Using wireless monitoring for market research interviewers.
Nasui, Dorel Vasile ; Cosoi, Alexandru Catalin ; Sgarciu, Valentin 等
1. INTRODUCTION
The task of marketing research is to provide management with
relevant, accurate, reliable, valid and current information. Competitive
marketing environment and the ever-increasing costs attributed to poor
decision making require that marketing research provide sound
information. Sound decisions are not based on gut feeling, intuition, or
even pure judgment.
Marketing managers make numerous strategic and tactical decisions
in the process of identifying and satisfying customer needs. They make
decisions about potential opportunities, target market selection, market
segmentation, planning and implementing marketing programs, marketing
performance, and control. These decisions are complicated by
interactions between the controllable marketing variables of product,
pricing, promotion, and distribution. Further complications are added by
uncontrollable environmental factors such as general economic
conditions, technology, public policies and laws, political environment,
competition, and social and cultural changes. Another factor in this mix
is the complexity of consumers. Marketing research helps the marketing
manager link the marketing variables with the environment and the
consumers. It helps remove some of the uncertainty by providing relevant
information about the marketing variables, environment, and consumers.
In the absence of relevant information, consumers' response to
marketing programs cannot be predicted reliably or accurately. Ongoing
marketing research programs provide information on controllable and
non-controllable factors and consumers; this information enhances the
effectiveness of decisions made by marketing managers.
Traditionally, marketing researchers were responsible for providing
the relevant information and marketing decisions were made by the
managers. However, the roles are changing and marketing researchers are
becoming more involved in decision making, whereas marketing managers
are becoming more involved with research.
Further on, the authors present the main characteristics of market
research:
First, marketing research is systematic. Thus systematic planning
is required at all the stages of the marketing research process. The
procedures followed at each stage are methodologically sound, well
documented, and, as much as possible, planned in advance. Marketing
research uses the scientific method in that data are collected and
analyzed to test prior notions or hypotheses.
Marketing research is objective. It attempts to provide accurate
information that reflects a true state of affairs. It should be
conducted impartially. While research is always influenced by the
researcher's research philosophy, it should be free from the
personal or political biases of the researcher or the management.
Research, which is motivated by personal or political gain, involves a
breach of professional standards. Such research is deliberately biased
so as to result in predetermined findings. The motto of every researcher
should be, "Find it and tell it like it is." The objective
nature of marketing research underscores the importance of ethical
considerations, which are discussed later in the chapter.
Marketing research involves the identification, collection,
analysis, and dissemination of information. Each phase of this process
is important. We identify or define the marketing research problem or
opportunity and then determine what information is needed to investigate
it, and inferences are drawn. Finally, the findings, implications and
recommendations are provided in a format that allows the information to
be used for management decision making and to be acted upon directly. It
should be emphasized that marketing research is conducted to assist
management in decision making and is not: a means or an end in itself.
In most cases, market research starts with collecting data. The
information can be collected from stores, clients, random people on the
street, companies and so on. Usually this happens with the help of
interviewers, which have to follow strict routes and interview as many
people in a day as possible. Also, the clients who ordered the market
research would appreciate a transparency of the interview process and
see the process in real-time, since some believe that part of the
studies are forged by the interviewers in order to complete their tasks
faster.
A system that would provide the transparency of the process, track
in real-time the routes of the interviewers, measure the time spent in
each location (interview duration estimation) and even helping the user
to find different locations is needed.
2. PROPOSED METHOD
The wireless monitoring system can control and monitor the mobile
assets from a computer through a software application called
SafeDispatch that is a part of the SafeMobile's Asset Management
System line of business products. SafeDispatch can monitor the fleet
more efficiently and can reduce losses from pilferage and unauthorized
use. With SafeDispatch the user can obtain information about the
vehicles at anytime, information about performed routes vs, planned
routes, driver tracking information. The tool can also check the speed
of the vehicles and monitor different routes that the drivers perform.
