100% tevredenheidsgarantie Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Lees online óf als PDF Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Samenvatting

Summary Survey Research Methods - Articles + Lectures summary (E_MKT_SRM)

Beoordeling
-
Verkocht
-
Pagina's
63
Geüpload op
02-09-2025
Geschreven in
2024/2025

This is a complete summary of all articles and lectures from the course Survey Research Methods from the Master Marketing at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. It includes all the information from the lecture slides, my notes from the lectures and my notes from the articles. My grade for the course was a 9 :)

Meer zien Lees minder











Oeps! We kunnen je document nu niet laden. Probeer het nog eens of neem contact op met support.

Documentinformatie

Geüpload op
2 september 2025
Aantal pagina's
63
Geschreven in
2024/2025
Type
Samenvatting

Onderwerpen

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

SURVEY RESEARCH METHODS – SUMMARY
LECTURE 1 – INTRODUCTION TO SURVEY RESEARCH
LECTURE – INTRODUCTION TO SURVEY RESEARCH
Agenda: Introduction to Survey Research
 Getting Started with Surveys
 What is Survey Research?
 Key Take-Aways: Introduction to Survey Research

Overview of Lectures
1 Introduction to Survey Research
3 Analyzing a Survey
4 Planning a Survey
5 Construct Measurement
6 Questionnaire Design
7 Sampling and Data Collection
9 International Survey Research
10 Designing an Experimental Study
11 Wrap-up of the Course

Getting Started with Surveys
 What do you know about survey research?
 How do you ensure to conduct a “good” survey?
 What are the pitfalls to avoid in survey research?

- Clean data  important before you process and analyze the data
- Items for the questions  input from other research
 Likert, length of the scale has to be the same
- What should be in, out of survey. Questions to ask or not ask: length important
 Good length questionnaire: 5-10 minutes, how much can we ask, how difficult is
questionnaire
 too long: concentration will get down and quality of the data goes down
- Attention check

Let’s Survey...
To what extent do you consider yourself a happy person?
Possible response categories are:
1) Very happy 2) Happy 3) Neither happy nor unhappy 4) Not very happy 5) Unhappy
 not very happy and unhappy, not the same language
 social desirability: respond with answer people want to hear or be perceived
 what is happy? general, current state, have same understanding  clarify this
 neutral category depends on goal

Q1: Have you read a book (also: eBook, article, or audio book) in the past 6
months?
1) Yes 2) No
 not good question: general interest everyone would say yes  meaningless
- Don’t need this question, you need some variance in the question, otherwise don’t
have any insights

Q2: How often have you been drunk in the last year?
1) Never 2) Once 3) Several times 4) Do not know
 people would not respond honest: social desirability
- Use techniques to uncover true answer

Q3: How dissatisfied are you with your mobile phone provider?
1) Very dissatisfied 2) Dissatisfied 3) A bit dissatisfied 4) Neutral 5) Fully satisfied 6) Do
not know

1

, bad way to ask question: dissatisfied is already steering you in certain direction, keep
it more neutral not in a direction
 no balance: bad thing, guide respondent to certain direction, neutral need to be in the
middle, response options should be balanced to get reliable answers

Telephone survey of 10,000 people in US about their intentions to buy a new car in the
next six months.
Q: Is the sample size large enough, and are results reliable and valid, generalizable?
- Not that valid and reliable although it’s bigger than the other sample size

Survey of 42 winners of a “slogan contest” by an insurance company about their
happiness with the prize (a very nice bottle of champagne).
Q: Is sample size large enough, results reliable and valid?

“Poorly designed and executed survey research is of little or no value”

Research Methods - Survey Research can include other Methods




→ The Right Approach is Determined by the (Research) Question!

Survey versus Experimental Research
Experiment Survey
- 2 conditions = manipulate -No manipulation
- Causality - No causality
- Narrow  look at 2 or 3 things - Broad  consider much more variables than
experiment
- Specific - More general

Going beyond Experimental Manipulations...




What is Survey Research?
 Survey: systematic method for gathering information with standardized
questionnaires from (a sample of) entities for the purpose of constructing
quantitative descriptors of the attributes of the larger population of which the
entities are members
 Systematic and Standardized
- Distinguishes itself from other techniques such as qualitative research
- Standardized  Everyone gets the same questionnaire
 (A Sample of) Entities
- Mostly a selection of the population is included in the survey  Sample not
population
- All entities can be included as well (employee survey)
 Quantitative Descriptors
- Statistics needed to analyze the responses
- Not qualitative


2

,A Short History of Survey Research
 Census surveys were conducted as early as Ancient Egypt
 Survey as a formal research method was pioneered in the 1930-40s by sociologist
Paul Lazarsfeld to examine the effects of the radio on political opinion formation of
the United States
 Today, surveys provide managers with deeper insights into their customers and
employees
 Surveys can contribute to generalizing experimental findings to different persons and
settings

Time Horizon of Survey Research
 Cross-Sectional Design
- Opinion polls (e.g., to predict electoral results)
- Typical thesis survey (e.g., to understand consumer preferences or attitudes)
 Longitudinal Design
- Repeated cross-sectional (different sample each time)
- Fixed-sample panel design (the same sample each time)
- Cohort study (follow the same people over a longer period of time, usually after an
event; e.g., people graduating MSc Marketing in 2010 and follow their lives over a 10-
year time period)

The Role of Surveys in Research
Early stages of research
 Exploratory survey research
 Descriptive survey research
 Goal: Hypothesis generation
Later stages of research
 Explanatory survey research
 Goal: Hypothesis testing

What is Survey Data good for?




Examples of Academic Survey Research




4 Phases of the Survey Research Process




Key Take-Aways: Introduction to Survey Research
 A survey is a systematic method for gathering information
- with standardized questionnaires

3

, - from (a sample of) entities
- for the purpose of constructing quantitative descriptors
- of the attributes of the larger population of which the entities are members.




4

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
De reputatie van een verkoper is gebaseerd op het aantal documenten dat iemand tegen betaling verkocht heeft en de beoordelingen die voor die items ontvangen zijn. Er zijn drie niveau’s te onderscheiden: brons, zilver en goud. Hoe beter de reputatie, hoe meer de kwaliteit van zijn of haar werk te vertrouwen is.
xpriscil Universiteit Leiden
Bekijk profiel
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
47
Lid sinds
8 jaar
Aantal volgers
3
Documenten
9
Laatst verkocht
3 dagen geleden

4,0

3 beoordelingen

5
1
4
1
3
1
2
0
1
0

Recent door jou bekeken

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Veelgestelde vragen