Marketing Research: European Edition: An Applied Orientation (Prentice Hall international editions)

Marketing Research: European Edition: An Applied Orientation (Prentice Hall international editions)

by NareshMalhotra (Author), David Birks (Author)

Synopsis

Malhotra's Marketing Research text is widely recognised as a comprehensive, applied and authoritative book on the nature and scope of marketing research. This European edition draws on the strengths of the original and builds on the material to reflect European marketing research practice. In doing so it achieves a comprehensive introduction to marketing research with a well-balanced coverage of both quantitative and qualitative techniques. Marketing Research data analysis procedures are illustrated with respect to SPSS, SAS, BMDP, Minitab and Excel, along with other popular programmes. The book is supported with a wide range of supplementary material for both students and lecturers. The CD-ROM provides access to software from SNAP and MOSAIC, packages designed to aid survey design, data analysis and display and manipulate statistics. Marketing Research has been updated throughout to reflect the way in which marketing research is taught in a European context.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 752
Edition: 1
Publisher: Financial Times/ Prentice Hall
Published: 05 Jan 2000

ISBN 10: 0139229647
ISBN 13: 9780139229640

Media Reviews
'This book shows much promise and might very well become the European marketing research handbook of the future. I believe every student of marketing research in Europe should obtain a copy of this book. The author has undertaken a Herculean task and has succeeded with flying colours.' Martin Wetzels, Maastricht University 'Malhotra's revised European edition is a comprehensive guide to modern marketing research. Not only is it a useful text for students of modern marketing research, providing them with examples of current practice, it is also a useful text for managers, who are either commissioning research or disseminating and operationalising its results.' Paul Baines, Middlesex University