knowt logo

Research

Market research

  • the process of finding out about customers, competitors and market conditions

Why market research is important:

  • understand their competition

  • make your company stand out from the competition (USP)

  • narrow down target market

  • know what customers are looking for - in the market’s current position

  • get a better knowledge of product (costs/pricing)

Primary - field research

  • carrying out your own research specifically for your business

    • focus groups

    • test marketing

    • questionnaires

  • advantages:

    • data collected is relevant to specifics

    • reliable research

  • disadvantages:

    • takes longer to collect

    • bias may occur

Sampling bias

bias - a factor that causes research findings to be unrepresentative of the whole demographic (population)

  • sampling involves collecting data from a group of people who will be representative of the target market or population as a whole

  • choosing a sample size is a ‘trade off

    • large sample = more accurate

    • small sample = quicker + cheaper

Primary research methods

  • focus groups - an in-depth discussion with a small group of consumers

    + explores ideas in-depth = find out attitudes + motives behind purchasing decisions

    + encourage creative ideas from participants = deepens understandings of what they want

    - expensive

    - not everyone is AS involved = lack of detail given in answers

    - people may not be honest about their answers = false understanding of what is going right + wrong with a product

  • test marketing - a form of product trial

    + launching a product in a small proportion of the market gives the ability to evaluate the response to it

    + ability to gauge potential demand

    the test market must be similar to the ultimate target market in order for this method to be effective

→ product trial - where customers buy it once to see if they like it

+ successful product trials lead to repeat purchases

→ repeat purchases - customers deciding to buy a product on a regular basis

  • questionnaire/survey - a set of questions designed to discover information relating to a product/service

    + cheap

    + quick

    + can be both/either qualitative + quantitative

    - it’s only as good as what’s in the questionnaire

    - hard to get people to return the questionnaire

    - people may not take it seriously

  • observation - when you study people’s behaviour in relation to your business (purchasing product)

    + can see who is buying your products most (demographic)

    + find out which product is best-selling, look at their USP

    + look at what

Secondary - desk research

  • looking at research that has already been made (carried out for another purpose)

    • market reports

    • government data (demographic + economics)

    • internet

    • trade publications/sites

  • advantages:

    • easy to get + use

    • sample size is likely to be larger than primary research

    • lots of readily available info that can be accessed

  • disadvantages:

    • unsure about reliability or accuracy of research

    • accounts must be accurate to give valid results

    • bias may occur

Quantitative research

  • results are numerical and can be statistically analysed

  • advantages:

    • easy to display data visually through graphs

  • disadvantages:

    • difficult to place appropriate value towards numbers

Qualitative research

  • results are based on opinions and feelings

  • advantages:

    • ability to grasp how customers feel about product

  • disadvantages:

    • difficult to represent statistical analysis

Market segmentation

the process of dividing up the market into different groups and studying their particular needs + wants

  • this enables firms to differentiate their product + their marketing strategies to meet each segments needs

ways a firm can segment a market:

  • age

  • gender

  • income

  • religion/ethnicity

  • lifestyles

  • location

  • interests

  • qualifications

advantages:

  • you can have a product which is very well suited to your target audience

  • you are able to carry out specific research on people who you have selected as your target audience (differentiate from the competition)

  • customer satisfaction leads to loyalty

disadvantages:

  • market segmentation can be a very lengthy + expensive process

  • if carried out incorrectly it is a large waste of money

  • might have to narrow down the market too much

Y

Research

Market research

  • the process of finding out about customers, competitors and market conditions

Why market research is important:

  • understand their competition

  • make your company stand out from the competition (USP)

  • narrow down target market

  • know what customers are looking for - in the market’s current position

  • get a better knowledge of product (costs/pricing)

Primary - field research

  • carrying out your own research specifically for your business

    • focus groups

    • test marketing

    • questionnaires

  • advantages:

    • data collected is relevant to specifics

    • reliable research

  • disadvantages:

    • takes longer to collect

    • bias may occur

Sampling bias

bias - a factor that causes research findings to be unrepresentative of the whole demographic (population)

  • sampling involves collecting data from a group of people who will be representative of the target market or population as a whole

  • choosing a sample size is a ‘trade off

    • large sample = more accurate

    • small sample = quicker + cheaper

Primary research methods

  • focus groups - an in-depth discussion with a small group of consumers

    + explores ideas in-depth = find out attitudes + motives behind purchasing decisions

    + encourage creative ideas from participants = deepens understandings of what they want

    - expensive

    - not everyone is AS involved = lack of detail given in answers

    - people may not be honest about their answers = false understanding of what is going right + wrong with a product

  • test marketing - a form of product trial

    + launching a product in a small proportion of the market gives the ability to evaluate the response to it

    + ability to gauge potential demand

    the test market must be similar to the ultimate target market in order for this method to be effective

→ product trial - where customers buy it once to see if they like it

+ successful product trials lead to repeat purchases

→ repeat purchases - customers deciding to buy a product on a regular basis

  • questionnaire/survey - a set of questions designed to discover information relating to a product/service

    + cheap

    + quick

    + can be both/either qualitative + quantitative

    - it’s only as good as what’s in the questionnaire

    - hard to get people to return the questionnaire

    - people may not take it seriously

  • observation - when you study people’s behaviour in relation to your business (purchasing product)

    + can see who is buying your products most (demographic)

    + find out which product is best-selling, look at their USP

    + look at what

Secondary - desk research

  • looking at research that has already been made (carried out for another purpose)

    • market reports

    • government data (demographic + economics)

    • internet

    • trade publications/sites

  • advantages:

    • easy to get + use

    • sample size is likely to be larger than primary research

    • lots of readily available info that can be accessed

  • disadvantages:

    • unsure about reliability or accuracy of research

    • accounts must be accurate to give valid results

    • bias may occur

Quantitative research

  • results are numerical and can be statistically analysed

  • advantages:

    • easy to display data visually through graphs

  • disadvantages:

    • difficult to place appropriate value towards numbers

Qualitative research

  • results are based on opinions and feelings

  • advantages:

    • ability to grasp how customers feel about product

  • disadvantages:

    • difficult to represent statistical analysis

Market segmentation

the process of dividing up the market into different groups and studying their particular needs + wants

  • this enables firms to differentiate their product + their marketing strategies to meet each segments needs

ways a firm can segment a market:

  • age

  • gender

  • income

  • religion/ethnicity

  • lifestyles

  • location

  • interests

  • qualifications

advantages:

  • you can have a product which is very well suited to your target audience

  • you are able to carry out specific research on people who you have selected as your target audience (differentiate from the competition)

  • customer satisfaction leads to loyalty

disadvantages:

  • market segmentation can be a very lengthy + expensive process

  • if carried out incorrectly it is a large waste of money

  • might have to narrow down the market too much