ICM course progression routes
Course toolbox
Related courses
Advertising
International Marketing
International Marketing Strategy
Marketing Policy & Strategy
Products and Characteristics
Buyer Behaviour & Consumerism

Visit the ICM Amazon Book Store

Marketing Research

Study Marketing Research with ICMMain topics of study:

Introducing Marketing Research

  • Who Needs Marketing Research?
  • Who Should Read This Book?
  • What Does the Book Cover? 

Getting Started

  • What Does the Organisation Need Research For?
  • Corporate Planning
  • Market Planning
  • Product Planning
  • Promotional Planning
  • Distribution Planning
  • Price Planning
  • What Types of Research Data are there?
  • Continuous Research
  • Ad hoc Research
  • Desk Research
  • Field Research
  • How Can the Organisation Obtain the Research it Needs?
  • Getting Started
  • Resources 

Marketing Research Begins at Home

  • What Can be Done at Home?
  • Data Produced in the Normal Course of Running the Organisation
  • Data Acquired Through Personal Contacts
  • Accumulated Research Information
  • Decision Support Systems
  • What Goes into an Internal Information System?
  • Operating Data
  • Market Intelligence
  • Information Library
  • Customer Relationship Management Systems
  • Data Warehouses & Data Mining

‘Off-the-Peg’ Research

  • Secondary Desk Research
  • Introduction
  • Sources
  • Finding the Pegs
  • Using Secondary Data
  • Syndicated Research Services
  • Index to Syndicated Research Surveys
  • Guide to Syndicated Research Services
  • Omnibus Research Surveys
  • Omnibus Research Services & Suppliers
  • General Population Omnibus Surveys
  • Specialist Omnibus Surveys
  • Specialist Research Services
  • Types of research Offered via the Market Research Society
  • Consumer Classification Systems

‘Made-to-Measure’ Research

  • Buying a ‘Made-to-Measure’ Research Survey is Just Like Buying a ‘Made-to Measure’ Suit
  • The ‘Made-to-Measure’ Research Process
  • Defining the Research Required
  • ‘What is the Problem?’
  • ‘What Data is Needed to Find a Solution?’

How is the Data Collected?

  • Interview Methods
  • Interviewing Individuals
  • Attitude Measurement
  • Projective Techniques
  • Interviewing Groups
  • Postal or Self-Completion Research
  • Internet & E-Mail Research
  • Diary Panels
  • Telephone Research
  • Observation Research
  • Observation Panels
  • Retail Audits

Who Provides the Information?

  • What is a Sample?
  • Why Use a Sample?
  • How is the Sample Selected?
  • Random Sampling
  • Quota Sampling
  • Judgement Sampling
  • How Big Does the Sample Need to Be?
  • Variability in the Population
  • Required Level of Confidence
  • Required Limits of Accuracy
  • Allowance for Non-Response
  • Subgroup Analysis Requirements
  • Practical Factors

How Do You Ask the Questions?:

  • Why Use a Questionnaire
  • To Collect Relevant Data
  • To Make Data Comparable
  • To Minimise Bias
  • To Motivate the Respondent
  • Getting the Questionnaire Content Right
  • What Types of Data can be Collected Using a Questionnaire?
  • Fact
  • Opinion
  • Motive
  • What Does a Questionnaire Contain?
  • Identification Data
  • Classification Data
  • Subject Data
  • What Types of Question Can Be Used?
  • Dichotomous Questions
  • Multiple-Choice Questions
  • Open-Ended Questions
  • Rating Scales
  • How Should Questions be Worded?
  • Meaning
  • Ambiguity
  • Leading
  • Generalisation
  • Unidimensionality
  • Cushion Statements
  • Will the Respondent Answer the Questions?
  • Allowing for Method of Analysis
  • Why Does Presentation Matter?
  • Will the Questionnaire Work?
  • Special Types of Questionnaire
  • Postal or Self-Completion Questionnaires
  • Telephone Questionnaires
  • Online Questionnaires
  • Vetting Questionnaires

Who Asks the Questions?

