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Amity Campus

Uttar Pradesh
India 201303

ASSIGNMENTS
PROGRAM: MFC
SEMESTER-II
Subject Name
Study COUNTRY
Roll Number (Reg.No.)
Student Name

: Marketing Research & Report PRE


:BOTSWANA
: MFC001112014-20160213
:PITSO SIYABONGA BOSIGO

INSTRUCTIONS
a) Students are required to submit all three assignment sets.
ASSIGNMENT
Assignment A
Assignment B
Assignment C

DETAILS
Five Subjective Questions
Three Subjective Questions + Case Study
Objective or one line Questions

MARKS
10
10
10

b)
c)
d)
e)

Total weightage given to these assignments is 30%. OR 30 Marks


All assignments are to be completed as typed in word/pdf.
All questions are required to be attempted.
All the three assignments are to be completed by due dates and need to be submitted for
evaluation by Amity University.
f) The students have to attached a scan signature in the form.

Signature :
Date
:

_________________________________
__10/06/15_______________________________

( ) Tick mark in front of the assignments submitted


Assignment
Assignment B
Assignment C
A

Marketing Research & Report Preparation


Assignment-1
1. Explain in details the process of marketing research.

It is paramount to delimit the universe of discourse by defining key concept being marketing research which
loosely refers to the systematic methodology for informing business decisions. Some scholars refers to it as
systematic and objective identification, collection, analysis, dissemination, and use of information for the
purpose of improving decision making related to the identification and solution of problems and opportunities
in marketing. Green and Tull have defined marketing research as follows: Marketing research is the systematic
and objective search for, and analysis of, information relevant to the identification and solution of any problem
in the field of marketing."As marketing research is systematic hence systematic planning is required at all stages
of the marketing research process. All the procedures followed at each step are planned in advance. Scientific
methods are being used to for data collection and analysis.
Stage1. Problem Identification
Perhaps the most important in the market research process is defining the goals of the project. It is therefore
fundamental to understand the root question that needs to be informed by market research. This entails among
others the purpose of study, background information, required information and its needs. It is during this stage
that intense discussion with decision makers, discussion with industry experts, analysis of past data, and
qualitative research are undertaken in order to make informed decision.
Stage2. Approach to the Problem
At the core of the stage of approach to the above identified problem is formulation of objective or theoretical
framework, analytical models, research questions, and hypothesis and identifying the information needed and is
largely guided by discussion, data analysis and qualitative research.
Stage 3. Research Design
Research design is an outline for piloting the marketing research project. It covers among others the actions
necessary for obtaining the required information, and its purpose is to design a study that will test the
hypotheses of interest, determine possible answers to the research questions, and provide the information
needed for decision making. The choice of research instruments will be based on the nature of the data the
researcher is attempting to collect. Therefore there are three classifications to consider being Exploratory
Research, Descriptive Research or Causal Research. In addition the issue of how the data should be obtained
from the respondents (for example, by conducting a survey or an experiment) must be addressed. It is also
necessary to design a questionnaire and a sampling plan to select respondents for the study. Based on that the
researcher will be able to identify the types of data analysis that he or she will conduct either simple summary,
advanced regression analysis, etc., which dictates the structure of questions asked. More formally, framing the
research design involves the following steps:
Secondary data analysis
Qualitative research
Methods of collecting quantitative data (survey, observation, and experimentation)
Definition of the information needed
Measurement and scaling procedures

