1 / 13

The Marketing Research Project

The Marketing Research Project. Purposes of the Project. Give you practical experience at conducting a marketing research project. Develop a systematic understanding of consumer perceptions of e-security. Develop a systematic understanding of consumers’ role in e-security.

violetta
Télécharger la présentation

The Marketing Research Project

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. The Marketing Research Project

  2. Purposes of the Project • Give you practical experience at conducting a marketing research project. • Develop a systematic understanding of consumer perceptions of e-security. • Develop a systematic understanding of consumers’ role in e-security.

  3. Benefits to be Gained • Practical experience • Exposure to a professional experience • Satisfaction of producing a product • Application of skills

  4. Major Project Phases • Questionnaire Development • Primary Data Collection • Data Input and Analysis • Marketing Research Report

  5. Outline of the Research Report • Title Page • Introduction • Objectives • Research Design and Methodology • Research Method • Sampling • Data Collection • Tabulation and Analysis Procedures • Sample Description Continued on next slide

  6. Outline of the Research Report • Results • Description of outcomes associated with each statistical procedure employed • Description of outcomes associated with each hypothesis • Conclusions • Recommendations • Limitations • Appendices

  7. Description of the Sample • Meant to familiarize the reader with the characteristics of the respondents • Thus, primarily want summary tables or graphs of key descriptive characteristics • Use percentages, not the raw numbers • Mention 2 or 3 of the key characteristics of the sample. • Refer your reader to the Annotated Questionnaire (in the Appendix) for a complete analysis of the sample

  8. Statistical Outcomes • Discuss outcome of all statistical procedures • Describe the findings for EACH hypothesis. • Do not simply repeat the information in your data tables. • Do not explain what the results mean – you’ll do that in the Conclusions section.

  9. Conclusions & Recommendations • While not the most extensive, are the most important • They tell the client what the results mean and what should be done • Conclusions are statements of what the analyst believes the findings mean • Recommendations suggest courses of action that should be pursued

  10. Limitations • ALL marketing research studies have limitations • Highlight the key limitations of the project • Briefly discuss the expected impact of each and/or the concern that should be given to each

  11. Annotated Questionnaire • Simple matter of extracting key figures from your computer printouts and placing them on a clean copy of the questionnaire used

  12. Example

  13. Format Requirements • Due NLT Thursday, December 3rd • Must be typed & double-spaced. • Use Times New Roman 12-pt. font. • Page numbers must be included. • Length is NOT a grading criterion. • Must be securely bound in some type of a binder (this does NOT mean a staple or an envelope). • All references must adhere to Journal of Marketing style. • No print-outs (originals or copies) from SPSS allowed. All tables must be the student’s original work.

More Related