Retailing Research. Overview Retailing What is research? Using the facts Researching the market...

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Retailing Research

Transcript of Retailing Research. Overview Retailing What is research? Using the facts Researching the market...

Page 1: Retailing Research. Overview Retailing What is research? Using the facts Researching the market Methods of data collection Primary V Secondary Quantitative.

Retailing Research

Page 2: Retailing Research. Overview Retailing What is research? Using the facts Researching the market Methods of data collection Primary V Secondary Quantitative.

Overview Retailing What is research? Using the facts Researching the market Methods of data collection Primary V Secondary

Quantitative V Qualitative Consumers expectations Malcolm Kirkup’s theory The Consumer Profile Use to the retail manager The Quiz and questions

Page 3: Retailing Research. Overview Retailing What is research? Using the facts Researching the market Methods of data collection Primary V Secondary Quantitative.

Definition: Retailing

“Process of selling consumer goods directly to consumers. Unlike the wholesaler, who sells goods to other businesses for resale, the retailer is the final agent through which products pass on their way from manufacturer to user.”

(Bangs 1998)

The retailer has to anticipate the needs of its present and even future consumers

Larger retail firms consist of:

Discount stores, chain stores, department stores, and supermarkets.

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Retailing also includes:

House-to-house canvassing,

Mail-order selling, Vending machines, Petrol stations, and Street stalls

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What is Research?

“Research is not simply describing what you find.” (Marshall, 1997)

Making sense of what you find. “The more questions a specific area or

fact can answer – that is, the more scope it has – the more useful it is to science and society.” (Marshall, I BID)

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Theories

Vital in the pre-determining of consumer behaviour patterns.

Strong Theories – Used for prediction

Weak Theories – Only sufficient for explanation

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PARADIGMS

Paradigms are particular ways of thinking about and sharing information with items of a similar nature.

Assumptions Conceptualisations Values Attitudes Orientations Beliefs

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Advantage and Disadvantage Of Paradigms

Advantage: They prevent analysts wasting time on problems they are not best equipped to solve.

Disadvantage: They blinker researchers to other valid ways of looking at the issues.

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Starting with the Facts?

Induction Deduction

Induction is the ordering of facts Deduction is the logical leap

process, always looking for the next stage past the theoretical ideas.

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The circular process of science

OBSERVATION

THEORYDEVELOPMENT

EMPIRICALGENERALISATION

HYPOTHESISFORMULATION

Source: O’Brien, 1991

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Researching the market

Retailers need to know who is buying what, where and when.

Analysing till receipts is useful, but can only give retailer information on what has happened and not what is going to happen.

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Next

Associated with edited retailing

Edited retailing: “The involvement of offering for sale a limited range of coordinated products for a specific client group.” (O’Brien et al. 1988)

New Next lines:Men,

Interiors,Jewellery.

“Women who care about fashion first and price second” (Ody 1998)

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Methods of data collection

Primary research:

“This type of data must be gathered by observing phenomena or surveying respondents.”

Dibb Dibb et al.et al. 2000 2000

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Primary Research Techniques

Experimentation – “Data collection that involves maintaining certain variables constant so that the effects of the experimental variables can be measured”

Marketing experimentation – “A set of rules and procedures by which data gathering is organised to analyse and interpret key marketing variables.”

Sampling – “The selection of representative units from a total population.”

RANDOM SAMPLING STRATIFIED SAMPLING AREA SAMPLING QUOTA SAMPLING

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Primary Research Techniques cont’d..

Survey methods – “Interviews by mail and personal interviews.”

1. Mail surveys

2. Mail panels

3. Consumer purchase diaries

4. Telephone surveys

5. Computer assisted telephone interviewing

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Primary Research Techniques cont’d..

6. Personal interview surveys

7. Depth interviews

8. Shopping mall/pavement intercept interviews

9. On-site computer interviewing

10. Focus group interviews

11. Quali-depth interviews and

12. IN-home interviews.

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Primary Research Techniques cont’d..

Questionnaire construction – “Base document for research purposes, providing the questions and structure for an interview or self-completion and providing space for respondents’ answers.”

Observation methods – “Methods by which researchers record respondents’ overt behaviour and take note of physical conditions and events.”

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Methods of data collection

Secondary research:

“Information compiled inside or outside the organisation for some purpose other than the current investigation.”

Dibb Dibb et al.et al. I BID I BID

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Syndicated Data Services

BARB – Supply Supply television stations with television stations with viewing estimates for viewing estimates for any specific time of day.any specific time of day.

Nielsen AGB – Provide data about Provide data about products primarily sold products primarily sold in the retail industry; in the retail industry; such as product sales, such as product sales, own brand sales and own brand sales and competing brands.competing brands.

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Quantitative V Qualitative

Quantitative: Meaning the research aimed at producing statistical data to be expressed numerically.

Qualitative: Information too difficult or expensive to quantify. Includes subjective opinions and personal judgements not accessible using quantitative methods.

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Consumer Expectations

Consumers expect more Improvements in quality and selection of

products within one retailer Lower prices, due to higher sales More choice at reasonable cost ASDA Wal-Mart use buying power to

lower costs at all levels of the supply chain

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Malcolm Kirkup’s theory

“A store is a ‘locus of social and informational, as well as material exchanges’, and therefore, methods are needed to capture the social exchanges within this arena”

(Kirkup, p3, 1998)

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Kirkup’s theory continued.

If the environment is right, the customers will keep coming back

Every consumer wants to feel special

Retailer must stay in touch with consumer demands/needs

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Building a consumer profile

EDI – Electronic Data Interchange

IOS – Inter-organisational information systems

Allows the retailer to be constantly up-to-date with the minimum amount of human intervention

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Other methods Loyalty cards

Store cards

Credit card transactions

Need to know the consumer’s every move

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The result…

More specific promotional activities More consumer focussed Making the consumer feel special Increasing the sales volume of the

business Continually innovating techniques Making sure they will be there in the

future!

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THE QUIZ!

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Answers…

1. Observation, Empirical Generalisation, Theory development, Hypothesis Formulation.

2. Nielsen AGB

3. Random, stratified, area and quota sampling

4. Mail Surveys, Mail panels, Consumer purchase diaries, Telephone surveys, Computer assisted telephone interviewing, Personal interview surveys, Depth interviews, Shopping mall/pavement intercept interviews, On-site computer interviewing, Focus Group interviews, Quali-depth interviews and IN-home interviews

5. Providing and understanding how to create the correct purchasing environment, not just knowing WHAT they buy.

6. Electronic Data Interchange