Questionnaire design Sampling process and sample size


Plan of data analysis

Stage 4: Field Work or Data Collection


This is the meat and potatoes of the project or a field force or staff that operates either in the field, as in the case
of personal interviewing (in-home, mall intercept, or computer-assisted personal interviewing), the time of
administering the survey, running focus groups, conducting the interviews, through mail (traditional mail and
mail panel surveys with pre recruited households) or implementing field test. Proper selection, training,
supervision, and evaluation of the field force help minimize data-collection errors hence is critical to note that
each nugget of information is precious and will be part of the masterful conclusions which will be drawn at
last.
Stage 5: Data Preparation and Analysis
It includes the editing, coding, transcription, and verification of data through usage of software package such as
Excel, SPSS, Minitab, etc.). Each questionnaire or observation form is inspected, or edited, and, if necessary,
corrected. Number or letter codes are assigned to represent each response to each question in the questionnaire.
The data from the questionnaires are transcribed or key-punched on to magnetic tape, or disks or input directly
into the computer. Verification ensures that the data from the original questionnaires have been accurately
transcribed, while data analysis, guided by the plan of data analysis, gives meaning to the data that have been
collected by giving tables, regression, graphs and also segmenting the results by groups that make sense and
ultimately look for the major trends in the data. Univariate techniques are used for analyzing data when there is
a single measurement of each element or unit in the sample, or, if there are several measurements of each
element, each RCH variable is analyzed in isolation. On the other hand, multivariate techniques are used for
analyzing data when there are two or more measurements on each element and the variables are analyzed
simultaneously.

Stage 6: Report Preparation and Presentation


At last, the complete project should be documented in a written report which addresses the specific research
questions identified, describes the approach, the research design, data collection, and data analysis procedures
adopted and present the results and the major findings. The findings should be presented in a comprehensible
format so that they can be readily used in the decision making process. In addition, an oral presentation should
be made to management using tables, figures, and graphs to enhance clarity and impact. For these reasons,
interviews with experts are more useful in conducting marketing research for industrial firms and for products
of a technical nature, where it is relatively easy to identify and approach the experts. This method is also helpful
in situations where little information is available from other sources, as in the case of radically new products
2. Compare and contrast the exploratory, descriptive, and causal research designs.
Global most research can be divided into three different categories; exploratory, descriptive and causal. Each
serves a different end purpose and can only be used in certain ways. In the online survey world, mastery of all
three can lead to sounder insights and greater quality information.

Exploratory research seeks to gather preliminary information that will help define problems and suggest
hypotheses while Descriptive research seeks to describe things, such as the market potential for a product or the
demographics and attitudes of consumers who buy the product while Causal research: The objective of causal
research is to test hypotheses about cause-and-effect relationships. If the objective is to determine which
variable might be causing a certain behavior, i.e. whether there is a cause and effect relationship between
variables, causal research must be undertaken

Exploratory research focuses on the discovery of ideas and insights as opposed to collecting statistically
accurate data hence exploratory research is best suited as the beginning of your total research plan while
Descriptive research takes up the bulk of online surveying and is considered conclusive in nature due to its
quantitative nature and mostly enough Like descriptive research, causal research is quantitative in nature as well
as preplanned and structured in design. For this reason, it is also considered conclusive research.
Moreover it is important to note that Causal research differs in its attempt to explain the cause and effect
relationship between variables. This is opposed to the observational style of descriptive research, because it
attempts to decipher whether a relationship is causal through experimentation. Unlike exploratory research,
descriptive research is preplanned and structured in design so the information collected can be statistically
inferred on a population
Exploratory research is most commonly used for further defining company issues, areas for potential growth,
alternative courses of action, and prioritizing areas that require statistical research while the core idea behind
using the descriptive type of research is to better define an opinion, attitude, or behaviour held by a group of
people on a given subject. Consider your everyday multiple choice questions. Since there are predefined
categories a respondent must choose from, it is considered descriptive research.

3. What are the advantages of using projective techniques in comparison to focus groups and indepth interviews?
They may elicit responses that subjects would be unwilling or unable to give if they knew the purpose of
the study.
2. Helpful when the issues to be addressed are personal, sensitive, or subject to strong social norms.
3. Helpful when underlying motivations, beliefs, and attitudes are operating at a subconscious level.
4. Disadvantages of Projective Techniques
5. Suffer from many of the disadvantages of unstructured direct techniques, but to a greater extent.
6. Require highly trained interviewers.
7. Skilled interpreters are also required to analyze the responses.
8. There is a serious risk of interpretation bias.
9. They tend to be expensive.
10. May require respondents to engage in unusual behavior.
11. Guidelines for Using Projective Techniques
12. Projective techniques should be used because the required information cannot be accurately obtained
by direct methods.

