THE PROCESS OF SCIENCE • What is different? – 1. Falsification! • The ability to find out that you’re wrong – 2. Theories and observation • Movement between concepts and observation – 3. Not very efficient • Slow. Lots of work. 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 1 THE MARKETING RESEARCH PROCESS • Five critical questions: – 1. What do we want to know? – 2. How would we conduct the research? – 3. What would it cost? – 4. How else could we conduct the research? – 5. Should we conduct research? 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 2 1. What do we want to know? It's important to ask the right questions – asking the wrong ones is at best, useless; – at worst, it will lead to the wrong decision • Examples: – audio CD players – New Coke 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 3 “The formulation of the problem is often more essential than its solution.” Albert Einstein The Process of Problem Definition Ascertain the decision maker’s objectives Determine unit of analysis Understand background of the problem Determine relevant variables Isolate/identify the problem, not the symptoms State research questions and objectives The Iceberg Principle • The most dangerous part of many business problems is neither visible to nor understood by managers. 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 6 2. How would we do the research? Are there useful insights that exist? – e.g., everyday low pricing • perhaps not for your product, but theoretically applicable – seasonality, loyalty, stockpiling • Is there existing data we can use? – has our or the competitors price varied? 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 7 3. What would it cost? • estimate: – a. staff * hours • (double how long you think it would take) – b. survey or experiment costs – c. incentives for participants • cost-benefit comparison • potential gain versus loss 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 8 Managing Costs Things take at least twice as long and cost at least twice expectations Cost overruns: Identify over budget situations and report cost overruns to management have options and suggestions (e.g. smaller samples, shorter interviews) 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 9 4. How else could we do the research? • if cost-benefit fails: – is there a cheaper way to go? • a. easier way to go? • b. smaller sample? • c. other ways to save $? • cost-benefit comparison • potential gain versus loss 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 10 5. Should we conduct research? • cost-benefit calculation – are there more benefits than costs? • capital of the company – can we afford it? • extension of existing product – if we already produce something similar... • confidence in factors identified – do we know what we need to know? 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 11 Case • Women's clothing store – four years decreasing profits – niche: conservative wear, not trendy – competition: aim at young, fashionable – idea: less conservative, younger buyer • What are the useful research questions? 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 12 Examples of possible projects 1. Movie trailors 2. Warning labels 3. Celebrity effects 4. Athletic attendance 5. Perceptions of wine 6. “Social Marketing” issues 7. Internet shopping versus purchasing 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 13 The End 7/17/2016 Marketing Research 14