This document discusses measurement and questionnaire design for quantitative research. It covers:
1. The basic concepts of measurement including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio scales. Nominal scales label objects, ordinal scales indicate relative size differences, interval scales measure unobservable constructs, and ratio scales have a true zero point.
2. Examples of different types of questions for each scale, including nominal questions about brand awareness, ordinal questions about attribute ranking, interval questions about levels of satisfaction, and ratio questions which are more specific but complicated than nominal questions.
3. Guidelines for designing a questionnaire including structuring closed-ended questions with predetermined answers for quantitative research and open-ended questions for qualitative research. The questionnaire should
This document discusses measurement and questionnaire design for quantitative research. It covers:
1. The basic concepts of measurement including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio scales. Nominal scales label objects, ordinal scales indicate relative size differences, interval scales measure unobservable constructs, and ratio scales have a true zero point.
2. Examples of different types of questions for each scale, including nominal questions about brand awareness, ordinal questions about attribute ranking, interval questions about levels of satisfaction, and ratio questions which are more specific but complicated than nominal questions.
3. Guidelines for designing a questionnaire including structuring closed-ended questions with predetermined answers for quantitative research and open-ended questions for qualitative research. The questionnaire should
This document discusses measurement and questionnaire design for quantitative research. It covers:
1. The basic concepts of measurement including nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio scales. Nominal scales label objects, ordinal scales indicate relative size differences, interval scales measure unobservable constructs, and ratio scales have a true zero point.
2. Examples of different types of questions for each scale, including nominal questions about brand awareness, ordinal questions about attribute ranking, interval questions about levels of satisfaction, and ratio questions which are more specific but complicated than nominal questions.
3. Guidelines for designing a questionnaire including structuring closed-ended questions with predetermined answers for quantitative research and open-ended questions for qualitative research. The questionnaire should
Understanding Measurement, Developing Questions, and Designing the
Questionnaire (Quantitative) Costco case : Problem Statement (Related to business [management,..] – Action, Decision) -> R. Objectives (awareness, image perception, brand evaluation – identify key information) -> R. Questions -> Questionaire Design Questionnaire (Quantitative) Structured with Close Ended Questions & Predeterminded Answers ( also questions are fixed orders, almost close-ended question- provide respondence with answer to select) Guidelines (Qualitative) Unstructured with Open Ended Questions (flexible in making question, orders, almost open-ended – freely to answer question) 1. Basic Concepts in Measurement: Measurement: determining a description or amount of some property of an object that is of interest 2. Types of Measures: • Nominal scales label objects • Ordinal scales indicate only relative size differences between objects. • Scale measures: those in which the distance between each level is known – Interval scales are used to measure unobservable constructs. – Ratio scales have a true zero point. a) Nominal scales questions: Top Of Mind_ When talk about brands of Hypermarket, which come to your mind first? (SA) Spontaneous_ Which brands of hypermarket do you aware of Brand list - Walmart, Costco, Basket Market … Results: Walmart (60%), Costco (80%), Basket Market (30%) Ask demo, behave, awareness b) Ordinal scales questions: Ask to rank, most important to least important attributes c) Interval Scale Questions: Q1 is not easy to understand -> Wrong answer
Q2 has more data
Middle Points
Attribute for statements
(based on Quali Research) Opinions attitudes
Semantic
Image Perception, Brand Evaluation can be done by this.
Intend to check the logic answer -> Eliminate not quality data This better to measure satisfaction levels, like abibily. d) Ratio Scales Questions: Ratio Scales is more complicated but more specific >< Nominal scales. e) Likert scales: An interval scale commonly used by marketing researchers is the Likert scale, in which respondents are asked to indicate their degree of agreement or disagreement on a symmetric agree–disagree scale for each of a series of statements. The Likert scale format measures intensity of agreement or disagreement.
Ask question in indirect way : based on answer -> identify attributes
Statements/ Brand attributes (ave. 10, but max 15 attributes) • General beliefs of customers • Past studied/ understood attitudes of customers • Wish to convey positioning to customers • Brand performance evaluation 3. Designing A Questionnaire: A questionnaire is the vehicle used to present the questions the researcher desires respondents to answer.
Problem statement => Research Objectives => Research Questions => Form a qnaire
Action => Information => Questions - Different Types (Reliability & Validity)