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Assessing Marketing Information Needs

The document discusses assessing marketing information needs. It covers developing needed information through internal data, marketing intelligence, and marketing research. Marketing research involves defining problems/objectives, developing a research plan, implementing the plan through data collection/analysis, and reporting findings. Research approaches include surveys, experiments, and observations. Sampling plans and instruments like questionnaires are also discussed. The document also covers analyzing information through customer relationship management systems.

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drbrijmohan
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
2K views

Assessing Marketing Information Needs

The document discusses assessing marketing information needs. It covers developing needed information through internal data, marketing intelligence, and marketing research. Marketing research involves defining problems/objectives, developing a research plan, implementing the plan through data collection/analysis, and reporting findings. Research approaches include surveys, experiments, and observations. Sampling plans and instruments like questionnaires are also discussed. The document also covers analyzing information through customer relationship management systems.

Uploaded by

drbrijmohan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 34

Assessing Marketing

Information Needs
• A marketing information system (MIS) consists of
people, equipment, and procedures to gather,
sort, analyze, evaluate, and distribute needed,
timely, and accurate information to marketing
decision makers.
• Assess the information needs
• Develop needed information
• Analyze information
• Distribute information

4-1
Assessing Marketing
Information Needs

The marketing information system


4-2
Assessing Marketing
Information Needs
• MIS provides information to the company’s
marketing and other managers and external
partners such as suppliers, resellers, and marketing
service agencies

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Assessing Marketing
Information Needs
• A good MIS balances the information users would
like to have against what they need and what is
feasible to offer.
• Issues to consider:
• Amount of information
• Availability of information
• Costs

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Developing Marketing Information
Marketers can obtain information from:
• Internal data
• Marketing intelligence
• Marketing research

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Developing Marketing Information

Internal Data
• Internal databases are electronic collections of consumer
and market information obtained from data sources within
the company network, including accounting, marketing,
customer service, and sales departments.

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Developing Marketing Information
Advantages and Disadvantage of Internal
Databases
Advantages: Disadvantages:
• Can be accessed more • Incomplete information
quickly • Wrong form for decision
• Less expensive making
• Timeliness of information
• Amount of information

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Developing Marketing Information

Marketing Intelligence
• Marketing intelligence is the systematic collection
and analysis of publicly available information about
competitors and developments in the marketplace.
• The goal of marketing intelligence is to:
• Improve strategic decision making,
• Assess and track competitors’ actions, and
• Provide early warning of opportunities and threats.

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Marketing Research
Marketing research is the
systematic design, collection,
analysis, and reporting of
data relevant to a specific
marketing situation facing an
organization.

4-9
Marketing Research

Steps in the marketing research process

1. Defining the problem and research objectives


2. Developing the research plan
3. Implementing the plan
4. Interpreting and reporting the findings

4-10
Marketing Research

Defining the Problem and Research Objectives

Types of objectives:
• Exploratory research
• Descriptive research
• Causal research

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Marketing Research

Defining the Problem and Research Objectives


• Exploratory research is the gathering of preliminary
information that will help to define the problem and
suggest hypotheses.
• Descriptive research is to describe things such as
market potential for a product or the demographics
and attitudes of consumers who buy the product.
• Causal research is to test hypotheses about cause-and-
effect relationships.

4-12
Marketing Research

Developing the Research Plan

The research plan


• Outlines sources of existing data
• Spells out the specific research approaches,
contact methods, sampling plans, and instruments
that researchers will use to gather data

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Marketing Research

Developing the Research Plan

The research plan is a written proposal that includes:


• Management problem
• Research objectives
• Information needed
• How the results will help management decisions
• Budget

4-14
Marketing Research

Developing the Research Plan

• Secondary data consists of information that


already exists somewhere, having been collected
for another purpose
• Primary data consists of information gathered for
the special research plan

4-15
Marketing Research
Gathering Secondary Data
+ Advantages: – Disadvantages:
• Speed • Availability
• Cost • Relevance
• Provides data that a • Accuracy
company cannot • Impartial
collect on its own

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Marketing Research

Primary Data Collection

• Research approaches
• Contact methods
• Sampling plan
• Research instruments

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Marketing Research

Research Approaches

• Observational research involves gathering primary


data by observing relevant people, actions, and
situations.

4-18
Marketing Research

Research Approaches

• Survey research is the most widely used method and is


best for descriptive information—knowledge,
attitudes, preferences, and buying behavior.
• Flexible
• People can be unable or unwilling to answer
• Gives misleading or pleasing answers
• Privacy concerns

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Marketing Research
Research Approaches

• Experimental research is best for gathering


causal information
• Tries to explain cause-and-effect relationships.

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Marketing Research
Contact Methods
Mail questionnaires
• Collect large amounts of information
• Low cost
• Less bias with no interviewer present
• Lack of flexibility
• Low response rate
• Lack of control of sample

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Marketing Research
Contact Methods

Telephone interviewing
• Collects information quickly
• More flexible than mail questionnaires
• Interviewers can explain difficult questions
• Higher response rates than mail questionnaires
• Interviewers communicate directly with respondents
• Higher cost than mail questionnaires
• Potential interviewer bias

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Marketing Research

Contact Methods

Mail, telephone, and personal interviewing


• Personal interviewing
• Individual interviewing
• Group interviewing

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Marketing Research

Sampling Plan
• A sample is a segment of the population selected for
marketing research to represent the population as a
whole.
• Who is to be surveyed?
• How many people should be surveyed?
• How should the people be chosen?

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Marketing Research
Sampling Plan
• Probability samples: Each population member has a
known chance of being included in the sample.
• Non-probability samples: Used when probability
sampling costs too much or takes too much time.

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Marketing Research
Research Instruments
• Questionnaires

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Marketing Research
Research Instruments
• Questionnaires
• Most common
• Administered in person, by phone, or online
• Flexible
• Open-end questions
• Closed-end questions

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Marketing Research
Research Instruments
• Closed-end questions include all the possible answers,
and subjects are to make choices among them.
• Provides answers that are easier to interpret and tabulate
• Open-end questions allows respondents to answer in
their own words.
• Useful in exploratory research

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Marketing Research
Implementing the Research Plan
• Collecting data
• Processing the information
• Analyzing the information

Issues to consider:
• What if respondents refuse to cooperate?
• What if respondents give biased answers?
• What if interviewer makes mistakes or takes shortcuts?

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Analyzing Marketing Information
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
• Consists of sophisticated software and analytical
tools
• Integrates customer information from all sources
• Analyzes it in depth
• Applies the results to build stronger customer
relationships

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Analyzing Marketing Information
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
• Data warehouses are comprehensive companywide
electronic databases of finely-tuned, detailed customer
information.
• Uses:
• To understand customers better
• To provided higher levels of customer service
• To develop deeper customer relationships
• To identify high-value customers

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Analyzing Marketing Information
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
• Touch points: Every contact between the customer and
company
• Customer purchases
• Sales force contacts
• Service and support calls
• Web site visits
• Satisfaction surveys
• Credit and payment interactions
• Research studies

4-33
Distributing and Using Marketing
Information
• Information distribution involves entering information
into databases and making it available in a time-
useable manner.
• Intranet provides information to employees and other
stakeholders.
• Extranet provides information to key customers and
suppliers

4-34

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