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Asif Jamal
Visiting Lecturer
University Of Sindh, Mirpurkhas campus
MARKETING RESEARCH
ETHICS
CLASSIFYING RESEARCH
z BASIC RESEARCH
z APPLIED RESEARCH
BASIC MARKETING RESEARCH
 Expands existing knowledge base
 Becomes part of public domain
 Published in scholarly journals
 Conducted primarily by individuals with terminal degrees
 Used for purposes of theory discovery and theory verification
APPLIED MARKETING RESEARCH
 Conducted in order to solve specific real-world problems
 Usually propriety information
 Employs knowledge gained in basic research
Research Suppliers
Internal External
Full Service Limited Service
FULL SERVICE
 Syndicated Data Services - collect information that is
available to multiple subscribers
 Standardized Services - the service used to collect
the data is standardized but the data collected is
unique to each buyer
 Customized Services - the research service provided
to each client is tailored to meet needs of that client
LIMITED SERVICE
 Field Services - specialize in data collection
 Market Segment Specialists - specialize in
conducting research pertaining to particular market
segments
 Data Entry Services - specialize in editing and coding
questionnaires and entering data
 Sample Design & Distribution Services - provide
distribution lists to firms and/or conduct surveys
 Data Analysis Services - analyze data already
collected
 Specialized Research Technique Firms - employ
highly -specialized services such as eye-tracking,
skin-response testing, brand naming, packaging
services
ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH
 Objectivity in Interpretation
purposely withholding information
changes in wording from original survey
overstating generalizability of findings
 Integrity in Data Collection
false data
failure to abide by agreed-upon data collection
procedures
ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH
 Proper treatment of subjects
lack of privacy in responses
harmful treatment of subjects
 Plagiarism
copying another’s survey instrument
reporting another’s results as your own
ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH
 Deontology - Focuses on individuals’ rights
 Teleology - Focuses on trade-offs between individual costs and
group benefits
ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH
 Sugging - selling under the guise of a survey (Illegal)
 Frugging - fund raising under the guise of a survey (Unethical)
ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH
If you think you might be doing something unethical,
it probably is unethical.
 What are ethics?
 What are ethical
principles
 Ethical business
behaviour
 Brief history of
evolution of ethics in
research
 Ethical principles
 Ethics in research
 Qualitative vs
quantitative data
WHAT ARE ETHICS?
 Societal norms adopted by a group
 A conception of conduct that is right or wrong
 Deal with fundamental human relationships
 Are a universal human trait
ETHICAL PRINCIPLES – WHAT ARE THEY?
 Guides to moral behaviour
 Good: honesty, keeping promises, helping others, respective
rights of others
 Bad: lying, stealing, deceiving, harming others
 Universality of ethical principles: should apply in the
same manner in all countries, cultures, communities
 Relativity of ethical principles: vary from country to
country, community to community
ETHICAL RELATIVISM
 Defined by
 Various periods of time in history
 A society’s traditions
 The special circumstances of the moment
 Personal opinion
 Meaning given to ethics are relative to time, place,
circumstance, and the person involved
REASONS FOR ETHICAL BUSINESS
BEHAVIOUR
 Fulfill public expectations for business
 Prevent harming others
 Improve business relations
 Improve employee productivity
 Reduce penalties
 Protect business from others
 Protect employees from their employers
 Promote personal morality
BUSINESS ETHICS ACROSS
ORGANIZATIONAL FUNCTIONS
 Accounting ethics – honesty, integrity, accuracy
 Marketing ethics (Professional Codes of Conduct in Marketing
& Information Systems – from American Marketing
Association)
 Information systems ethics
 Others
HISTORY OF ETHICS IN RESEARCH
 In the past – not given attention
 Changed with Nuremberg trial findings
 Nuremberg Code (1948)
 Thalidomide (late 1950s)
 Declaration of Helsinki (1964)
 Tearoom Trade (1960s)
 Milgram (1963)
 Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1932-1972)
ETHICS IN RESEARCH – WHY?
