Module- 1
1. Introduction of Business Research
2. Steps of Business Research
3. Research Design
4. Exploratory Research
5. Descriptive Research
6. Causal Research
Business Research
Business research is the 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 business.
Steps of Business Research Process
Step 1
: Problem Definition
Step 2
: Development of an Approach to the Problem
Step 3
: Research Design Formulation
Step 4
: Fieldwork or Data Collection
Step 5
: Data Preparation and Analysis
Step 6
: Report Preparation and Presentation
Step 1: Problem Definition
The purpose of the study
The relevant background information
How it will be used in decision making
Problem definition involves discussion with
The decision makers
Interviews with industry experts
Analysis of secondary data, and
Some qualitative research, such as focus groups
Step 2: Development of an approach to the problem
Formulating an objective or theoretical framework
Analytical models
Research questions and
Identifying the information needed
This process is guided by discussions with
Management and industry experts
Analysis of secondary data and
Qualitative research
Step 3 : Research Design Formulation
Definition of the information needed
Secondary data analysis
Qualitative research
Methods of collecting quantitative data(survey, observation, and
experimentation)
Measurement and scaling procedures
Questionnaire design
Sampling process and sample size
Plan of data analysis
Step 4: Fieldwork or Data Collection
Personal interviewing (in-home, mall intercept, or computerassisted personal interviewing)
Telephone (telephone or computer- assisted personal interviewing)
Mail (traditional mail)
Electronically (e-mail or Internet)
Step 5: Data Preparation and Analysis
The editing
Coding
Transcription and
Verification of data.
Step 6 : Report Preparation and Presentation
Address the specific research questions identified
Describes the approach
The research design,
Data collection
Data analysis procedures adopted
Presents the results and
Major findings
Research Design
A research design is a framework or blueprint for
conducting the business research project. It details
the
procedures
necessary
for
obtaining
the
information needed to structure or solve business
research problems.
A Classification of Business Research Designs
Research Design
Exploratory
Research Design
Conclusive
Research Design
Descriptive
Research
Cross-Sectional
Design
Single CrossSectional Design
Causal
Longitudinal
Design
Multiple CrossSectional Design
Research
Exploratory Research Design
Uses of Exploratory Research
Formulate a problem or define a problem more precisely
Identify alternative courses of action
Develop hypotheses
Isolate key variables and relationships for further examination
Gain insights for developing an approach to the problem
Establish priorities for further research
Methods of Exploratory Research
Secondary data analyzed in a qualitative way
Qualitative research
Secondary data
Secondary data are data that have already been
collected for purposes other than the problem
at hand. These data can be located quickly and
inexpensively.
Uses of Secondary Data
Identify the problem
Better define the problem
Develop an approach to the problem
Formulate an appropriate research design (for example, by
identifying the key variables)
Answer certain research questions and test some hypotheses
Interpret primary data more insightfully
A Classification of Secondary Data
Secondary Data
Internal
Ready to
Use
Requires
Further
Processing
External
Published
Materials
Computerized
Databases
Syndicated
Services
Internal Secondary Data
Department Store Project Sales were analyzed to obtain:
Sales by product line
Sales by major department (e.g., men's wear, house wares)
Sales by specific stores
Sales by geographical region
Sales by cash versus credit purchases
Sales in specific time periods
Sales by size of purchase
Sales trends in many of these classifications were also examined
A Classification of Published Secondary Sources
Published
Secondary Data
Government
Sources
General Business
Sources
Guides
Directories
Indexes
Statistical
Data
Census
Data
Other
Government
Publications
A Classification of Computerized Databases
Computerized
Databases
Online
Bibliographic
Databases
Numeric
Databases
Internet
Full-Text
Databases
Off-Line
Directory
Databases
SpecialPurpose
Databases
Syndicated Services
Syndicated services are companies that collect and sell common pools of
data of known commercial value designed to serve a number of clients
Syndicated sources can be classified based on the unit of measurement
(households/consumers or institutions)
Household/consumer data may be obtained from surveys, diary panels,
or electronic scanner services
Institutional data may be obtained from retailers, wholesalers, or
industrial firms
A Classification of Syndicated Services
Unit of
Measurement
Households/
Consumers
Institutions
Syndicated Services: Consumers
Households /
Consumers
Panels
Purchase
Electronic
scanner services
Media
Surveys
Volume
Tracking Data
Psychographic
& Lifestyles
Advertising
Evaluation
Scanner
Panels
Scanner
Panels with
Cable TV
Syndicated Services: Institutions
Institutions
Retailers
Wholesalers
Industrial firms
Audits
Direct
Inquiries
Clipping
Services
Corporate
Reports
A Classification of Business Research Data
Business Research Data
Secondary Data
Primary Data
Qualitative Data
Descriptive
Survey
Data
Observational
and Other Data
Quantitative Data
Causal
Experimental
Data
A Classification of Qualitative Research Procedures
Direct (Non- disguised): Focus Groups
Group Size
8-12
Group Composition
Homogeneous, respondents,
prescreened
Physical Setting
Relaxed, informal atmosphere
Time Duration
1-3 hours
Recording
Use of audiocassettes and
videotapes
Moderator
Observational, interpersonal, and
communication skills of the
moderator
Depth Interview Techniques: Laddering
In laddering, the line of questioning proceeds from product
characteristics to user characteristics. This technique allows the
researcher to tap into the consumer's network of meanings.
