MARKETING RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

Code Cours
2324-IÉSEG-M1S1-MKT-MA-TE48UE
Langue d'enseignement
English
Matières
MARKETING
Responsable(s)
B.CLAUS
Intervenant(s)
Qualitative research : Catherine JANSSEN (Lille) + Benjamin BOEUF (Paris); Experimental Research : Elke CABOOTER, Nico HEUVINCK (Lille) + Bart CLAUS (Paris)
Niveau
Master
Année de formation
Période

Présentation

Prérequis
Basics related to market research studies (namely: qualitative vs. quantitative, etc.)
Objectifs
At the end of the course the student should be able to :
At the end of the course, the student should be able to:
1. Master the appropriate techniques and display expertise with regards to different marketing research paradigms.
2. Identify which research paradigm, methodologies and techniques are most relevant when dealing with a specific research/managerial problem.
3. Select the relevant research method, define the sub-issues (research design, sampling, analyses, triangulation, etc.) and offer the relevant answers to the issues
4. Design qualitative and experimental studies that will answer to a specific research question
5. Use different data analysis techniques and correctly select the relevant ones according to the available data and relevant research question.
6. Have greater awareness about ESRS topics such as conducting research in a rigorous, responsible, and ethical way, treating participants with all necessary precautions and care, and interpreting results with all necessary reservations.
7. Provide a critical opinion on propositions made by research agencies, and the validity, rigour and general quality of research and research reports.
Présentation
Qualitative Research (first 3 sessions)
• Session 1 & 2 – Before the field and field work: What should I know and how do I do that?
Data collection methods, Sampling, Interview guide, The art of moderation, Ethics of research
• Session 3– After the field: What should I know and how do I do that?
Analysis, Interpretation, Report, Validity and reliability of research

Experimental Research (last 4 sessions)
• Session 1 & 2 – Introduction to experimental designs and their purpose and advantages, Independent vs. dependent variables, Reliability and validity, ethical questions
• Session 3 & 4– Multiple-group experiments, hypothesis testing, interactions, control variables, data analysis with statistical software

Modalités

Organisation
Type Amount of time Comment
Présentiel
Cours interactif 16,00
Travail personnel
Group Project 16,00
Charge de travail personnel indicative 6,00
Autoformation
Recherche 10,00
Overall student workload 48,00
Évaluation
Please note that the two parts, qualitative (QR) and experimental (ER) research, are graded seperately. Additional to a required average of 10/20, a minimum of 8/20 is required on each of the parts to pass the course.
For QR: Active participation (discussions and exercices): 20%; Groupr project (including preparation steps to the final project): 80%
For ER: Group work: 20%; In-class tests/exercises/cases: 20%; Final report: 60%
Control type Duration Amount Weighting
Contrôle continu
Participation 0,00 0 20,00
Autres
Projet Collectif 0,00 2 70,00
Rapport écrit 0,00 3 10,00
TOTAL 100,00

Ressources

Bibliographie
Qualitative Research Methods for the social sciences ”, 2009, B. L. Berg, Pearson Education. -
“Readme first for a User’s Guide to Qualitative Methods”, 2007, L. Richards and J.M. Morse, Sage. -
“Marketing Research, An applied orientation”, 2010, N.K. Malhotra, Pearson -
Experimentation: Research Design Explained - Mark L. Mitchell and Janina M. Jolley (2007), 6th edition, International edition, Thomson Wadsworth, paperback (ISBN: 0495092231). -