To protect rights and welfare of
research participants
and
to protect the wider society or community within which the
research is being conducted
MECHANISMS OF PROTECTION
 Ethical regulations or guidelines
 Law
 Universal principles of human rights
ETHICAL PRINCIPLES
 In research, help to make and to justify decisions
 Are abstract and difficult to implement in practical
situations
 Key phrases:
 Voluntary participation
 Informed consent
 Risk of harm
 Confidentiality
 Anonymity
HUMAN SUBJECTS
 Canada
Tri-council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving
Humans
 Medical Research Council of Canada
 Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
 Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
 http://www.pre.ethics.gc.ca/english/policystatement/policystatement.cfm
ETHICAL PRINCIPLES GUIDING
RESEARCH
 Respect for human dignity
 Respect for free and informed consent
 Respect for vulnerable persons
 Respect for privacy and confidentiality
 Respect for justice and inclusiveness
 Balancing harms and benefits
 Minimizing harm
 Maximizing benefit
1. HUMAN DIGNITY
 Cardinal Principle
 Basis of ethical obligations
 Two essential components
 The selection and achievement of morally acceptable ends
 The morally acceptable means to those ends
Protect the multiple and interdependent interests of
the person (bodily, psychological, cultural integrity)
2. CONSENT
 Presumption that individuals have capacity and right
to make free and informed decisions
 In research = dialogue, process, rights, duties,
requirements for free and informed consent by the
research subject
 Your research cannot proceed without consent
 Consent must be maintained throughout
3. VULNERABLE PERSONS
 Ethical obligations towards vulnerable persons
 Diminished competence
 Diminished decision-making capacity
 Entitled to special protection, special procedures to
protect their interests
 Entitlement (based on grounds of human dignity,
caring, solidarity, fairness) to special protection
against abuse, exploitation, discrimination
4. PRIVACY & CONFIDENTIALITY
 Fundamental to human dignity
 Standards protect the access, control, dissemination of
personal information
 Helps to protect mental, psychological integrity
 9-11
5. HARMS AND BENEFITS
 Balance critical to ethics of human research
 Foreseeable harms should not outweigh anticipated benefits
 Harms-benefits analysis affects welfare and rights of subjects
6. JUSTICE AND INCLUSIVENESS
 i.e., fairness and equity
 Procedural justice
 Application process
 Distributive justice
 Harms and benefits
7. NON-MALFEASANCE
 Duty to avoid, prevent or minimize harm
 No unnecessary risk of harm
 Participation must be essential to achieving scientifically and
societally important aims that cannot be realized without the
participation of human subjects
 Minimizing harm requires smallest number of human subjects
that will ensure valid data
8. BENEFICENCE
 The duty to benefit others
 The duty to maximize net benefits
 Produce benefits for subjects themselves, other individuals
 Produce benefits for society as a whole and for the
advancement of knowledge (usually the primary benefit)
QUALITATIVE VS QUANTITATIVE DATA
 Quantitative
 Logic rests on generalizability & representativeness
 Sample size is criterion for judging rigour
 Respondents can refuse to answer questions
 Qualitative approaches
 Designed to best reflect experiences
 Therefore most qualitative research less formally structured
 Logic rests on notice of saturation – the point at which no new
insights are likely to be obtained
 Saturation guides sample size
QUALITATIVE ISSUES
 More invasive therefore ethical issues more subtle
 Tendency to investigate more completely
 Reliance on observations, interviews, stealthy methods can
lull subjects
 Easy to violate confidentiality and trust
 Power and status differentials
CONFIDENTIALITY & ANONYMITY
 Quantitative
Techniques
 Can be easier
 Anonymity of the firm
sometimes impossible
 Pseudonyms common
but do not eliminate
problem
 Qualitative
Techniques
 Smaller sample sizes
 Informed consent more
critical
 Problems with data
presentation/
publication
OBLIGATIONS OF THE RESEARCHER
 Follow code of ethics
 Objectivity
 No misrepresentation
 Preserve anonymity and confidentiality
 Competing research proposals
RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS OF SUBJECT
 Right to informed consent
 Obligation to be truthful
 Right to privacy
 Right to confidentiality
 Right to no harm
 Right to be informed
RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS OF CLIENT
(USER)
 Ethical conduct between buyer and seller
 Obligation to reduce bias
 Do not mis-represent data
 Privacy
 Commitment to research
 Pseudo-pilot studies
 Advocacy
LANGUAGE
 The language you use is very, very important. What may be
clear to you may not be clear to the reader. The reader, who
is your prospective participant, is in a different world than you
– don’t expect the reader to read your mind, to know your
intentions….
