Marketing Research Methods & Environments
Part A:
1.
Define the
marketing research process:
o Identify the problem.
o Determine the different research objectives.
o Select data sources.
o Select research methods.
o Make a sample.
o Set budgets and deadlines.
o Begin your research.
o Analysis and evaluation.
2.
List 3 secondary data sources for
both internal & external:
o Internal: Sales figures, customer reports, Trend data.
o External: Competitor information, government publications,
Retail audits.
3.
List
3 primary field data sources:
o Experiments.
o Observations
o Surveys.
4.
Choose one of the primary field data sources. (Observation)
a.
Explain
it in more details (3 points)
-
Method of
collecting data/ information done by watching people’s behaviours+ identifying
their responses (no questions are asked.) Useful approach when determining
where people shop, what they buy and what interests them.
b.
Explain
the advantages & disadvantages (3 points each)
-
STRENGTHS: You get information through people’s actions
instead of their words, smaller chance of people being biased, method is done
without the customer being aware (high chance of getting “truthful” responses).
-
WEAKNESS: It’s very expensive and it takes a lot of
time, you aren’t able to find out the reason behind someone’s decision, it is
easy to misunderstand a person’s response.
Part B:
1.
What is a micro-environment and list 5 elements:
-
Group
that’s linked closest to the company and affects the direct decisions
made. 5 elements: customers,
intermediaries, suppliers, competitors, employees.
2.
List and describe the four categories of competitor
environment:
-
Direct
Competitors: Direct rival of a company; makes somewhat identical product
-
Close
Competitors: Companies that make similar products.
-
Substitutes:
Different products that might be purchased instead of the other.
-
Indirect
Competition: All other companies; compete for customer’s money.
3.
Define and provide an example from YOUR experiences
a.
Perfect competition: Type of market
where companies sell the same/similar kind of product; lots of buyers and
sellers (ex. Agricultural market)
b.
Monopolistic competition: Lots of companies
selling different goods that they have monopoly over. (ex. Colgate vs. Crest)
c.
Oligopoly: Market/industry
that’s controlled by a small number of sellers. (ex. The automobile industry)
d.
Monopoly: A single seller selling one
product; faces no competition. (ex.
ICBC)
4.
List and describe Porter’s five forces:
-
“Intensity of
competition in the industry”: Bigger # of competitors in industry=
bigger threat to the company.
-
“Barrier/ lack of
entry to new competitors”: How easy it is for new companies to enter the
industry; easier+ cheaper it is, more the company is weakened.
-
“Threat of
substitute products”: Competitor company substitutions can replace a company’s
products+ services.
-
“Bargaining power
of customers”:
Customers ability to lower prices.
-
“Bargaining power
of suppliers”:
How easy it is for suppliers to increase the prices of goods+ services.
5.
List the 5 main market environment types:
-
Consumer
(B2C) markets.
-
Business
(B2B) markets.
-
Export
markets.
-
Government
markets- government is large buyer.
-
Reseller
markets- buyer is intermediary and sells to someone else.
6.
What is a macro-environment and list 5 elements:
v Macro-Environment: general area surrounding the
organization; affects business activity in the market + influences
organization.
1)
Macro
economic environment.
2)
Political
environment.
3)
Social
and cultural environment.
4)
Demographic
environment.
5)
Technical
environment.
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