4.4 Market research Flashcards
What is market research?
marketing activities designed to discover the opinions, beliefs and preferences of potential and existing customers
What is the purpose of market research?
gives businesses up-to-date info
enables businesses to improve their marketing strategies
assesses customer reactions to a new product by testing it on a small group of customers
gives businesses an understanding of the activities and strategies of rivals
helps businesses to predict what is likely to happen in the future
What is primary research?
market research that involves gathering new data first-hand for a specific purpose
What are the different techniques of primary research?
surveys
interviews
focus groups
observations
Ads + disads of primary research
\+ relevance \+ up to date \+ confidential and unique - time consuming - costly - validity
What is secondary research?
involves the collection of second-hand data and information that already exists.
What are the different techniques of secondary research?
market analyses
academic journals
governmental publications
media articles
Ads + disads of secondary research
\+ cheaper and faster \+ provides insight \+ huge range of resources \+ based on large sample sizes - outdated - irrelevant - only provide partial information - available to competitors
What are ethical considerations of market research?
needs to be systematic, consistent and unbiased.
must not cause damage, be deceitful, deceptive.
What is the difference between quantitative and qualitative market research?
Qualitative market research involves getting non-numerical answers and opinions from respondents.
Quantitative market research relies on a much larger number of responses to get hard’ answers (factual and measurable information rather than people’s opinions).
What are the advantages of qualitative research?
+ explore driving and restraining forces
+ rich info
+ inexpensive
+ one-to-one interviews: respondents are not under the pressure
- findings are not representative of the whole population
- time consuming
- expertise
- interview bias
What is sampling?
the practice of selecting a small group (or sample) of the population for a particular market for primary research purposes.
What are the different types of sampling?
Quota Random Stratified Cluster Snowballing Convenience
Quota sampling ads + disads
a certain number of people (known as the quota) from different market segments is selected according to shared characteristics such as age, gender or occupation.
+ relatively representative sample can be obtained
+ findings are reliable
- not representative of the whole population –> sampling errors
Random sampling ads + disads
involves giving everyone in the population an equal chance of being selected for the sample.
+ easy to get a sample
+ everyone has an equal chance of being selected
- indiscriminate