CASES
QUESTIONS?

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Marketing Research Ethics

  • 1. Asif Jamal Visiting Lecturer University Of Sindh, Mirpurkhas campus MARKETING RESEARCH ETHICS
  • 2. CLASSIFYING RESEARCH z BASIC RESEARCH z APPLIED RESEARCH
  • 3. BASIC MARKETING RESEARCH  Expands existing knowledge base  Becomes part of public domain  Published in scholarly journals  Conducted primarily by individuals with terminal degrees  Used for purposes of theory discovery and theory verification
  • 4. APPLIED MARKETING RESEARCH  Conducted in order to solve specific real-world problems  Usually propriety information  Employs knowledge gained in basic research
  • 6. FULL SERVICE  Syndicated Data Services - collect information that is available to multiple subscribers  Standardized Services - the service used to collect the data is standardized but the data collected is unique to each buyer  Customized Services - the research service provided to each client is tailored to meet needs of that client
  • 7. LIMITED SERVICE  Field Services - specialize in data collection  Market Segment Specialists - specialize in conducting research pertaining to particular market segments  Data Entry Services - specialize in editing and coding questionnaires and entering data  Sample Design & Distribution Services - provide distribution lists to firms and/or conduct surveys  Data Analysis Services - analyze data already collected  Specialized Research Technique Firms - employ highly -specialized services such as eye-tracking, skin-response testing, brand naming, packaging services
  • 8. ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH  Objectivity in Interpretation purposely withholding information changes in wording from original survey overstating generalizability of findings  Integrity in Data Collection false data failure to abide by agreed-upon data collection procedures
  • 9. ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH  Proper treatment of subjects lack of privacy in responses harmful treatment of subjects  Plagiarism copying another’s survey instrument reporting another’s results as your own
  • 10. ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH  Deontology - Focuses on individuals’ rights  Teleology - Focuses on trade-offs between individual costs and group benefits
  • 11. ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH  Sugging - selling under the guise of a survey (Illegal)  Frugging - fund raising under the guise of a survey (Unethical)
  • 12. ETHICS IN MARKETING RESEARCH If you think you might be doing something unethical, it probably is unethical.
  • 13.  What are ethics?  What are ethical principles  Ethical business behaviour  Brief history of evolution of ethics in research  Ethical principles  Ethics in research  Qualitative vs quantitative data
  • 14. WHAT ARE ETHICS?  Societal norms adopted by a group  A conception of conduct that is right or wrong  Deal with fundamental human relationships  Are a universal human trait
  • 15. ETHICAL PRINCIPLES – WHAT ARE THEY?  Guides to moral behaviour  Good: honesty, keeping promises, helping others, respective rights of others  Bad: lying, stealing, deceiving, harming others  Universality of ethical principles: should apply in the same manner in all countries, cultures, communities  Relativity of ethical principles: vary from country to country, community to community
  • 16. ETHICAL RELATIVISM  Defined by  Various periods of time in history  A society’s traditions  The special circumstances of the moment  Personal opinion  Meaning given to ethics are relative to time, place, circumstance, and the person involved
  • 17. REASONS FOR ETHICAL BUSINESS BEHAVIOUR  Fulfill public expectations for business  Prevent harming others  Improve business relations  Improve employee productivity  Reduce penalties  Protect business from others  Protect employees from their employers  Promote personal morality
  • 18. BUSINESS ETHICS ACROSS ORGANIZATIONAL FUNCTIONS  Accounting ethics – honesty, integrity, accuracy  Marketing ethics (Professional Codes of Conduct in Marketing & Information Systems – from American Marketing Association)  Information systems ethics  Others
  • 19. HISTORY OF ETHICS IN RESEARCH  In the past – not given attention  Changed with Nuremberg trial findings  Nuremberg Code (1948)  Thalidomide (late 1950s)  Declaration of Helsinki (1964)  Tearoom Trade (1960s)  Milgram (1963)  Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1932-1972)
  • 20. ETHICS IN RESEARCH – WHY? To protect rights and welfare of research participants and to protect the wider society or community within which the research is being conducted
  • 21. MECHANISMS OF PROTECTION  Ethical regulations or guidelines  Law  Universal principles of human rights