Projective Techniques
An unstructured, indirect form of questioning that encourages
respondents to project their underlying motivations, beliefs, attitudes or
feelings regarding the issues of concern.
In projective techniques, respondents are asked to interpret the
behavior of others.
In interpreting the behavior of others, respondents indirectly project
their own motivations, beliefs, attitudes, or feelings into the situation.
Word Association
In word association, respondents are presented with a list of words, one at
a time, and asked to respond to each with the first word that comes to
mind.
The words of interest, called test words, are interspersed
throughout the list which also contains some neutral, or filler words to
disguise the purpose of the study.
Example:
Mrs. X
Mrs.Y
Bubbles
Bath
Soap &Water
Towels
Dirty
Wash
Completion Techniques
In sentence completion, respondents are given incomplete sentences and
asked to complete them. Generally, they are asked to use the first word
or phrase that comes to mind.
A person who shops at Shopping mall is ______________________
When I think of shopping in a department store, I ________
A Cartoon Test
Should we go to
the shopping
mall?
Expressive Techniques
Role playing
Third-person technique
Descriptive Research Design
Use of Descriptive Research
To describe the characteristics of relevant groups, such as consumers,
salespeople, organizations, or market areas
To estimate the percentage of units in a specified population exhibiting
a certain behavior
To determine the perceptions of product characteristics
To determine the degree to which marketing variables are associated
To make specific predictions
Types of Descriptive research Design
Cross-Sectional Research Designs
Longitudinal Research Designs
Cross-Sectional Research Designs
Single cross-sectional designs
Multiple cross-sectional designs
Cohort analysis
Longitudinal Designs
A fixed sample (or samples) of population elements is measured
repeatedly on the same variables
A longitudinal design differs from a cross-sectional design in that the
sample or samples remain the same over time
Methods of Descriptive Research Design
Survey
Observation
A Classification of Survey Methods
Survey
Methods
Telephone
Personal
In-Home
Traditional
Telephone
Mall
Intercept
Computer-Assisted
Telephone
Interviewing
Mail
Computer-Assisted
Personal
Interviewing
Mail
Interview
Electronic
E-mail
Mail
Panel
Internet
A Classification of Observation Methods
Observation Methods
Personal
Observation
Mechanical
Observation
Audit
Content
Analysis
Trace
Analysis
Personal Observation
A researcher observes actual behavior as it occurs.
The observer does not attempt to manipulate the phenomenon being
observed but merely records what takes place.
Mechanical Observation
Do not require respondents' direct participation
The AC Nielsen audimeter
Turnstiles that record the number of people entering or leaving a building.
On-site cameras (still, motion picture, or video)
Optical scanners in supermarkets
Do require respondent involvement
Eye-tracking monitors
Pupilometers
Psychogalvanometers
Voice pitch analyzers
Devices measuring response latency
Audit
The researcher collects data by examining physical records or
performing inventory analysis.
Data are collected personally by the researcher.
The data are based upon counts, usually of physical objects.
