3. . . . systematic witnessing and/or
recording of behavioral patterns of
objects, people, and events without
directly communicating with them â
can collect both qualitative and
quantitative data.
There are four conditions for scientific
observation:
⢠Serves a formulated research
purpose
⢠Planned systematically
⢠Recorded systematically
⢠Subjected to checks or controls on
validity and reliability
OBSERVATIONS
5. WHAT CAN BE OBSERVED
Human behavior
or physical
action
⢠Shoppers movement pattern in a store
Verbal
behavior
⢠Statements made by airline travelers who wait in lineExpressive
behavior
⢠Facial expressions, tone of voice, and other form of body
language
Spatial
relations and
locations
⢠How close visitors at an art museum stand to paintings
Temporal
patterns
⢠How long fast-food customers wait for their order to be
served
Physical
objects
⢠What brand name items are stored in consumersâ pantries
Verbal and
Pictorial
Records
⢠Bar codes on product packages
6. OBSERVATION OF HUMAN BEHAVIOUR
Business researchers can observe people, objects, events, or other phenomena using either human
observers or machines designed for specific observation tasks
Direct observation is a
straightforward attempt to
observe and record what
naturally occurs; the
investigator does not create
artificial situation.
Contrived observation is
observation in which the
investigator creates an
artificial environment in
order to test a hypothesis.
Direct versus scientifically
contrived observation
Visible observation is
situation in which the
observerâs presence is
known to the subject.
Hidden observation is
situation in which the
subject is unaware that
observation is taking place.
Visible versus hidden
observation
Mechanical observation is
situation in which video
cameras, traffic
counters, and other
machines help observe and
record behavior.
Human versus mechanical
observation
7. NATURE OF OBSERVATION STUDIES
⢠Communication with respondent is not necessary
⢠Data without distortions due to self-report (e.g.: without social desirability) Bias
⢠No need to rely on respondents memory
⢠Nonverbal behavior data may be obtained
⢠Certain data may be obtained more quickly
⢠Environmental conditions may be recorded
⢠May be combined with survey to provide supplemental evidence
9. DIRECT OBSERVATION
ďĄ Straight forward attempt to observe and record what naturally
occurs
ďĄ Data like age, gender, race can be easily observed
ďĄ Produces detailed Records with more accurate data
ďĄ Observer - Passive Role
ďĄ Helps keep researchersâ observation consistent
ďĄ Response Latency - Amount of time it takes to make a choice
between two alternatives
ďĄ Quick decision indicates psychological distance between
alternatives
10. ERRORS IN DIRECT OBSERVATION
ď Observer Bias : A distortion of measurement resulting from the cognitive behavior
ď To some extent Subjective in nature
ď Compromise on accuracy due to factors such as speed of recording details, observerâs
memory, writing speed
ď Not all details recorded
ď Interpretation of data can be a source of error.
11. SCIENTIFICALLY CONTRIVED OBSERVATION
ďĄ Create an artificial situation in order to test a hypothesis or a situation under study
ďĄ Less time consuming than the observation technique.
ďĄ Observer has greater control over gathering the data
ďĄ Observer can Influence the subjects
12. COMBINING DIRECT OBSERVATION & INTERVIEWING
ďĄ Interviews conducted after detailed direct
observation
ďĄ Can better explain their actions noticed under
the observation technique
13. ETHICAL ISSUES IN OBSERVATION
ďĄ Hidden Observations intrudes into the RIGHT TO
PRIVACY
ďĄ More problematic in Private places than in public such
as
ďź Trial rooms , Rest rooms, Spas etc
ďź Observation through two way mirrors
ďĄ Some people might see contrived observation as
entrapment
If no permission is
taken from the
subject:
⢠Intrusion into privacy
⢠Unethical and Illegal
behavior
If permission is taken
from the subject:
⢠Un natural responses
⢠Soul purpose of research
being negotiated
The Dilemma
14. WHEN SHOULD A RESEARCHER FEEL
COMFORTABLE ABOUT COLLECTING
OBSERVATIONS
ďĄ Is the behavior being observed commonly performed in public where
it is expected to be observed by others
ďĄ Is the behavior performed in a setting in which the anonymity of the
person is assured
ďĄ Has the person agreed to the observations
Yes ?
Yes ?
Yes
?
15. OBSERVATION OF PHYSICAL OBJECTS
ďĄ Physical trace data serves as visible record of past
events
ďĄ Important information can be extracted
ďĄ Response bias is avoided
ďĄ More correct and accurate information as it is the direct
physical object
Examples:
ďĄ More the wear and tear of books indicates more is the
usage and preference for those books.