13. Projective techniques should be used for exploratory research to gain initial insights and
understanding.
14. Given their complexity, projective techniques should not be used naively.
4. Write a brief note on survey methods.
Surveys provide a means of measuring a populations characteristics, self-reported and observed behaviour,
awareness of programs, attitudes or opinions, and needs. Normally, a questionnaire is a paper-and-pencil
instrument that is administered to the respondents. The usual questions found in questionnaires are closed-ended
questions, which are followed by response options. However, there are questionnaires that ask open-ended
questions to explore the answers of the respondents. Between the two broad types of surveys, interviews are
more personal and probing. Questionnaires do not provide the freedom to ask follow-up questions to explore the
answers of the respondents, but interviews do. An interview includes two persons - the researcher as the
interviewer, and the respondent as the interviewee. There are several survey methods that utilize interviews.
These are the personal or face-to-face interview, the phone interview and more recently, the online interview.
Self-completion surveys via mail, email, the internet or SMS are generally the least expensive, particularly for a
widespread sample. They allow respondents time to consider their answers, refer to records or consult with
others. In addition Cross-Sectional Surveys means collecting information from the respondents at a single
period in time uses the cross-sectional type of survey. Cross-sectional surveys usually utilize questionnaires to
ask about a particular topic at one point in time. For instance, a researcher conducted a cross-sectional survey
asking teenagers views on cigarette smoking as of May 2015. Longitudinal Surveys is used when the researcher
attempts to gather information over a period of time or from one point in time up to another, he is doing
a longitudinal survey. The aim of longitudinal surveys is to collect data and examine the changes in the data
gathered. Longitudinal surveys are used in cohort studies, panel studies and trend studies. Lastly Computer
Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) is a particular type of telephone survey technique that helps to resolve
some of the limitations of general telephone-based surveying. With CATI, interviewers use a computer terminal.
The questions appear on the computer screen and the interviewers enter responses directly into the computer.
The interviewers screen is programmed to show questions in the planned order. Interviewers cannot
inadvertently omit questions or ask them out of sequence. Online messages warn interviewers if they enter
invalid values or unusual values.

5. When selecting the use of a neutral alternative in dichotomous questions what considerations
should be kept in mind?
If a neutral alternative isn't included, respondents are forced to choose between "no" and "yes" even if they
feel indifferent. Conversely, if a neutral alternative is included, respondents may avoid taking a position on
the issue, thus biasing the results. Following guidelines are offered. If substantial proportion of the
respondents can be expected to be neutral, include a neutral alternative. If proportion of neutral respondents
is anticipated to be small, avoid the neutral alternative.

Assignment-2
1. Explain data editing and coding process in details.

After being validated, the data must be edited for the possibility of mistakes. Therefore Editing is the process
whereby the data are checked for mistakes made by either the interviewer or respondent. This is done by
manually scanning through each completed interview so as to check several areas of concern including;
Proper asking of questions
Proper recording of answers
Proper screening of respondents
Proper recording of open-ended questions
Data coding involves grouping and assigning value to responses to questions contained in the survey
instrument. Coding specifically entails the assignment of numerical values to each individual response for each
question within the survey. Typically, these codes are numerical- a number from 0 to 9- because numbers are
quick and easy to input and computers work better with numbers than alphanumeric values.

