1 / 24

Learning Objectives Chapter 6: Marketing Research

Learning Objectives Chapter 6: Marketing Research. Define marketing research. Describe the reasons for doing marketing research (the five Cs) and explain why marketing research is sometimes not done. Explain how research is used in each step of the hospitality and travel marketing system.

Télécharger la présentation

Learning Objectives Chapter 6: Marketing Research

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Learning ObjectivesChapter 6: Marketing Research • Define marketing research. • Describe the reasons for doing marketing research (the five Cs) and explain why marketing research is sometimes not done. • Explain how research is used in each step of the hospitality and travel marketing system. • List and describe the five key requirements for good research information. • List in order and explain the six steps in the marketing research process.

  2. Learning ObjectivesChapter 6: Marketing Research • Describe the internal and external sources of secondary research. • Explain the differences between primary and secondary research and list their respective advantages and disadvantages. • List and describe the primary research methods and differentiate between quantitative and qualitative research. • Explain the advantages and disadvantages of personal interviews, mail, telephone, in-house, self-administered, and online surveys.

  3. Learning ObjectivesChapter 6: Marketing Research • Explain the focus group approach and how it can be used in making effective marketing decisions.

  4. Marketing Research The function that links the consumer, customer, and public to the marketer through information. The information is used to: 1. Identify and define marketing opportunities and problems. 2. Generate, refine, and evaluate marketing actions. 3. Monitor marketing performance. 4. Improve understanding of marketing as a process.

  5. Reasons for Doing Marketing Research: The Five Cs • Customers: To determine how well customer needs are being met, investigate new target markets, and assess and test new services and facilities. • Competition: To identify primary competitors and pinpoint their strengths and weaknesses. • Confidence: To reduce the perceived risk in making marketing decisions.

  6. Reasons for Doing Marketing Research: The Five Cs • Credibility: To increase the believability of promotional messages among customers. • Change: To keep updated with changes in travelers’ needs and expectations.

  7. Reasons for Not Doing Marketing Research • Timing: It will take to much time. • Cost: The cost of the research is too high. • Reliability: There is no reliable research method available for doing the research. • Competitive intelligence: There is a fear that competitors will learn about the organization’s intentions. • Management decision: Management prefers to use own judgment.

  8. Five Key Requirements of Marketing Research Information • Utility: Can we use it? Does it apply to us? • Timeliness: Will it be available in time? • Cost-effectiveness: Do the benefits outweigh the costs? • Accuracy: Is it accurate? • Reliability: Is it reliable?

  9. Marketing Research Programs and Projects • Marketing Research Program: A plan or program to investigate several marketing opportunities or problems (several projects). • Marketing Research Project: An individual element of a marketing research program in which a specific marketing opportunity or problem is investigated.

  10. Marketing Research Process • Formulate Problem: • Define research problem • Identify research objectives and related questions • Select Research Design And Data Collection Method: • Collect and analyze secondary information • Select research design and primary data collection method

  11. Marketing Research Process • Select Sample And Collect Data: • Decide on sample design and collect primary data • Analyze And Interpret Data • Analyze and interpret primary data • Prepare Research Report: • Draw conclusions and make recommendations • Communication of the Research Results • Present results to all interested parties

  12. Sources of Secondary Research Information Secondary Research Internal Data External Data Registrations or reservations Government agencies Sales or customer mix WWW. Magazines, journals, newspapers, radio, TV Databases Associations Inquiries Research companies and consultants Unfulfilled reservations/ turn-aways Universities and Colleges

  13. Secondary and Primary Research • Secondary: Published information available from other sources, either internal or external • Primary: Data collected for the first time, by a method other than secondary research, to answer specific questions.

  14. Advantages and Disadvantages of Secondary Research • Advantages • Inexpensive • Easily accessible • Immediately available • Disadvantages • Frequently outdated • Potentially unreliable • May not be applicable

  15. Advantages and Disadvantages of Primary Research • Advantages • Applicable and usable • Accurate and reliable • Up-to-date • Disadvantages • Expensive • Not immediately available • Not as readily accessible

  16. Primary Research Methods & Techniques Primary Research Quantitative Data Qualitative Data • Surveys • Personal interview (intercepts) • Mail • In-house, self-administered • Telephone, fax, e-mail, Web Experiments Focus groups Individual depth interviews Mechanical observation Human observation Simulation Case studies

  17. Primary Research Methods • Experimental (e.g., test marketing) • Observational (human and mechanical) • Survey (mail, telephone, personal interview, in-house self-administered, online) • Simulation (mathematical and computer modeling) • Focus groups (groups of 8 to 12 people with moderator trying to reach a consensus of opinions)

  18. Personal Interviews Advantages • High response rate • Great flexibility (ability to adapt/explain questions) • Can show or demonstrate items • Fuller explanations can be given • Very timely data

  19. Personal Interviews Disadvantages • Relatively expensive • Possibility of interviewer bias • Personal nature of questions (e.g., age or income) • Respondents not relaxed (put on the spot) • Time may not be convenient for respondents

  20. Mail Surveys Advantages • Relatively inexpensive • No interviewer bias • Consistent questions (for all respondents) • Large number of respondents can be included • Anonymity • Respondents can choose the most convenient time to answer

  21. Mail Surveys Disadvantages • Low response rates (relative to other survey types) • Junk mail syndrome • Impersonal nature

  22. Telephone Surveys • Advantages • More flexibility compared to mail surveys • Quick and inexpensive • High response rates • Disadvantages • More obtrusive than mail • Greater difficulties in rapport building • Long-distance calls are expensive

  23. In-House, Self-Administered Surveys • Advantages • Completed by customers within the premises of a hospitality and travel organization • Convenient • Disadvantages • Generate low response rates

  24. Online Surveys • Advantages • Relative speed and flexibility • Large and growing audience • Disadvantages • Technical skills and time required to develop questionnaires

More Related