Retail and wholesale audits conducted by marketing research suppliers
were discussed in the context of syndicated data.
Content Analysis
The objective, systematic, and quantitative description of the manifest
content of a communication.
The unit of analysis may be words, characters (individuals or objects),
themes (propositions), space and time measures (length or duration of
the message), or topics (subject of the message).
Analytical categories for classifying the units are developed and the
communication is broken down according to prescribed rules.
Trace Analysis
The number of different fingerprints on a page was used to gauge
the readership of various advertisements in a magazine.
The position of the radio dials in cars brought in for service was
used to estimate share of listening audience of various radio stations.
Internet visitors leave traces which can be analyzed to examine
browsing and usage behavior by using cookies.
Causal Research Design
Uses of Causal Research
To understand which variables are the cause (independent variables)
and which variables are the effect (dependent variables) of a
phenomenon
To determine the nature of the relationship between the causal variables
and the effect to be predicted
METHOD: Experiments
Concept of Causality
Ordinary Meaning
Scientific Meaning
X is only one of a number of possible of
X is the only cause of Y.
causes of Y.
The
X must always lead to Y(X is
deterministic cause of Y)
occurrence
of
makes
the
occurrence of Y more probable(X is a
probabilistic cause of Y)
We can never prove that X is a cause of Y.
It is possible to prove that X is
a cause of Y
At best, we can infer that X is cause of Y.
Concepts of Causal Research
Independent variables
Test units
Dependent variables
Extraneous variables
Experimental Design
The test units and how these units are to be divided into
homogeneous subsamples,
What independent variables or treatments are to be manipulated,
What dependent variables are to be measured; and
How the extraneous variables are to be controlled.
Validity in Experimentation
Internal validity refers to whether the manipulation of the independent
variables or treatments actually caused the observed effects on the
dependent variables. Control of extraneous variables is a necessary
condition for establishing internal validity.
External validity refers to whether the cause-and-effect relationships
found in the experiment can be generalized.
To what populations,
settings, times, independent variables, and dependent variables can the
results be projected?
Extraneous Variables.
History refers to specific events that are external to the experiment but occur at
the same time as the experiment.
Maturation (MA) refers to changes in the test units themselves that occur with
the passage of time.
Testing effects are caused by the process of experimentation. Typically, these
are the effects on the experiment of taking a measure on the dependent variable
before and after the presentation of the treatment.
The main testing effect (MT) occurs when a prior observation affects a latter
observation.
Extraneous Variables
In the interactive testing effect (IT), a prior measurement affects the test unit's
response to the independent variable.
Instrumentation (I) refers to changes in the measuring instrument, in the
observers, or in the scores themselves.
Statistical regression effects (SR) occur when test units with extreme scores
move closer to the average score during the course of the experiment.
Selection bias (SB) refers to the improper assignment of test units to treatment
conditions.
Mortality (MO) refers to the loss of test units while the experiment is in
progress.
Controlling Extraneous Variables
Randomization refers to the random assignment of test units to experimental
groups by using random numbers. Treatment conditions are also randomly
assigned to experimental groups.
Matching involves comparing test units on a set of key background variables
before assigning them to the treatment conditions.
Statistical control involves measuring the extraneous variables and adjusting
for their effects through statistical analysis.
Design control involves the use of experiments designed to control specific
extraneous variables.
A Classification of Experimental Designs .
Pre-experimental designs do not employ randomization procedures
to control for extraneous factors: the one-shot case study, the onegroup pretest-posttest design, and the static-group.
In true experimental designs, the researcher can randomly assign
test units to experimental groups and treatments to experimental
groups: the pretest-posttest control group design, the posttest-only
control group design, and the Solomon four-group design.
A Classification of Experimental Designs
Quasi-experimental designs result when the researcher is unable
to achieve full manipulation of scheduling or allocation of
treatments to test units but can still apply part of the apparatus of
true experimentation: time series and multiple time series designs.
A statistical design is a series of basic experiments that allows for
statistical control and analysis of external variables: randomized
block design, Latin square design, and factorial designs.
