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Lecture Principles of Marketing - Chapter 4: Managing Marketing information

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Chapter four explain the importance of information to the company and its understanding of the marketplace, define the marketing information system and discuss its parts, outline the steps in the marketing research process, explain how companies analyze and distribute marketing information, discuss the special issues some marketing researchers face, including public policy and ethics issues.

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Nội dung Text: Lecture Principles of Marketing - Chapter 4: Managing Marketing information

  1. Chapter Four Managing Marketing Information
  2. Roadmap: Previewing the Concepts 1. Explain the importance of information to the company and its understanding of the marketplace. 2. Define the marketing information system and discuss its parts. 3. Outline the steps in the marketing research process. 4. Explain how companies analyze and distribute marketing information. 5. Discuss the special issues some marketing researchers face, including public policy and ethics issues. Copyright 2007, Prentice Hall, Inc. 4-2
  3. Case Study Coach – Research Revamps Strategy The Situation Research’s Role  Firm began by offering  Method: Interviews 14,000 classically styled, high- women annually. Watches quality leather handbags. trends for “market voids.”  Women needed only two  Key research findings: purses in brown or black. 1) desire for “fashion  Mid-1990s: sales slowed. pizzazz” in handbags.  Consumer preferences 2) “Usage voids.” changed as more women  New products are created entered the workforce. to fill voids (wristlets, fabric  Designer bags made bags, Signature line, etc.). Coach’s look plain.  Sales and earnings grow.
  4. The Importance of Marketing Information  Companies need information about their: – Customers’ needs – Marketing environment – Competition  Marketing managers do not need more information, they need better information.
  5. Marketing Information System  An MIS consists of people, equipment, and procedures to gather, sort, analyze, evaluate, and distribute needed, timely, and accurate information to marketing decision makers.  The MIS helps managers to: 1. Assess information needs 2. Develop needed information 3. Distribute information
  6. Assessing Information Needs  A good MIS balances the information users would like against what they really need and what is feasible to offer.  Sometimes the company cannot provide the needed information because it is not available or due to MIS limitations.  Have to decide whether the benefits of more information are worth the costs.
  7. Developing Marketing Information  Internal Databases: Electronic collections of information obtained from data sources within the company.  Marketing Intelligence: Systematic collection and analysis of publicly available information about competitors and developments in the marketing environment.  Marketing Research: Systematic design, collection, analysis, and reporting of data relevant to a specific marketing situation facing an organization.
  8. Defining Problem & Objectives  Exploratory Research: – Gathers preliminary information that will help define the problem and suggest hypotheses.  Descriptive Research: – Describes things (e.g., market potential for a product, demographics and attitudes).  Causal Research: – Tests hypotheses about cause-and-effect relationships.
  9. The Marketing Research Process  Defining the problem and research objectives  Developing the research plan  Implementing the research plan  Interpreting and reporting the findings
  10. Developing the Research Plan  Includes: – Determining the exact information needed. – Developing a plan for gathering it efficiently. – Presenting the written plan to management.  Outlines: – Sources of existing data – Specific research approaches – Contact methods – Sampling plans – Instruments for data collection
  11. Gathering Secondary Data  Information that already exists somewhere: – Internal databases – Commercial data services – Government sources  Available more quickly and at a lower cost than primary data.  Must be relevant, accurate, current, and impartial.
  12. Primary Data Collection  Consists of information collected for the specific purpose at hand.  Must be relevant, accurate, current, and unbiased.  Must determine: – Research approach – Contact methods – Sampling plan – Research instruments
  13. Observational Research  The gathering of primary data by observing relevant people, actions, and situations.  Ethnographic research: – Observation in “natural environment”  Mechanical observation: – People meters – Checkout scanners
  14. Survey Research  Most widely used method for primary data collection.  Approach best suited for gathering descriptive information.  Can gather information about people’s knowledge, attitudes, preferences, or buying behavior.
  15. Experimental Research  Tries to explain cause-and-effect relationships.  Involves: – selecting matched groups of subjects – giving different treatments – controlling unrelated factors – checking differences in group responses
  16. Contact Methods  Mail surveys  Telephone surveys  Personal interviews – Individual interviewing – Focus group interviewing  Online marketing research – Surveys – Experiments – Focus groups
  17. Sampling Plan  Sample: segment of the population selected to represent the population as a whole.  Sampling requires three decisions: – Who is to be surveyed? • Sampling unit – How many people should be surveyed? • Sample size – How should the people in the sample be chosen? • Sampling procedure  Probability vs. nonproability samples
  18. Primary Data Collection  Questionnaires: – What questions to ask? – Form of each question? • Closed-ended • Open-ended – Wording? – Ordering?
  19. Primary Data Collection  Mechanical Devices: – People meters – Supermarket scanners – Galvanometer – Eye cameras
  20. Implementing the Research Plan  Collecting the data – Most expensive phase – Subject to error  Processing the data – Check for accuracy – Code for analysis  Analyzing the data – Tabulate results
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