2. Discuss the importance of marketing research report in the marketing research process.
With the economy becoming more and more competitive with each passing day, having apt knowledge about
the concerns and preferences of your customers has become integral for any business. Market research is the
best way to increase customer satisfaction, understand the factors that affect your business, and to elevate your
performance. Here are three reasons why market research report cannot be ignored:
Market research report can guarantees the success of your marketing campaigns, and in-turn
sales
Market research report not only helps in identifying new business opportunities, but also helps in
designing marketing campaigns that will directly target the interest of your potential consumers and help
in increasing sales. Marketing research provides valuable information about the potential of a particular
market segment, during a specific time, and within a particular age group.
Market research can help you keep a tab on your competitors
Marketing research is a good evaluation tool that can be of great use in comparative studies. You can
track your company's progress as well as the growth of your competitors, by keeping an eye on your
competitors. You can devise business strategies that would keep you ahead of your business rivals.
3. Market research report can help you minimize loss in your business
With market research, you can reduce the chances of loss to a large extent. Before launching a product,
you can identify potential problems and even determine the solutions. The research carried out after the
launch of a new product can help you find loopholes and devise plans to counter that loss and increase
the profits
3. Briefly discuss mechanical observation. What is it and why is it used?
Mechanical observation, as the term implies, is the use of some type of mechanical or electronic device
(videotape camera, traffic counter, optical scanner, eye tracking monitor, pupilometer, audio voice pitch
analyzer, psychogalvanometer, to name a few) to capture human behavior, events, or marketing phenomena.

Such electronic devices may reduce the cost and improve the flexibility, accuracy, or other functions in the data
collection process.
Describe two devices used for mechanical observation that do not require the respondents direct
participation.
The pupilometer mechanically observes and records changes in the diameter of a subjects pupils. In its
employment, the subject is instructed to view a screen on which the stimulus is projected. As the
distance and brightness of the stimulus to the subjects eyes are held constant, changes in pupil sizes are
recorded and are interpreted to be the results of some type of unobservable cognitive activity. The
assumption that underlies the use of a pupilometer is the belief that increases in pupil size within a
controlled environment reflects a positive attitude or interest in the stimulus.
The eye tracking monitor is a device that observes and records a persons unconscious eye movements.
Invisible infrared light beams record the subjects eye movements while reading or viewing the stimulus
(e.g., a magazine ad, TV commercial, package design) and another video camera records what part of
the given stimulus is being viewed at the movement. The two databases are overlaid and the monitor
system can determine what parts of the stimulus were seen and which components were overlooked. In
advertising, this type of data can provide insights to possible points of interest and impacts to selling
points.
Assignment-3
1. Marketing Research, is everything except_______
a. Systematic
b. Politically biased
c. Objective
d. Used to assist management in decision making
e. None of the above
2. _____ is undertaken to help identify problems that are perhaps not apparent on the surface and yet exist or are
likely to arise in the future.
a. Problem identification research
b. Segmentation research
c. Problem solving research
d. Marketing information systems
e. Advertising research
3. In order to determine customer needs and to implement marketing strategies and programs aimed at
satisfying those needs, marketing managers need information about _____.
a. Customers
b. Competitors
c. Other forces in the marketplace
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
4. Marketing managers need the information provided by marketing research for many reasons.
Which of the following is not a reason to need information provided by marketing research?
a. Firms have become national and international in scope.
b. Consumers have become more affluent and sophisticated.
c. Competition has become more intense.
d. All of the above.

e. (a) and (b) above


5. The Nielsen Television Index is a set of information of known commercial value that is provided to multiple
clients on a subscription basis. The Nielson Index is an example of _____.
a. Syndicated services
b. Customized services
c. Standardized services
d. Analytical services
e. Partial services
6. Customized services are________
a. Companies that specialize in one or a few phases of the marketing research project
b. Companies that use standardized procedures to provide marketing research to various clients
c. Companies that collect and sell common pools of data designed to serve information needs shared by a
number of clients
d. Companies that tailor the research procedures to best meet the needs of each client
e. Both (a) and (b) above
7. Which one of the following techniques is not a qualitative research technique?
a. Depth interview
b. Word association
c. Focus group
d. Conclusive research
e. Projective technique
8. Which of the following tasks is not a component of research design?
a. Design the exploratory, descriptive, and/or causal phases of the research.
b. Construct and pretest a questionnaire (interviewing form) or an appropriate form for data collection.
c. Specify the sampling process and sample size.
d. Develop hypotheses.
e. None of the above
9. As compared to primary data, secondary data are collected_______.
a. Rapidly and easily
b. At a relatively low cost
c. In a short time
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
10. Depth interviews are like focus group in all of the following ways except:
a. Both are unstructured interviews
b. Both are direct ways of obtaining information
c. Both are qualitative research methods
d. Both are one-on-one interviews
e. (b) and (c) above
11. An interviewing process which uses a computerized questionnaire administered to respondents over the
telephone is known as
a. Traditional telephone
b. In-home
c. Computer-assisted telephone interviews (CATI)
d. Internet

