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The Marketing Research Report: Preparation and Presentation

The Marketing Research Report: Preparation and Presentation. The Marketing Research Report.

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The Marketing Research Report: Preparation and Presentation

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  1. The Marketing Research Report: Preparation and Presentation

  2. The Marketing Research Report • Marketing research report: a factual message that transmits research results, vital recommendations, conclusions, and other important information to the client, who in turn bases his or her decision making on the content of the report

  3. The Importance of the Marketing Research Report • The client bases his or her decision making on the contents of the report. • The marketing research report is the product that represents the efforts of the marketing research team, and it may be the only part of the project that the client will see. • The time and effort expended in the research process are wasted if the report does not communicate effectively.

  4. Organizing the Written Report • Marketing research reports are tailored to specific audiences and purposes, and you must consider both in all phases of the research process, including planning the report. • Must consider questions such as: • What is your purpose? • Who is the audience? • What are your audience’s interests, values, concerns?

  5. Organizing the Written Report

  6. Organizing the Written Report • The front matterconsists of all pages that precede the first page of the report. • The title page contains the title of the document, the organization/person(s) for whom the report was prepared, the organization/person(s) who prepared the report, and the date of submission. • The letter of authorizationis the marketing research firm’s certification to do the project and it is optional.

  7. Organizing the Written Report • The letter of transmittal is used to release or deliver the document to an organization for which you are not a regular employee. • The memo of transmittal is used to deliver the document within your own organization.

  8. Organizing the Written Report • The table of contents helps the reader locate the information in the research report. • The list of illustrations helps locate tables or figures within the report. • Tables are words or numbers that are arranged in rows and columns. • Figures are graphs, charts, maps, pictures, and so on.

  9. Organizing the Written Report

  10. Organizing the Written Report

  11. Organizing the Written Report

  12. Organizing the Written Report • Abstract/executive summary: skeleton of your report • Body: bulk of the report, including introduction, explanation of method, discussion of results, statement of limitations, and a list of recommendations and conclusions

  13. Introduction • The introduction may contain: • A statement of the background situation leading to the problem • The statement of the problem • A summary description of how the research process was initiated.

  14. Introduction • It should contain a statement of the general purpose of the report and also the specific objectives for the research. • Research objectives may be listed here or in a separate section.

  15. Organizing the Written Report • Method describes in detail how the research was conducted, who (or what) the subjects were, and what methods were used to achieve the objectives • Methodology refers to the science of determining appropriate methods to conduct research. • Method refers to the tools used in a scientific investigation. • Use method, not methodology!

  16. Organizing the Written Report • Results present the findings of the research. • Limitations may focus on, but not limited to, time, money, personnel, and size of population.

  17. Organizing the Written Report • Conclusionsare the outcomes and decisions you have reached based on your research results. • Recommendations are suggestions for how to proceed based on the conclusions. • The end mattercontains information that the reader may need to refer to for further reading but that is not essential to reporting the data.

  18. Plagiarism • Plagiarism refers to presenting the work of others as your own and is a serious offense. • If you are in doubt, document!

  19. Following Guidelines and Principles for the Written Report • Headingsindicate the topic of each section. • Subheadingsshould divide that information into segments. • Visualsare tables, figures, charts, diagrams, graphs, and other graphic aids.

  20. A Tip to Make You a Better Writer…Use Subheadings! • TITLE • FIRST-LEVEL HEADING • Second-Level Heading • Third-Level Heading • Fourth-Level Heading. • Fifth-Level Heading – part of the sentence • See MRI 20.3, p. 611

  21. Style • Stylistic devices can make the difference in whether or not your reader gets the message as you intended it. • Examples: • A good paragraph has one main idea… See MRI 20.4 on p. 612. • Capitalize on white space.

  22. Using Visuals: Tables and Figures • Tablesidentify exact values; allow reader to compare numerical data.

  23. Using Visuals: Tables and Figures • Charts: • Pie charts: circle divided into sections; compare a specific part of the whole to whole

  24. Using Visuals: Tables and Figures • Charts: • Bar charts: graphically show concepts such as frequency distribution

  25. Producing an Accurate and Ethical Visual • Ethical visual: one that is totally objective in terms of how information is to be presented in the research report

  26. Ethical Visuals • An ethical visual is one that is totally objective in terms of how information is presented in the research report. • Double- and triple-check all labels, numbers, and visual shapes. • Exercise caution if you use three-dimensional figures. • Make sure all parts of the scales are presented.

  27. Presenting Your Research Orally • The purpose of an oral presentation is to succinctly present the research information and to provide an opportunity for questions and discussion.

  28. Presenting Your Research Orally • To be prepared follow these steps: • Identify and analyze your audience. • Find out the expectations your audience has for your presentation. • Determine the key points your audience needs to hear. • Outline the key points so you can easily refer to them. • Present your points clearly and succinctly.

  29. Presenting Your Research Orally • Make sure your visuals graphically and ethically portray your key points. • Practice your presentation. • Check out the room and media equipment prior to the presentation. • Arrive early. • Be positive and confident. • Practice good presentation skills (volume, enunciation, eye contact, good posture, professional dress).

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