Research Design
Research Design
Research Design
Descriptive Research
Causal Research
Cross-Sectional Design
Longitudinal Design
Conclusive
To test specific hypotheses and examine relationships. Information needed is clearly defined. Research process is formal and structured. Sample is large and representative. Data analysis is quantitative.
Information needed is defined only Character-istics: loosely. Research process is flexible and unstructured. Sample is small and non-representative. Analysis of primary data is qualitative.
Tentative. Findings /Results: Outcome: Generally followed by further exploratory or conclusive research. Conclusive.
Descriptive
Describe market characteristics or functions Marked by the prior formulation of specific hypotheses Preplanned and structured design
Causal
Determine cause and effect relationships Manipulation of one or more independent variables Control of other mediating variables Experiments
Characteristics:
Flexible, versatile
Often the front end of total research design Expert surveys Pilot surveys Secondary data Qualitative research
Methods:
Cross-sectional Designs
Involve the collection of information from any given sample of population elements only once. In single cross-sectional designs, there is only one sample of respondents and information is obtained from this sample only once. In multiple cross-sectional designs, there are two or more samples of respondents, and information from each sample is obtained only once. Often, information from different samples is obtained at different times. Cohort analysis consists of a series of surveys conducted at appropriate time intervals, where the cohort serves as the basic unit of analysis. A cohort is a group of respondents who experience the same event within the same time interval.
Percentage consuming on a typical day Age 8-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ 1980 52.9 45.2 33.9 23.2 18.1 1990 62.6 60.7 46.6 40.8 28.8 2000 73.2 76.0 67.7 58.6 50.0 C1
C7 C6 C5 C4 C3
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
Detecting Change Large amount of data collection Accuracy Representative Sampling Response bias
+ +
+ + + -
Note: A + indicates a relative advantage over the other design, whereas a - indicates a relative disadvantage.
Total Error
Non-sampling Error
Response
Error
Non-response Error
Interviewer Error
Respondent
Error
Surrogate Information Error Measurement Error Population Definition Error Sampling Frame Error Data Analysis Error
a) income of INR50K or more? b) the top 20% of households as measured by income? c) with net worth over INR250,000?
1) A taskforce was created to better define the market parameters to include all the needs of the many Citicorp branches. A final decision was made to include Americans 55 years of age or older, retired, and in the upper half of the financial strata of that market.
3) The next stage of research was brainstorming. This involved the formation of many different financial packages aimed at the target market. In this case, a total of 10 ideas were generated.