e. Mall intercept
12. In marketing research, attitudinal data obtained from rating scales are often treated as _______ data.
a. Nominal
b. Ordinal
c. Interval
d. Ratio
e. Non metric
13. When used for classification purposes, the ________ scaled numbers serve as labels for classes or
categories.
a. Ordinally
b. Intervally
c. Nominally
d. Ratio scale
e. Rank
14. The mathematical symbols X and X S represent a _____ for the population and the sampling
distribution respectively.
a. Standard error of the proportion
b. Standard deviation
c. Standard error of the mean
d. Median
e. Variance
15. Respondents have been asked to express their degree of agreement with a series of lifestyle
statements on a 1-to-5 scale, assuming that 9 has been designated for missing values, data values of 0, 6, 7, and
8 are out of range. Where in the data cleaning process might any out-of range data be caught?
a. Consistency checks
b. Returning to the field
c. Treatment of missing responses
d. Both (a) and (c) are correct
e. Both (b) and (c) are correct
16. Which option for the treatment of missing values involves the researcher using the respondents pattern of
responses to calculate a suitable response to the missing questions?
a. Returning to the field
b. Case-wise deletion
c. Substitute an imputed response
d. Substitute a neutral value
e. Pair wise deletion
17. Which of the research questions / hypotheses given below is best answered using cross tabulations?
a. Is model appeal of an motorbike related to age and education levels?
b. The department store is being patronized by more than 10 percent of households.
c. One hotel has a more upscale image than its close competitor.
d. Both (b) and (c) are correct.
e. None of the above
18. The regression equation for a categorical independent variable with four categories would be modeled as:
i=a+ b1 D1+ b2 D2+ b3 D3, here D1, D2, D3 are the
a. Dependent variables

b. Independent Variables
c. Dummy variables
d. Surrogate variables
e. Trial variables
19. If the discriminant function is estimated and the square of the canonical correlation is 0.81, what does it
indicate?
a. 81% of the variance in the dependent variable is explained by the model.
b. The null hypothesis is rejected. Therefore, there is significant discrimination between groups.
c. 90% of the explained variance is accounted for.
d. (b) and (c) are correct
e. None of the above
20. The linear combinations of independent variables developed by discriminant analysis that will best
discriminate between the categories of the dependent variable are _____.
a. Discriminant functions
b. Discriminant scores
c. Characteristic profiles
d. Classification matrix
e. Group centroids
21. Factor analysis is a (n) _____ in that the entire set of interdependent relationships is examined.
a. KMO measure of sampling adequacy
b. Orthogonal procedure
c. Interdependence technique
d. Varimax procedure
e. Orthogonal rotation
22. The amount of variance a variable shares with all other variables included in the factor analysis is referred to
as _____.
a. Communality
b. Total variance
c. Shared variance
d. Percentage of variance
e. Eigen value
23. An analysis technique which uses methods that are heuristics based on algorithms is known as.
a. Factor analysis
b. Discriminant analysis
c. Clustering
d. Analysis of variance
e. Regression analysis
24. If you are performing cluster analysis on the same data using different distance measures and then
comparing the results across measures to determine stability of the solutions, you are at which stage of the
cluster analysis process?
a. Interpreting and profiling the clusters
b. Assessing reliability and validity
c. Deciding on the number of clusters
d. Deciding on the number of factors
e. Selecting a clustering procedure

