knowledge is power marketing information system (mis) determines what information managers need and...

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Knowledge is Power

• Marketing Information System (MIS) determines what information managers need and then gathers, sorts, analyzes, stores, and distributes relevant and timely marketing information to system users

• 3 components to MIS– data

– computer hardware and software

– MIS experts

The Marketing Information System

Information for Marketing Decisions

Computer Hardwareand Software

Internal Data

MarketingIntelligence

MarketingResearch

AcquiredDatabases

Marketing Information System• Internal Data System - internal system for

communication (e.g., intranet)• Marketing Intelligence - method to get

information about the environment• Marketing Research - process of collecting,

analyzing, and interpreting data about customers, competitors, and the business environment to improve marketing effectiveness

Marketing Research Data

• Syndicated research reports– collected and compiled by secondary data firms

on a regular basis and sold

• Custom research reports– primary data collected to provide answers to

specific questions

Marketing Decision Support Systems

Marketing Manager/ Decision Maker

Interactive Software

MIS Data

Statistical and Modeling Software

InformationNeeded

for Decision Making

Step 1: Define the Problem

What is the management decision?

• Specify the research objectives – “translate” the management decision into research objectives

• Identify the consumer population of interest

• Place the problem in an environmental context – what are the underlying assumptions?

Step 2: Determine the Design

• Can the information be acquired from existing data?– If so, secondary data sources will be utilized– If not, primary research will be necessary

Research Designs

Internal Sources

ExternalSources

Company reportsPrevious company research

Salesperson feedbackCustomer feedback

Published researchTrade organizationsSyndicated researchGovernment sources

Secondary Research

Research Designs

Primary Research

Exploratory Descriptive Causal

InterviewsFocus GroupsCase Studies

Ethnographies

Cross-sectionLongitudinal

Laboratory Field

Exploratory Research

Generally provides qualitative data:

Does it exist, what is it?

• May take several forms– interviews– focus groups– case studies– Ethnography

Descriptive Research• Generally provides quantitative data:

How big is the market?• Utilizes large sample of participants as base• Designs

– Cross-sectional design involves the systematic collection of quantitative information from one or more samples of respondents at one point in time

– Longitudinal design tracks the responses of the same sample of respondents over time

Causal Research

• Attempts to understand cause-and-effect relationships

• Factors that might cause a change are independent variables while the variables that are affected are dependent variables

• Experimental design allows researchers to control possible explanations for the effect

Step 3: Choose the Method for Collecting Primary Data

• Communication– Mail questionnaires– Telephone interviews– Face-to-face interviews– Online questionnaires

• Observation– Personal– Mechanical

Mail Questionnaires

• Advantages– Respondents feel

anonymous

– Low cost

– Good for ongoing research

• Disadvantages– Slow return speed

– Low response rates typical

– Inflexible questionnaire

– Length of survey is limited

Telephone Interviews

• Advantages– Fast

– High flexibility in questioning

– Low cost

– Limited interviewer bias

• Disadvantages– Decreasing levels of

cooperation

– Limited questionnaire length

– Consumers screen calls

Face-to-Face Interviews• Advantages

– Flexibility of questioning

– Long questionnaires possible

– Can help explain questions

– Can use visuals

• Disadvantages– High cost

– Interviewer bias possible

– Time requirements are high

Online Questionnaires

• Advantages– Instant data collection

– Flexible question patterns

– Low cost

– No interviewer bias

– Access regardless of geographic location

• Disadvantages– Unclear who is

responding

– No assurance of honesty

– Limited questionnaire length

– Limitations inherent with self-selected samples

Observation

• Personal observation– traffic analysis– recording how products are used

• Unobtrusive measures– pantry checks– garbage search

• Mechanical observation– people meters

Data Quality

• Validity - extent to which the research measures what it was intended to measure

• Reliability - extent to which research measurement techniques are free of errors

• Representativeness - extent to which consumers in the study are similar to the target of interest

Step 4: Design the Sample

• Probability samples– each member of the population has an equal and known

chance of being included in the sample

– allows for inferences to be made about the population

• Non-probability samples– unequal chance of being included in the sample

– limits inferences to the population

Probability Samples

• Simple random sample

• Systematic random sample

• Stratified sample

Non-Probability Samples

• Convenience sample

• Quota sample

Step 5: Collect the Data

• Implementation phase• Special issues in data collection

– Gathering Data in Foreign Countries• Challenges due to access, coverage, and language

– Single Source Data• Data on purchasing behavior and advertising

exposure are measured for members of a consumer panel using television meters, retail scanners, and split-cable technology

Step 6: Analyze and Interpret Data

• Enter, clean, and code data

• Choose appropriate techniques for analysis

• Interpret analysis

Step 7: Prepare Research Report

Who will be receiving the Report?

• Executive summary

• A description of research methods

• Discussion of results

• Limitations of study

• Conclusions and recommendations

Online Research

• Online Tracking

• Cookies

• Testing, Questionnaires, and Focus Groups

Online Tracking

• The Internet offers the ability to track and monitor consumers while they surf

• Several behaviors can be monitored– What sites are visited?– How long did the visitor stay?– What types of information did they collect at

the site?– Where did they go after they left?

Cookies

• text files inserted on a user’s hard drive by an Internet site

• allow for details of a web visit to be stored and tracked with future visits

• provide a way of observing behavior and customizing web sites and offerings to specific users

• For consumers, cookies represent a trade-off between privacy and customization

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