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Chapter One

Chapter One. The Nature of Marketing Research . The Nature of Marketing Research. Marketing research is one of the principal tools for answering questions because it: Links the consumer, customer, and public to the market through information used to identify and define marketing

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Chapter One

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  1. Chapter One The Nature of Marketing Research

  2. The Nature of Marketing Research • Marketing research is one of the principal tools for answering questions because it: • Links the consumer, customer, and public to the market through information used to identify and define marketing • Generates, refines, and evaluates marketing actions • Monitors marketing performance • Underlines the understanding of marketing as a process

  3. Marketing Research Defined The systematic and objective process of generating information for aid in making marketing decisions

  4. The American Marketing Association Redefines Marketing Research used to identify and define market opportunities and problems The New Definition Marketing research is the function which links the consumer, customer, and public to the marketer through generate, refine, and evaluate marketing performance monitor marketing performance Information improve understanding of marketing as a process

  5. The Marketing Research Process • specifying what information is required; • designing the method for collecting information; • managing and implementing the collection of data; • analyzing the results; and • communicating the findings and their implications.

  6. Information Reduces Uncertainty I don’t know if we should enter the Australian Market?

  7. Marketing Research Types Basic research Applied research

  8. Basic Research • Attempts to expand the limits of knowledge • Not directly involved in the solution to a pragmatic problem

  9. Basic Research Example • Do consumers experience cognitive dissonance in low-involvement situations?

  10. Applied Research • Conducted when a decision must be made about a specific real-life problem

  11. Applied Research Example • Should McDonalds add Italian pasta dinners to its menu? • Marketing research told McDonald’s it should not? • Should Procter & Gamble add a high-priced home teeth bleaching kit to its product line? • Research showed Crest Whitestrips would sell well at a retail price of $44

  12. ScientificMethod • The analysis and interpretation of empirical evidence (facts from observation or experimentation) to confirm or disprove prior conceptions

  13. Scientific Method is a formalized research procedures that can be characterized as logical, objective, systematic, reliable, valid, impersonal, and ongoing.

  14. Marketing Concept • Central idea in marketing • Evolved over time • Not production-oriented • Marketing-oriented

  15. Marketing Concept Consumer Oriented Long Run Profitability • Cross-Functional • Effort

  16. No One Know Better than Mom !!! Does she know : How much underwear you own ? Jockey International Does ?

  17. No One Know Better than Mom !!! Does she know : The number of ice cube you put in a glass? Coca-Cola Does ?

  18. No One Know Better than Mom !!! Does she know : Which pretzels you usually eat first the broken ones or the whole ones? Try asking Frito-Lay

  19. Knows • We put 3.2 ice cubes in a glass • See 69 of its commercial everyday • Prefer cans out of vending machines • to be at a temperature of 2 C

  20. Did you know that ? 38 % North Americans would rather had a tooth pulled than take their car to a dealership for repairs

  21. For every 10,000 Canadians in 1992 there were 8.13 automated teller machines while there were only 5.26 for Americans and 3.36 for Germans

  22. Lever Brothers Co. uncovered the fact that 79% of women said they didn’t trust their husbands to do the laundry

  23. NOTHING ABOUT OUR BEHAVIOR IS SACRED !!! 68% of consumers prefer their toilet paper to unwind over the spool rather than the under.

  24. Campbell Soup gave up trying to learn our opinions about the ideal sized meatball after a series of tests showed that we prefer one so big it wouldn’t fit in the can

  25. Our favorite toothbrush color isBLUE Only 37% of us are using one that’s more than six months old 47 % put water on brush before apply the paste 15 % put water on after the paste 24 % do both 14 % don’t wet the brush at all

  26. Keeping Customers and Building Relationships • RELATIONSHIP MARKETING - the idea that a major goal of marketing is to build long-term relationships with the parties who contribute to the company’s success. • Marketers want customers for life. • Managing the relationships that will bring about additional exchanges

  27. Total Quality Management • Much in common with marketing concept • Focus on integrating customer-driven quality throughout the organization. • Stresses continuous improvement

  28. Stages in Developing and Implementing a Marketing Strategy • Identifying and evaluating opportunities • Analyzing market segments and selecting target markets • Planning and implementing a marketing mix • Analyzing market performance

  29. Identifying and Evaluating Opportunities Examples • Mattel Toys investigates desires for play experiences • Home cooking is on the decline. Purchase of precooked home replacement meals is on the rise. • Number of investors trading stock on the Internet is growing.

  30. Analyze Market Segments and Select Target Markets Examples • Cadillac investigates buyers’ demographic characteristics • MTV, monitoring demographic trends, learns the Hispanic audience is growing rapidly • Sears learns women, age 25-54 with average household income of $38,000, are core customers. Targets this market with "The Good Life at a Great Price. Guaranteed. Sears."

  31. Product Research • test concept • determine optimal product design • package tests • product modification • brand positioning and repositioning • test marketing • control score tests Distribution Reseach • types of distribution • attitudes of Channel members • intensity of wholesale & resale • coverage • channel margins • location of retail and wholesale • outlets

  32. Pricing Research • importance of price in brand selection • pricing policies • product line pricing • price elasticity of demand • initiating and responding to price changes Promotional Research • optimal promotional budget • sales promotion relationship • optimal promotional mix • copy decisions • media decisions • creative advertising testing • claim substantiation • evaluation of advertising effectiveness 0.00% APR

  33. Plan and Implement a Marketing Mix • Price: Safeway does a competitive pricing analysis • Distribution: Caterpillar Tractor Co. investigates dealer service program. • Product: Oreo conducts taste test, Oreo cookie vs. Chips Ahoy • Promotion: How many consumers recall the “Life Tastes Good. Coca Cola!” slogan?

  34. Analyze Marketing Performance • This year’s market share is compared to last year’s. • Did brand image change after new advertising?

  35. Performance-monitoring Research • Research that regularly provides feedback For evaluation And control • Indicates things are Or are not going as planned • Research may be required To explain why something “went wrong”

  36. Determining When to Conduct Marketing Research • Time constraints • Availability of data • Nature of the decision • Benefits versus costs

  37. Determining When to Conduct Marketing Research Time Constraints Availability of Data Nature of the Decision Benefits vs. Costs Is sufficient time available? Information already on hand inadequate? Is the decision of strategic or tactical importance? Does the information value exceed the research cost? Conduct Marketing Research Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No Do Not Conduct Marketing Research

  38. Potential Value of a Marketing Research Effort Should Exceed Its Estimated Costs Costs Value • Research expenditures • Delay of marketing decision and possible disclosure of information to rivals • Possible erroneous research results • Decreased certainty • Increased likelihood of a correct decision • Improved marketing performance and resulting higher profits

  39. Marketing Research in the 21st Century • Increased globalization • Growth of the Internet and other information technologies

  40. Global Research • Business Research is increasingly global • Market knowledge is essential • A.C. Nielsen - more that 67% international business

  41. Global Marketing Research • General information about country - economic conditions and political climate • Cultural and consumer factors • Market and competitive conditions - demand estimation

  42. The Internet is Transforming Society • Time is collapsing. • Distance is no longer an obstacle. • Crossing oceans is only a mouse click away. • People are connected 24 hours a day, seven days a week. • "Instantaneous" has a new meaning.

  43. Internet Research • Seeking facts and figures about an issue • Surveys on Web sites

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