  • 22. ETHICAL PRINCIPLES  In research, help to make and to justify decisions  Are abstract and difficult to implement in practical situations  Key phrases:  Voluntary participation  Informed consent  Risk of harm  Confidentiality  Anonymity
  • 23. HUMAN SUBJECTS  Canada Tri-council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans  Medical Research Council of Canada  Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)  Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)  http://www.pre.ethics.gc.ca/english/policystatement/policystatement.cfm
  • 24. ETHICAL PRINCIPLES GUIDING RESEARCH  Respect for human dignity  Respect for free and informed consent  Respect for vulnerable persons  Respect for privacy and confidentiality  Respect for justice and inclusiveness  Balancing harms and benefits  Minimizing harm  Maximizing benefit
  • 25. 1. HUMAN DIGNITY  Cardinal Principle  Basis of ethical obligations  Two essential components  The selection and achievement of morally acceptable ends  The morally acceptable means to those ends Protect the multiple and interdependent interests of the person (bodily, psychological, cultural integrity)
  • 26. 2. CONSENT  Presumption that individuals have capacity and right to make free and informed decisions  In research = dialogue, process, rights, duties, requirements for free and informed consent by the research subject  Your research cannot proceed without consent  Consent must be maintained throughout
  • 27. 3. VULNERABLE PERSONS  Ethical obligations towards vulnerable persons  Diminished competence  Diminished decision-making capacity  Entitled to special protection, special procedures to protect their interests  Entitlement (based on grounds of human dignity, caring, solidarity, fairness) to special protection against abuse, exploitation, discrimination
  • 28. 4. PRIVACY & CONFIDENTIALITY  Fundamental to human dignity  Standards protect the access, control, dissemination of personal information  Helps to protect mental, psychological integrity  9-11
  • 29. 5. HARMS AND BENEFITS  Balance critical to ethics of human research  Foreseeable harms should not outweigh anticipated benefits  Harms-benefits analysis affects welfare and rights of subjects
  • 30. 6. JUSTICE AND INCLUSIVENESS  i.e., fairness and equity  Procedural justice  Application process  Distributive justice  Harms and benefits
  • 31. 7. NON-MALFEASANCE  Duty to avoid, prevent or minimize harm  No unnecessary risk of harm  Participation must be essential to achieving scientifically and societally important aims that cannot be realized without the participation of human subjects  Minimizing harm requires smallest number of human subjects that will ensure valid data
  • 32. 8. BENEFICENCE  The duty to benefit others  The duty to maximize net benefits  Produce benefits for subjects themselves, other individuals  Produce benefits for society as a whole and for the advancement of knowledge (usually the primary benefit)
  • 33. QUALITATIVE VS QUANTITATIVE DATA  Quantitative  Logic rests on generalizability & representativeness  Sample size is criterion for judging rigour  Respondents can refuse to answer questions  Qualitative approaches  Designed to best reflect experiences  Therefore most qualitative research less formally structured  Logic rests on notice of saturation – the point at which no new insights are likely to be obtained  Saturation guides sample size
  • 34. QUALITATIVE ISSUES  More invasive therefore ethical issues more subtle  Tendency to investigate more completely  Reliance on observations, interviews, stealthy methods can lull subjects  Easy to violate confidentiality and trust  Power and status differentials
  • 35. CONFIDENTIALITY & ANONYMITY  Quantitative Techniques  Can be easier  Anonymity of the firm sometimes impossible  Pseudonyms common but do not eliminate problem  Qualitative Techniques  Smaller sample sizes  Informed consent more critical  Problems with data presentation/ publication
  • 36. OBLIGATIONS OF THE RESEARCHER  Follow code of ethics  Objectivity  No misrepresentation  Preserve anonymity and confidentiality  Competing research proposals
  • 37. RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS OF SUBJECT  Right to informed consent  Obligation to be truthful  Right to privacy  Right to confidentiality  Right to no harm  Right to be informed
  • 38. RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS OF CLIENT (USER)  Ethical conduct between buyer and seller  Obligation to reduce bias  Do not mis-represent data  Privacy  Commitment to research  Pseudo-pilot studies  Advocacy
  • 39. LANGUAGE  The language you use is very, very important. What may be clear to you may not be clear to the reader. The reader, who is your prospective participant, is in a different world than you – don’t expect the reader to read your mind, to know your intentions….
  • 40. CASES