SafeMobile Asset Management System consists of three main
components: the Remote Unit, the Communication Platform and the
Application Software (SafeNet/SafeDispatch). Remote Units are available
for transmission over a variety of wireless network. The Remote Unit
used for monitoring the bus school is using GPRS communication network.
The Vehicular Unit contains a microcontroller embedded in a Delight
modem and a GPS module. The communication platform is via GSM/GPRS
communication network. The operating system is firmware.
The communication platform is via GPRS communication network. GPRS
(General Packet Radio Service) is a private network for data. It uses
the existing GSM network to transmit and receive TCP/IP based data to
and from GPRS mobile devices. Private IP addresses are dynamically
assigned within the network to the mobile devices.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
The communication protocol is represented by the following stages:
1. The GPS module sends data to the microcontroller that is
embedded in the modem
2. The microcontroller sends these data through communication
module (via GPRS) to a Gateway (the Gateway is a software application
that is hosted on a computer with a public IP address)
3. Before sending data to the Gateway, the microcontroller packs
these data
4. The Gateway unpacks the data and loads them in data bases The
final user can monitor the vehicles with SafeDispatch/SafeNet software
applications.
SafeDispatch is SafeMobile's client hosted application; it
provides a rich graphical user interface to the dispatch and
automatically plots vehicle positions using Microsoft MapPoint.
The major features for SafeDispatch are:
* creating tabs to track interviewers, and monitoring different
routes that the interviewer performs
* information about routes performed vs. routes planned
* agent tracking information
* saving events for future reference and analysis
* SafeDispatch allows tracking units through different tracking
tabs; live tab displays real-time information about the mobile assets,
history tab shows history information on selected units.
SafeDispatch allows setting up different landmarks on the map.
Landmarks are points on the map, or particular geographic locations that
can be marked by placing special icons on the map allowing to identify
when a unit is near a particular location.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
3. CONCLUSIONS
The configuration presented in this paper is used in several
countries for bus-school monitoring: Skokie School District--Illinois
--Web-based AVL System with Professional Units; U.S. Department of
Defense Education Activity--Puerto Rico --Web-based AVL System with
Professional Units; DHL Romania --Web-based AVL System with Basic Units;
Cyprus Police--Cyprus--Client-hosted AVL system with Professional Radio
Units***, and has proved that it works and can be considered as a fast
and reliable system.
Using the same configuration adjusted for market research
interviewers brings new advantages in the market research industry:
trust, speed and reliability.
Clients are able to see what each interviewer is doing at a certain
moment and that all desired routes are followed as planned. Interview
designers are able to see how long their interviews last in real life.
In case an agent gets lost, the company is able to help him with
directions since they know the exact position where he is.
4. REFERENCES
Huang, G. (2006). "Control the vehicle flow via GPS monitor
center", Proceedings of the 6th WSEAS International Conference on
Signal Processing, Computational Geometry & Artificial Vision, World
Scientific and Engineering Academy and Society (WSEAS), ISBN: 1790-5117,
ISSN: 960-8457-51-3, Elounda, Greece, 2006, pp 174-181
Xinhua, H, Wenliang X. & Guang Z. (2003). "Electronics map
control for vehicle monitor", Intelligent Transportation Systems,
Proceedings IEEE, volume 2, 2003, 12-15 Oct. 2003, pp 924-926
Zhao F., & Guibas L., "Wireless Sensor Networks--An
Information Processing Approach", The Morgan Kaufmann Series in
Netwoking, Series Editor, David Clark, M.I.T.
*** www.safemobile.com
*** www.airradio.com
*** http://home.mira.net/~gnb/gps/nmea.html#gprmc
*** Expert Choice has the solution to help.
http://www.expertchoice.com/xres/uploads/resource-center
documents/Market_Research.pdf
*** Market Research Council
http://www.forrester.com/role_based/pdfs/msecouncil_feb0 9.pdf
*** IpsosInsight http://www. ipsosinsight. com/