25. _____ is a lack of fit measure; higher values indicate poorer fits.
a. Attribute levels
b. Stress
c. R-square
d. KMO
e. Relative importance weights
26. In which approach to collecting perception data are respondents often required to rate all possible pairs of
brands or stimuli in terms of similarity/dissimilarity on a 1-5 scale? (1 Most similar, 5 least similar)
a. Direct
b. Preference
c. Derived
d. Likert
e. In direct
27. Which statement is true about using discriminant analysis to create spatial maps?
a. Input data should be obtained via attribute-based approaches to obtaining perception data.
b. Spatial maps are obtained by plotting brand scores on the factors.
c. Discriminant weights can be used to label the dimensions.
d. Both (a) and (c) are true
e. None of the above.
28. Which of the following statements is not true concerning conjoint analysis?
a. The underlying assumption is that any set of stimuli, such as products, brands, or stores, is evaluated as a
bundle of attributes.
b. Conjoint analysis relies on respondents subjective evaluations.
c. Conjoint analysis seeks to develop the part-worth or utility functions describing the utility consumers attach
to the levels of each attribute.
d. The stimuli in conjoint analysis are products or brands
e. It is used for determining the relative importance of attributes in the consumer choice process
29. For conjoint analysis, when full or complete profiles of brands are constructed for all the attributes, the
process is known as
a. Full-profile approach
b. Pair-wise approach
c. Two-factor evaluations
d. Both (b) and (c)
e. Multifactor evaluation
30. Marketing research has often been described as having four stakeholders. These stakeholders have certain
responsibilities to each other and to the research project. Which of the following is not one of the stakeholders?
a. The marketing researcher
b. The respondent
c. The public
d. The environment
e. The research agency
31. Because of potential difficulties when seeking advice from experts, it is best to use interviews with experts when
conducting marketing research ________.
a. For industrial firms
b. For products of a technical nature
c. In situations where little information is available from other sources
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
32. The management decision problem focuses on ________, while the marketing research problem focuses on
________.

a. Symptoms; solutions
b. Symptoms; underlying causes
c. Solutions; underlying causes
d. Underlying causes; solutions
e. None of the above
33. ________ is a type of non-sampling error arising from respondents who do respond but give inaccurate answers, or
their answers are mis-recorded or mis analyzed. It may be defined as the variation between the true mean value of the
variable in the net sample and the observed mean value obtained in the marketing research project.
a. Random sampling error
b. Non-response error
c. Non-sampling error
d. Response error
e. Inefficiency error
34. Which of the following is a disadvantage of surveys?
a. Interviewer errors; respondent errors
b. Data is lacking in terms of content, quantity, and quality
c. Data may not be representative; quality of data limited
d. Coverage may be incomplete; matching of data on the competitive activity may be difficult
e. None of the above
35. The target population for a department store project was defined as male or female head of household responsible for
most of the shopping at department stores in metro Mumbai in 2006. Male or female head of household responsible for
most of the shopping at department stores is what part of the target population definition?
a. Elements
b. Sampling unit
c. Extent
d. Time
e. Both (b) and (c) above
36. Using the same text in question number 7 Metro Mumbai is what part of the target population definition?
a. Elements
b. Sampling unit
c. Extent
d. Time
e. Both (b) and (c) above
37. Supervisor should keep daily records of the number of calls made, number of not-at-homes, number of refusals, and
number of completed interviews for each interviewer and the total for all interviewers under their control. These daily
records are a part of ________.
a. Quality control and editing
b. Control of cheating
c. Central office control
d. Sampling control
e. Both b and c above
38. The number of units that will have to be sampled is the
a. Incidence rate
b. Initial sample size
c. Completion rate
d. Final sample size
e. Population size
39. Which option for the treatment of missing values involves the researcher using only cases or respondents with
complete responses for each calculation?
a. Returning to the field
b. Case-wise deletion
c. Pair-wise deletion
d. Substitute a neutral value
e. Using an arbitrary value
40. Factor analysis is a multivariate statistical techniques used when, there is
a. Variable interdependence

b. One dependent variable


c. More than one dependent variable
d. Inter object similarity
e. Inter object dissimilarity

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