towards the company and the brand?
How much advertising is necessary on a continued basis, to sustain the same level of consumers’
interest in the brand?
Are the consumers convinced that the brand is superior of competitors