Title: Secondary and Primary Data Collection
1Secondary and Primary Data Collection
- Secondary
- Published information available from other
sources that has already been gathered. This
information is relevant to the problem at hand.
Either internal or external to an organisation.
Start by collecting this type. - Primary
- Data collected for the first time, by a method
other than secondary research, to answer specific
questions. Primary data comes from the
researcher for the purpose of the specific
purpose it hand.
2Group Task 1
- In groups of 5 or 6 identify the advantages and
disadvantages of using secondary and primary
research. - Be prepared to report you findings to the group.
3Advantages and Disadvantages of Secondary Research
- Advantages
- Inexpensive
- Easily accessible
- Immediately available
- Will provide essential background and help to
clarify or refine research problem essential
for literature review - Secondary data sources will provide research
method alternatives. - Will also alert the researcher to any potential
difficulties.
4Advantages and Disadvantages of Secondary Research
- Disadvantages
- Frequently outdated e.g. census data
- Potentially unreliable not always sure where
information has come from - May not be applicable may not totally answer
your research questions - Lack of availability i.e. no data available or
very difficult to obtain
5Advantages and Disadvantages of Primary Research
- Advantages
- Applicable and usable if done right
- Accurate and reliable can answer your direct
research questions - Up-to-date as you have collected the data
6Advantages and Disadvantages of Primary Research
- Disadvantages
- Expensive
- Not immediately available takes time to define
problem, sampling frame, method and analysis. - Not as readily accessible
7Primary Research Methods Techniques
Primary Research
Quantitative Data
Qualitative Data
- Surveys
-
- Personal interview (intercepts)
- Mail
- In-house, self-administered
- Telephone, fax, e-mail, Web
Experiments
Focus groups
Individual depth interviews
Mechanical observation
Human observation
Simulation
Case studies
8Primary Research Methods
- Experimental (e.g. test marketing)
- Observational (human and mechanical)
- Survey (mail, telephone, personal interview,
in-house self-administered, online) - Focus groups (groups of 8 to 12 people with
moderator trying to reach a consensus of
opinions)
9Group Task 2
- Make a list of the advantages disadvantages of
the following research methods as applied to the
leisure/travel and tourism sectors - Personal Interviews
- Mail Surveys
- Telephone Surveys
- In-House, Self-Administered Surveys
- Online Surveys
- Focus groups
10Personal Interviews (including focus groups)
- Advantages
- High response rate
- Great flexibility (ability to adapt/explain
questions) - Can show or demonstrate items
- Fuller explanations can be given
- Very timely data
- Body language can emphasize responses
11Personal Interviews
- Disadvantages
- Relatively expensive
- Possibility of interviewer and interviewee bias
- Personal nature of questions (e.g., age or
income) - Respondents not relaxed (put on the spot)
- Time may not be convenient for respondents
12Mail Surveys
- Advantages
- Relatively inexpensive
- No interviewer bias
- Consistent questions (for all respondents)
- Large number of respondents can be included
- Anonymity
- Respondents can choose the most convenient time
to answer
13Mail Surveys
- Disadvantages
- Low response rates (relative to other survey
types) - Junk mail syndrome
- Impersonal nature
14Telephone Surveys
- Advantages
- More flexibility compared to mail surveys
- Quicker but will cost you some money (telephone
bill) - High response rates
- Disadvantages
- Interviews tend to be a lot shorter
- More obtrusive than mail
- Greater difficulties in rapport building -
Researchers cannot study behaviour or body
language - Long-distance calls are expensive
15In-House, Self-Administered Surveys
- Advantages
- Completed on-sight by customers within the
premises of a leisure and travel organisation - Convenient
- Disadvantages
- Generate low response rates
16Online Surveys
- Advantages
- Relative speed and flexibility
- Large and growing audience
- Relatively inexpensive
- Uses graphics and visual aids
- Disadvantages
- Technical skills and time required to develop and
analyse questionnaires - May deter visitors from your website.
17Sources of Secondary Research Information for
Leisure and Travel External
- Library books, journals, newspapers, CD-roms,
directories. - Internet on-line computer searches e.g. Data
bases, periodicals (Emerald) and newsletters,
demographic data (GIS). (URLs and Search
engines) - Trade associations and societies (also available
on internet). - Census also government data on internet
- Published company accounts
18Sources of Secondary Research Information for
Leisure and Travel Internal
- Sales invoices e.g. memberships or flights sold
- Usage figures e.g. leisure centre
- Personnel records e.g. staff turnover
- Sales people e.g. expense accounts, call reports
19Task 3 Collecting Secondary Data/Information
- Group 1 - Log on to the internet and collect
data/information from the worksheet provided. - Group 2 Go to the library and collect
data/information from the worksheet provided
(once you have found the data/information please
put the source back in its original place).