ďĄ Garbage Project
16. CONTENT ANALYSIS
ďĄ Systematically analyzing the written
communication
ďĄ Observing and analyzing the contents
,messages ,advertisements, newspaper article
,television programmes.
ďĄ Aimed at collecting information on
characteristics of messages
ďĄ Advertisement content analysis:
ďź analyzing the usage of word ,themes and
characters
18. TRACE ANALYSIS
ďĄ Researchers collect data on the basis of
physical trace and evidence of previous
activities of the users
ďĄ For e.g.: Looking at product wrappers in waste
bin
ďĄ Has disadvantages in terms of generalizability of
the result
ďĄ FMCGs use this quite frequently to have initial
idea about the consumption behaviour of their
newly launched products
19. MECHANICAL OBSERVATION
ďĄ Includes video cameras, traffic counters and machines, which helps us to observe and record
behaviour
ďĄ Sometimes motion picture cameras and time lapse photography are also used
ďĄ Application in real time:
ďź Train passengers and find out their level of comfort
ďź Traffic flows in urban square
ďź Organization of warehouse
20. TELEVISION MONITORING
ďĄ Computerized mechanical observation used to obtain
television ratings
ďĄ Used consumer panel & PeopleMeter â a monitoring
device
ďĄ PeopleMeter gathers data about who is watching which
program at what time
ďĄ More than 5000 TV sets were fitted with this device
21. CLICK â THROUGH RATES (MONITORING WEBSITE TRAFFIC)
ďĄ Percentage of people who are exposed to an
advertisement who actually click on the corresponding
hyperlink which takes them to the Companyâs website
ďĄ Way of measuring the success of an online advertising
campaign for a particular website
ďĄ Advertisers incur cost on each click as cost per click
ďĄ Counting hits suggests the amount of interest website is
receiving but these measures are flawed
22. CTR FLAWS
ďĄ Hits do not differentiate between lot of activity by a few visitors or little activity by many visitors
ďĄ Cant differentiate if a user is clicking multiple times due to some useful thing or just because he is trying
unsuccessfully to find something by looking in several places.
ďĄ Hits by mistake
ďĄ Consumer may be unaware of what they are doing while clicking the ad, they might be looking for
something & ended up there
23. SCANNER BASED RESEARCH
What it is ??
ďĄ A mechanical method of observation
ďĄ Use of scanner based consumer panels instead
of consumer purchase diaries
How it is implemented ??
ďĄ Each household is assigned with a bar code
card
ďĄ Scanner machines record purchase information
at the billing counter
ďĄ Background information collected through
surveys is also coupled with household code
number
ďĄ Aggregate data is provided to industries for
analytics
24. ADVANTAGES OVER CONVENTIONAL SYSTEM
ďĄ Actual purchase behavior rather than reported behavior
ďĄ Improved efficiency
ďĄ Unbiased data
ďĄ More extensive data can be recorded
ďĄ Data can be combined with other factors and be analyzed with powerful analytical software
25. MEASURING PHYSIOLOGICAL REACTIONS
ďĄ Mechanical devices have been used to record physiological reactions of consumer to
advertising, packaging or other stimuli
ďĄ The two basic principals for these observations are:
ďź Eye Movements towards stimuli which attracts more
ďź Change in Adrenaline level when body is aroused
26. DEVICES USED
Eye-tracking monitor
Tracks eye movements with invisible infrared light beams
Infrared beam of light locks on pupil to record eye movement across stimuli
Another camera records the pages or screen being viewed
Data is analyzed in a computer to find out the subjectâs interest in an ad
Pupilometer
⢠Observes and records changes in the diameter of subjectâs pupils
⢠Brightness and distance of the stimulus from the subject âs eyes are held constant
⢠Assumption â Increased pupil size reflects positive attitude
27. DEVICES USED
Psychogalvanometer
⢠Measures galvanic skin response i.e change in electrical resistance
⢠Change in adrenaline level increases blood flow, perspiration and
electrical resistance of the body
⢠Based on assumption that physiological changes accompany emotional
reaction to stimuli
Voice-pitch analysis
⢠Gauges emotional reactions as reflected by frequency of personâs voice
⢠Abnormal frequencies in the voice are recorded that are supposed to
reflect emotional reaction towards stimuli
28. LIMITATIONS
ďĄ No strong evidence supports the argument that physiological change is a valid measure of future
sales, change of attitude etc
ďĄ Calibration of measuring devices
ďĄ Expensive
ďĄ Participants know that they are being observed