Survey Methods + Ch7 (Test 1 Inclusive) Flashcards

1
Q

Surveys

A

Systematic process of recording consumer info via structured questionnaire; focus on consumer attitudes and emotion

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2
Q

Attitude

A

Lasting, general evaluation of:
people
objects
places
behaviours
ideas

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3
Q

3 components of an attitude (ABC)

A

Affective component (how consumers FEEL about x)
Behavioural component (whether consumers intend to DO something with x)
Cognitive component (what consumers BELIEVE about x)

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4
Q

Questions to ask for cognitive attitudes (knowledge/opinions)

A

Which brands are you familiar with?
What are the key features of the brand?

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5
Q

Questions to ask for affective attitudes (liking/emotions)

A

Which would you prefer?
How do you feel about the brand?

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6
Q

Questions to ask for behavioural attitudes (actions/intentions)

A

How many times have you previously purchased the brand?
How likely are you to recommend to a friend?

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7
Q

Likert Scales

A

Provide a numerically weighted scale for consumers to answer a question on

Likert scales provide endpoints (eg: 1 = not at all)

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8
Q

Survey methods (IPEI)

A

In-person
Phone
Email
Internet

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9
Q

Internet surveys, advantages and disadvantages

A

Advantages:
Fast, cheap, personalized

Neutral:
Response rates, representativeness, hard-to-reach groups, panel management

Disadvantages:
Multiple completes
Response fraud for compensation

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10
Q

4 types of survey platforms

A

Google Forms
Survey Monkey
Amazon Mechanical Turk
Qualtrics

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11
Q

Systematic error aka bias

A

Difference due to intentional or unintentional mistakes
Reduce with careful design and implementation

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12
Q

4 types of measurement errors (NIRP)

A

Non-response bias
Interviewer bias
Response bias
Processing errors

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13
Q

Non-response bias

A

Due to difference between respondents and non-respondents

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14
Q

Interviewer bias

A

Due to intentional or unintentional influence of the interviewer

eg: interviewer starts by saying the current campus options are “good”

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15
Q

Response bias

A

Due to intentional or unintentional misrepresentation of info

Participants are embarrassed to admit how much they love “McDonalds”

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16
Q

Processing error

A

Due to errors in data recording, transcription, etc

17
Q

Tackling non-response bias (financial incentives)

A

Questionnaire with money enclosed using the principle of reciprocity had the highest response rates

18
Q

Advantages of surveys

A

Provides standardization
Easy to administer
Gets “beneath the surface” to uncover motivations, attitudes, beliefs
Easy to analyze
Reveals subgroup differences - respondents can be divided into segments or subgroups for comparison

19
Q

Disadvantages of surveys

A

Asking can change behaviour
Requires careful design to mitigate measurement errors
Can be more contrived responses (unnatural)
Instrument error - items don’t measure the actual concepts the researcher wants to study
Not guaranteed to be representative of population

20
Q

Six main advantages of surveys

A

Standardization
Efficiency
Ease of administration
Ability to tap the “unseen”
Suitable for statistical analysis
Sensitivity to subgroup differences

21
Q

Incidence rate

A

The percentage of the population that qualifies to be included in a survey, affects decisions about data collection modes for that survey