market research - the process of gathering analysing
and processing data relevant to marketing decisions
market segment - a group similar needs within the overall market
segmentation - occurs when a market is divided
into different groups of needs and wants
primary market research - (aka field research) involves gathering
information for the first time e.g. using questionnaires to conduct
a survey of potential customers
secondary market research - (aka desk research) involves using data
that already exists e.g. information in a newspaper or published on a
website
the purpose of market research
a business needs to gather information about
the competitors, customers and their products
to understand how to make and market
products for a profit
when it has been completed a
business can make more
informed decisions
process of gathering, analysing and
processing data relevant to marketing
decision
Market researches gather information on:
demand - size and growth of the market and different segments in it
market share - sales of each producer as a percentage of total sales in the market
competition - number as the size and number of competitors
target market - as business is likely to focus on part of the
market with similar needs and wants known as market
segment e.g. children between ages 10-13 for lego
types of data used in market research
quantitative
involves the use of numbers e.g. the size
of the market, the growth of the market
or number of customers a business has
qualitative
involves opinions and views but not
statically reliable information e.g. why
people like a certain washing up liquid
Use of market research
to identify opportunities e.g. demand for electric cars
to weigh up different possible actions
e.g. advertise on the internet or not
to assess effectiveness of actions that have been
taken e.g. after advertising on the internet did sales
go up
methods of market research
collecting market research.
primary information // field research
Annotations:
can be tailored to meet businesses needs and is up to date but it can be more expensive to gather and results can be misleading
Advantages:
telephone surveys - can call when convenient to business
door-to-door - can see reactions and people may be more likely to tell the truth
focus groups - in-depth responses
internet research - quick, cheap
disadvantages:
telephone survey - cannot see reactions e.g. body language. people may not answer phones/be reluctant to give answers
door-to-door - time consuming
focus group- small groups may not reflect all target customers
internet research - may not find views of target customers
questionaries and surveys
Annotations:
where people are interviewed that may the product and asked a range of questions now done increasingly through online questionnaires
types of surveys:
telephone - calling customer to obtain views, its relatively cheap but difficult to get people to answer
questionnaires - often completed online and they need to be asked carefully to avoid bias of incorrect responses
customer/supplier feedback - asking what people think and asking suppliers on issues like speed of response and how it compares to other busineses
observations
Annotations:
e.g. watching shoppers buying habits in a supermarket
consumer trials
Annotations:
experimenting such as offering customers a trail of a new product and gathering feedback
hall tests
focus groups
Annotations:
small groups of people selected to give their views on a particular business e.g. brand image or product compared to competitors
secondary information // desk research
Annotations:
Advantages:
can be gathered quickly and cheaply as data is already gathered e.g. by specialist market research companies like Mintel
also provide information on large parts of the population which would be unrealistic for a business to gather e.g. economic growth of country
disadvantages:
include existing data that may not be what the business wants e.g. spending habits for the whole country rather than in one place
the existing data may be out of date e.g. last government census of population was 2011
articles
books
newspapers
internet
CD/DVD
Market size
can be measured by the value of the volume of sales using the equation
volume of sales = number of units sold x price per unit
2,000 units are sold at £5 means volume of sales = 2,000 x £5 = £10,000
Market growth
market growth = change in market size/original market size X 100
original market size £10,000 and the current market zee
is £12,000. change in market = £2,000 market growth =
£2,000/£10,000 X 100 = 20%
Market share
market share = sales of the product/total market sales X 100
if product sales are £5,000 and total market sales are
£100,000. market share = £10,000/£100,000 X 100 = 10%
from market share to market size
if market research shows the market share
of a product and its sales, it is possible to
calculate the total market size
for example , if a product has 10% of
market and sales are £10,000