A Classification of Experimental Designs
Experimental Designs
Pre-experimental
True
Experimental
One-Shot Case
Study
Pretest-Posttest
Control Group
One Group
Pretest-Posttest
Posttest: Only
Control Group
Static Group
Solomon FourGroup
Quasi
Experimental
Time Series
Multiple Time
Series
Statistical
Randomized
Blocks
Latin Square
Factorial
Design
Pre-experimental designs
One-Shot Case Study
X
01
A single group of test units is exposed to a treatment X.
A single measurement on the dependent variable is taken (01).
There is no random assignment of test units.
The one-shot case study is more appropriate for exploratory than for
conclusive research.
One-Group Pretest-Posttest Design
01
02
A group of test units is measured twice.
There is no control group.
The treatment effect is computed as 02 01.
The validity of this conclusion is questionable since extraneous
variables are largely uncontrolled.
Static Group Design
EG:
CG:
02
01
A two-group experimental design.
The experimental group (EG) is exposed to the treatment, and the control
group (CG) is not.
Measurements on both groups are made only after the treatment.
Test units are not assigned at random.
The treatment effect would be measured as 01 - 02.
True Experimental Designs
Pretest-Posttest Control Group Design
EG:
CG:
R
R
01
03
02
04
Test units are randomly assigned to either the experimental or the control
group.
A pretreatment measure is taken on each group.
The treatment effect (TE) is measured as: (02 - 01) - (04 - 03).
Selection bias is eliminated by randomization.
The other extraneous effects are controlled as follows:
02 01= TE + H + MA + MT + IT + I + SR + MO
04 03= H + MA + MT + I + SR + MO
= EV (Extraneous Variables)
The experimental result is obtained by:
(02 - 01) - (04 - 03) = TE + IT
Interactive testing effect is not controlled.
Posttest-Only Control Group Design
EG : R X 01
CG : R
02
The treatment effect is obtained by:
TE = 01 02
Except for pre-measurement, the implementation of this design is very
similar to that of the pretest-posttest control group design.
Quasi-Experimental Designs
Time Series Design
01 02 03 04 05
X 06 07 08 09 010
There is no randomization of test units to treatments.
The timing of treatment presentation, as well as which test units
are exposed to the treatment, may not be within the researcher's
control.
Multiple Time Series Design
EG : 01 02 03 04 05
X 06 07 08 09 010
CG : 01 02 03 04 05
06 07 08 09 010
If the control group is carefully selected, this design can be an
improvement over the simple time series experiment.
Can test the treatment effect twice: against the pretreatment
measurements in the experimental group and against the control
group.
Statistical Designs
Statistical Designs
Statistical designs consist of a series of basic experiments that allow
for statistical control and analysis of external variables and offer the
following advantages:
The effects of more than one independent variable can be measured.
Specific extraneous variables can be statistically controlled.
Economical designs can be formulated when each test unit is
measured more than once.
Randomized Block Design
Randomized Block Design is useful when there is only one major
external variable, such as store size, that might influence the dependent
variable.
The test units are blocked, or grouped, on the basis of the external
variable.
By blocking, the researcher ensures that the various experimental and
control groups are matched closely on the external variable.
Randomized Block Design
Block
Number
1
2
3
4
Store
Patronage
Heavy
Medium
Low
None
Treatment Groups
Commercial Commercial
Commercial
A
B
C
A
A
A
A
B
B
B
B
C
C
C
C
Latin Square Design
Allows the researcher to statistically control two noninteracting external
variables as well as to manipulate the independent variable.
Each external or blocking variable is divided into an equal number of blocks,
or levels.
The independent variable is also divided into the same number of levels.
A Latin square is conceptualized as a table ,with the rows and columns
representing the blocks in the two external variables.
The levels of the independent variable are assigned to the cells in the table.
The assignment rule is that each level of the independent variable should
appear only once in each row and each column.
Latin Square Design
Interest in the Store
Store Patronage
High
Heavy
Medium
Low and none
B
C
A
Medium
A
B
C
Low
C
A
B
Factorial Design
Factorial Design Is used to measure the effects of two or more
independent variables at various levels.
A factorial design may also be conceptualized as a table.
In a two-factor design, each level of one variable represents a row
and each level of another variable represents a column.
Factorial Design
Amount of Humor
Amount of Store
Information
Low
No
Humor
A
Medium
Humor
B
High
Humor
C
Medium
High