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Stakeholder preference and stated vs derived importance satisfaction research

Stakeholder preference and stated vs derived importance satisfaction research
Stakeholder preference and stated vs derived importance satisfaction research
This paper presents a case study that reveals how stakeholders in the research process, by recommending specific data collection and analytical techniques, exert significant ‘hidden’ influence on the decisions made on the basis of market research findings. While disagreements among stakeholders regarding research design are likely, the possibility that strategies adopted by companies are dependent upon stakeholder research preferences has not been adequately addressed in the literature. Two widely used quantitative customer satisfaction evaluation approaches, involving stated and derived importance, are compared within a real-life market research setting at an international bank. The comparative analysis informs an ongoing debate surrounding the applicability of explicit and implicit importance measures, and demonstrates how recommendations are dependent upon the methodological and analytical techniques selected. The findings, therefore, have significant implications for importance-based satisfaction market research planning, and highlight the need to consider the impact of stakeholder preferences on research outcomes.
1470-7853
35-56
Greenland, Steven
2283760b-16a7-4f1a-9059-6fe1a1e8bb65
Combe, Ian
03bc21d8-a9c3-459e-b852-43faaabf44a8
Farrell, Andrew
9e84f894-53b6-4025-8038-4890e1f1548a
Greenland, Steven
2283760b-16a7-4f1a-9059-6fe1a1e8bb65
Combe, Ian
03bc21d8-a9c3-459e-b852-43faaabf44a8
Farrell, Andrew
9e84f894-53b6-4025-8038-4890e1f1548a

Greenland, Steven, Combe, Ian and Farrell, Andrew (2016) Stakeholder preference and stated vs derived importance satisfaction research. International Journal of Market Research, 58 (1), 35-56. (doi:10.2501/IJMR-2016-005).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper presents a case study that reveals how stakeholders in the research process, by recommending specific data collection and analytical techniques, exert significant ‘hidden’ influence on the decisions made on the basis of market research findings. While disagreements among stakeholders regarding research design are likely, the possibility that strategies adopted by companies are dependent upon stakeholder research preferences has not been adequately addressed in the literature. Two widely used quantitative customer satisfaction evaluation approaches, involving stated and derived importance, are compared within a real-life market research setting at an international bank. The comparative analysis informs an ongoing debate surrounding the applicability of explicit and implicit importance measures, and demonstrates how recommendations are dependent upon the methodological and analytical techniques selected. The findings, therefore, have significant implications for importance-based satisfaction market research planning, and highlight the need to consider the impact of stakeholder preferences on research outcomes.

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Greenland Combe Farrell 2015 IJMR StakeholderPreference.pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 August 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 January 2016
Published date: 1 January 2016
Organisations: Digital and Data Driven Marketing

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 395409
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/395409
ISSN: 1470-7853
PURE UUID: 5f59d856-538b-42d4-9ea7-72934c4ea463
ORCID for Andrew Farrell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5903-3611

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 31 May 2016 08:28
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:37

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Contributors

Author: Steven Greenland
Author: Ian Combe
Author: Andrew Farrell ORCID iD

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