March 3, 2011

In Response to Taylor Griffin...

Taylor makes statement that I think many people can agree with. He says that "Sometimes when i fill out surveys, I think one of two things. I am going to fill this survey out with giving my honest opinion or I will fill out this survey just to get it done with and out of my way." I can't argue with that logic. 

Recently there was a survey on my KSC account that continued to pop-up every time I logged in. I knew that it would not go away unless I filled it out, so I took as little time as I could to fill it out. The survey was for campus housing - the problem: I have never lived on campus. I couldn't answer anything honestly because it did not have the option for students who have not lived on campus. The creators of surveys need to be careful about how they word questions and who they have them out. 

How do you think Keene State should have administered the survey?

March 2, 2011

A Clearer Image: Supermarket

For our 331 Principle of Marketing class we were asked to critique the methods of a study including what questions I would ask if I was a hired consultant, providing alternatives. Study: A supermarket was interested in determining its image.  It dropped a short questionnaire into the grocery bag of each customer before putting in the groceries. 

I immediately though of a bunch of questions.

         1. Did you inform the customer that there was a survey in their grocery bag.
I would ask this because customers might throw the survey away without even looking at the paper.

         2. Was there any incentives to filling out this survey in an alloted amount of time?
I would ask this because some people don't go out of their way to fill out a survey that doesn't help them. An incentive might create a higher answering rate. 

        3. What questions were asked? How are they graded?
I would ask this because there are many definitions of image. It could mean physical image like how clean there store is. Or social image like what people thought of their company. Also, was they survey yes no answers or range of 1 - 5 or comments. All these factors could change the outcome of the survey. 

Some alternative ways to get feedback:
  • Have them fill out the questionnaire while the teller is ringing out the groceries.
  • Have a wider range people (customers and non-customers) by placing the questionnaire in the local newspaper.
  • Have the survey table right before the exit to generate data. 


Do you have any other suggestions?

March 1, 2011

Marketing Research = Money in My Pocket!


According to our textbook marketing research is the systematic design, collection, interpretation, and reporting of information to help marketers solve specific marketing problems or take advantage of marketing opportunities. This can take forms such as polls, surveys, and focus groups. Today I want to tell you about E-Rewards, an online opinion panel.

E-Rewards is free to join and they give you a small incentive to try to qualify for surveys and you collect your awards in the form of gift cards or discounts. The surveys are not very long taking my 20 minutes max and with all the points I receive I am able to cash them in for American Eagle or Borders gift-cards along with other great promotions. 

Do you feel as if you need a promotion in order to fill out surveys?

February 26, 2011

In Response to Chris Kurylo . . .

As an owner of Mac I was interested in Chris's blog post. He wrote about an article on CNN wrote about an Apple employee that tells about his experiences working for Apple. You too can find the article at http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2011/02/18/an-apple-store-employee-tells-all/. After reading the article I have a very different look then my peer. Chris asked, "Do you think employees should change who they are just to do well at there place of work?" 

I found the article to be more about how one works hard at a job he enjoys. The anonymous worker said, "I wanna work my way up, get promoted and eventually get to the Genius Bar—which is where you want to be. Who doesn't want to be a genius?" The worker did say that he changed his personality when we was working to "sell, sell, sell." Apple pushing their employees to sell is nothing new, they are in the retail industry. If you don't think that every company trying to sell products do not push a particular item or promotion on the customer, then you are naive. 

Do you think that pushing products on customers is an effective way of selling a product?

February 25, 2011

Ethics and WikiLeaks


This week in our marketing class we have been talking about ethics. The textbook definition of ethical issue is "An identifiable problem, situation, or opportunity requiring a choice among several actions that must be evaluated as right or wrong, ethical or unethical." One of the ethical issues that I am passionate about is WikiLeaks and the impact they are having on the United States' security. 

One of the largest government leaks in history was on November 28 posting more than 250,000 diplomatic documents on WikiLeaks. These documents strained relations with some countries, influencing international relations. Dallas news posted that "Most of them [documents] are from the past three years, provide an unprecedented look at backroom bargaining by embassies around the world, brutally candid views of foreign leaders and frank assessments of nuclear and terrorist threats." Some documents named diplomats and their sources. This put the United States government in a panic. 

In a poll done by NPR, 55% of Americans agreed that the public has a right to the knowledge leaked, while 45% thought that what was posted was wrong and put lives at risk. I think that the government needs to be able to keep secrets. They are what is keeping us safe. What did the knowledge leaked gain us? After 9/11, the showdown of terrorism still dominates the US as seen through Obama's struggle with Pakistan, Iraq, and Iran.

Do you think that having government secrets is worth the risk of putting people in danger? 

February 19, 2011

In Response to Jackie Bunker . . .

In Jackie’s post about Amazon’s shipping service called Amazon Prime that guarantees every product purchased will be shipped within two days maximum. The cost to the shopper is only $79, but is supposed to be free for the first year for students. While shopping for textbooks this semester I went through Amazon and wanted to use this new way of getting faster shipping for free. But, when I tried to sign up I was unable because you needed a .edu email address for students and keene’s email is @ksc.mailcruiser.com.

To combat this I signed up for the 30-day trail for the Amazon Prime and tried upgrading my order, but I was unable to get an updated shipping time because I had ordered all my books used (because they were cheaper.) In the end I was just frustrated and did not get any better deal on shipping. I think that shoppers need to be wary of signing up for “bargains” like this one because do you really save more than $79 for getting your purchase a day earlier? Do you think that this is a good marketing ploy to get shoppers to waste their money? 

February 16, 2011

Advertising Through Teaching

As I was scanning a list of recent articles, I came across one titled "Attract More Clients By Teaching". Automatically I thought of Country Life Restaurant and how they want to teach people about eating healthy. As I read the article by Peter George, I was intrigued to see that he considered the best way to "getting your name out there" is to teach by holding seminars, workshops, teleseminars, or webinars. Something that George made very clear was that you have to teach consistently, because it only takes one bad night to ruin a bunch of good ones. 

I think that Country Life Restaurant could gain a lot of good publicity through teaching about veganism and making tasty vegan food. What would you like to learn from a vegan restaurant?


You can read more at: http://www.articlesfactory.com/articles/marketing/attract-more-clients-by-teaching.html