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Chapter 1 Research in Business McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 1 Research in Business McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 1 Research in Business McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

2 1-2 Understand... What business research is and how it differs from business decision support systems and business intelligence systems. Trends affecting business research and the emerging hierarchy of business decision makers. The distinction between good business research and research that falls short of professional quality. The nature of the research process. Learning Objectives

3 1-3 Data Collectors Face Responsibilities “This is a fantastic time to be entering the business world, because business is going to change more in the next 10 years than it has in the last 50.” Bill Gates, entrepreneur and founder Microsoft

4 1-4 PulsePoint: Research Revelations 34 The percent of employees who never consider that their bosses, clients, or colleagues think before posting to a blog, discussion forum, or social network.

5 1-5 Why Study Business Research? Business research provides information to guide business decisions

6 1-6 Research Should Help Respond to Change “ Enterprises have long recognized the need to better sense and respond to business change. What’s different today is that ubiquitous access to information and real-time communications have fostered an ‘always on’ business culture where decision making has become a ‘just-in-time process.’” Business Performance Management Forum

7 1-7 A process of determining, acquiring, analyzing, synthesizing, and disseminating relevant business data, information, and insights to decision makers in ways that mobilize the organization to take appropriate business actions that, in turn, maximize business performance Business Research

8 1-8 Research Should Reduce Risk The primary purpose of research is to reduce the level of risk of a marketing decision

9 1-9 Critical Scrutiny of Business Computing Power & Speed Computing Power & Speed Battle for Analytical Talent Factors Information Overload Shifting Global Economics Government Intervention Technological Connectivity New Research Perspectives What’s Changing in Business that Influences Research

10 1-10 Computing Power and Speed Real-time Access Real-time Access Lower-cost Data Collection Powerful Computation Better Visualization Tools Integration of Data Factors

11 1-11 Business Planning Drives Business Research Organizational Mission Business Goals Business Strategies Business Tactics

12 1-12 Business Decisions and Research Häagen-Dazs Tactics –Super premium –Dozens of flavors –Small packages –Signature colors on packaging –Available in franchise and grocery stores

13 1-13 Information Sources Decision Support Systems Numerous elements of data organized for retrieval and use in business decision making Stored and retrieved via –Intranets –Extranets Business Intelligence Systems Ongoing information collection Focused on events, trends in micro and macro-environments

14 1-14 Sources of Business Intelligence Business Intelligence Government/ Regulatory Economic Competitive Demographic Technological Cultural/ Social

15 1-15 Hierarchy of Business Decision Makers Visionaries Intuitive Decision Makers Standardized Decision Makers Visionaries

16 1-16 Minute Main and Business Research

17 1-17 P&G has a world-class research department

18 1-18 Research May Not Be Necessary Can It Pass These Tests? Can information be applied to a critical decision? Will the information improve managerial decision making? Are sufficient resources available?

19 1-19 Information Value Chain Characteristics Data collection/ transmission Data interpretation Models Decision support systems Data management

20 1-20 The Research Process

21 1-21 Characteristics of Good Research Clearly defined purpose Detailed research process Thoroughly planned design High ethical standards Limitations addressed Adequate analysis Unambiguous presentation Conclusions justified Credentials

22 1-22 Categories of Research AppliedBasic (Pure)

23 1-23 Types of Studies Reporting ExplanatoryPredictive Descriptive

24 1-24 Key Terms Management dilemma Predictive studies Pure research Reporting studies Return on Investment (ROI) Scientific method Strategy Tactics Applied research Business intelligence system (BIS) Business research Control Decision support system Descriptive studies Explanatory Studies

25 Appendix 1a How the Research Industry Works

26 1-26 Who Conducts Business Research?

27 1-27 Some Organizations Use Internal Research Sources

28 1-28 Some Organizations Use External Research Sources

29 1-29 Business Research Firms

30 1-30 Proprietary Research Decision Analyst, Inc. uses Internet- based concept testing called Conceptor to examine new product concepts

31 1-31 Syndicated Services Nielsen Media Research provides audience data for television programs like Court TV

32 1-32 Some Syndicated Data Providers AC Nielsen Scarborough Millward Brown Nielsen Media Research Roper ASW CSA TMO Yahoo! ORC International DoubleClick Nielsen/NetRatings Taylor Nelson Sofres Intersearch J.D. Power Associates MediaMark Simmon (SMRB) BRMB Information Resources Inc.

33 1-33 Specialty Business Research Firms Methodology Process Industry Participant group Geographic Region

34 1-34 Communication Agencies Direct Business Public Relations Advertising Sales Promotion

35 1-35 Consultants and Trade Associations

36 1-36 Trade Associations NHRA CASRO MRA ESOMAR BRA AMA WAOBRP MPA NAB

37 1-37 Many Firms Conduct Research

38 1-38 Key Terms Custom Researcher Full-service researcher Specialty researcher Syndicated data provider Omnibus researcher Omnibus study

39 Chapter 1 Addendum Research Timeline 1-39

40 1-40 Information Revolution 1960 U.S. DOD commissions forerunner of Internet 1964 OCR shows promise 1968 Word processing first demonstrated 1971 First CATI survey conducted 1972 Optical laser disk revealed 1973 UPC bar-code scanning introduced 1975 Microsoft is born 1979 First VisiCalc ships 1964 IBM introduces model 360 1968 SPSS created 1971 Intel introduces first microprocessor 1973 Basic ideas of Internet created 1976 Apple I released 1980 Apple owns 50% of pc market 1980

41 1-41 Information Revolution 1980 1981 IBMPC released 1987 First Internet survey 1990s OCR used for data entry 1993 WWW experiences 3,400X growth in service traffic 1994 Greenfield Online Introduces online focus group 2001 Online survey software widely available 2002 Web-conferencing Software introduced 1987 IRI conducts first scanner tracking study 1991 WWW developed 1996 Internet World Exposition held 2002 High-speed chip technology for servers 2009 76.3% in US have Internet access 2003 Wal-Mart commits To use RFID 2010


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