  • Interviewers: ‘Horses for Courses’
  • Fully Structured Interviews
  • Using Rating Scales
  • Semi-Structured Interviews
  • Unstructured Interviews
  • What do Interviewers Do?
  • Selecting Respondents
  • Obtaining Interviews
  • Asking Questions
  • Probing & Prompting
  • Motivating Respondents
  • Interpreting & Recording Responses
  • Interviewer Bias
  • Who Are the Interviewers?
  • Gender
  • Age
  • Social Background
  • Education
  • Job Background
  • Personality
  • Training
  • How are Interviewers Controlled?
  • The Interviewer Quality Control Scheme
  • Field Supervision
  • Postal Checking
  • Telephone Checks
  • Personal Recall Checks
  • Editing Checks
  • Computer Checks
  • Monitoring Fieldwork
  • Choosing a Good Fieldwork Agency
  • Finding the Agency
  • Asking Pertinent Questions
  • Looking at the Evidence
  • Membership of the Interviewer Quality Control Scheme
  • Relevant Experience
  • Cost
  • Using an Agency for Fieldwork
  • Briefing the Agency
  • Agreeing the Procedures
  • Briefing the Interviewers
  • Asking the Questions Yourself

What Happens to the Answers?

  • Analysis & Interpretation of Qualitative Data
  • Analysis of Quantitative Data
  • Data Preparation
  • Data Processing
  • Statistical Analysis
  • Interpretation of Quantitative Data
  • Reporting
  • The Research Report

How Do You Buy Good Research?

  • Getting the Research Requirement Right
  • Is Research Really Necessary?
  • What Type of Research is Needed?
  • What Will the Research be Used For?
  • When is the Research Needed By?
  • How Much is the Research Information Worth?
  • Preparing the Brief
  • Choosing the Right Agency
  • Drawing up the Shortlist
  • Briefing the Agencies
  • The Research Proposal
  • Selecting the Research Agency
  • Checking that the Agency Does a Good Job
  • Monitoring While in Progress
  • Evaluating the Final Results
  • Learning from Experience
  • Were the Objectives Right?
  • Was the Research Programme Right?
  • Was Too Much or Too Little Information Produced?
  • Did It Help to Provide a Solution?
  • Using Feedback
  • What Action Resulted from the Research?
  • Buying Syndicated Services
  • Defining the Requirement
  • Does the Service Meet the Requirement?
  • Does the Service Provide Adequate Flexibility?
  • Is the Money Worth Spending?
  • Evaluating Other Research Reports
  • A Scheme for Judging Research Quality

Using Research in Experiments

  • Types of Research Experiment
  • Experimental Launching
  • Pilot Launching
  • Specific Market Test
  • Exploratory Market Test
  • Types of Experimental Design
  • Informal Experimental Designs
  • Formal Experimental Designs
  • Setting Up Research Experiments
  • Selecting the Experimental Design
  • The Scale of the Experiment
  • Choosing the Test Area
  • Timing
  • Test Conditions
  • Test Variables
  • Cost
  • Syndicated Test Procedures

Using Research in Business-to-Business & Industrial Markets

  • Marketing Research Begins at Home
  • ‘Off-the-Peg’ Research
  • ‘Made-to-Measure’ Research
  • How is the Data Collected?
  • Who Provides the Information?
  • How Are the Questions Asked?
  • Who Asks the Questions?
  • What Happens to the Answers?
  • How Do You Buy Good Research?
  • Using Research in Industrial Markets

Using Research in Online Markets

  • Marketing Research Begins at Home
  • ‘Off-the-Peg’ Research
  • ‘Made-to-Measure’ Research
  • How are the Data Collected?
  • Who Provides the Information?
  • How are the Questions Asked?
  • Who Asks the Questions?
  • What Happens to the Answers?
  • How Do You Buy Good Research?
  • Using Research in Online Markets

Using Research in International Markets

  • Who Monitors the Quality of International Research?
  • Who Are the Users?
  • Who Undertakes the Research?
  • International Market Research Begins at Home
  • ‘Off-the-Peg’ Research
  • Secondary Desk Research
  • Sources
  • Government Published Data
  • ‘Made-to-Measure’ Research
  • Sampling
  • Data Collection Methods
  • How Do You Ask the Questions?
  • How Do You Buy Good Research?
  • Preparing the Brief
  • Selecting the Agency
  • Government Assistance for Overseas Research
  • Commissioning the Research
  • Implementing the Research

Using Research in Marketing Decision Making

  • Using Research for Market Analysis
  • Using Research to Develop New Products & Services
  • Using Research to Select Brand Names & Pack Designs
  • Using Research for Pricing Decisions
  • Using Research for Decisions About Advertising

 

Reading List

Main Text:

Marketing Research for Managers - S. Crouch & M. Housden (Butterworth Heinemann)

Back to top ^
© 2012 The Institute of Commercial Management (ICM), ICM House, Castleman Way, Ringwood, Hampshire, BH24 3BA, England