Tuesday, 5 February 2013

Criteria 1 Questions Word Doc


Unit 3 Research Techniques for  the Creative Media Industries

 

1 Understand the nature and purposes of research in the creative media industries

D1 comprehensively explain the nature and purposes of research in the creative media industries with elucidated examples and consistently using subject terminology correctly

 

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Types of research

·         Explain in detail the meaning of quantitative research

 

Quantitative research is questions which get a numerical answer. These can be things such as statistics , percentages, etc. The advantage of this is you can put the information into graphs or tables to show the results. This makes it easier to see what results you got and quickly find the answers.

 

·         Give a variety of examples showing how and why quantitative research might be used in the media industry

 

Quantitative research might be used in the media industry to find out if their product is good. They would ask how many people liked the product or not and put that in a pie chart as percentages to show the people making it to carry on. Normally a TV audience tells the producers of a TV program if it’s good to see if they carry on. The same for a new game, they would release it as an Alpha product or Beta to test is out and gives feedback. This is usually some questions at the end of the test asking what they thought out of 5 of specific aspects.

 

·         What are the benefits and limitations of quantitative research

 

The benefits of quantitative research is you get specific answers which can be easily read and find out the results quickly. Another advantage is you can convert the results into different data such as tables or graphs. The limitations of quantitative research are you can’t get peoples opinions.

 

·         Explain in detail the meaning of qualitative research

 

Qualitative research is questions where you get in-depth answers which consist of worded answers. This can be opinions of what someone thinks on a subject, etc.

 

·         Give a variety of examples showing how and why qualitative research might be used in the media industry

 

An example of qualitative research in the media industry is focus groups. If there is a new song from an artist , people give feedback telling them their opinion on the song saying good points , bad points and what they would like better in the song for example.

 

·         What are the benefits and limitations of qualitative research

 

The benefits of qualitative research are you get detailed responses which you can find out a lot of information about this. You usually get peoples opinion on a subject which tells you their feelings about that certain thing which usually tells you how to improve it. The limitations of this are you can’t store the data conveniently in graphs etc. This means you can’t see an overall opinion and makes it harder to find information since you have to look through all the responses yourself.

 

Methods of research ; Secondary

·         Explain in detail the meaning of secondary research

 

Secondary research means you got information from another source. This could be off the internet for example where someone else has gone and got the results and give them out to everyone.  This is usually used in medical and legal research but can also be applied to just about anything. You can usually find secondary research in magazines , newspapers and government statisitics.

 

·         Give a variety of examples of sources of secondary research and their purpose (eg. www.ITNSource.comnews film archive, http://www.visit4info.com/ - archive of TV advertisements).

 

        http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/ - Current news.

        http://www.guardian.co.uk/ - Current news

        http://www.statistics.gov.uk/hub/index.html - National Statisitics

        http://www.euromonitor.com/ - Market research

 

·         What are the purposes, benefits and limitations of secondary research

 

The main purpose of secondary research that its fast and easy to get. That’s the only reason people get it. If they get it from a secondary source then they don’t have to go through all the effort of going and asking everyone themselves. The limitations of this are pretty low since you can find just about any information from someone else but the downside is the reliability. Just because someone’s give you some statistics it doesn’t always mean their right.

 

·         The following are examples of organizations who gather data which can be accessed for use by others;

Summarise what each organization does and what useful data might be available from it.

 

·         http://www.nrs.co.uk/toplinereadership.html - This website is the “National Readership Survey”. This is a survey which is carried out 12 months a year 7 days a week with 36,000 people being interviewed each year. It is completely at random who they choose to answer and usually takes27 minutes. The questions mainly consist of their readership of newspapers , magazines, etc.

 

 

·         http://www.bbfc.co.uk/

 

The BBFC is the rating for film and TV. They make the classification for these. You can find all the classifications online on the website which anyone can research. You can do primary research to find out the classifications on your own but its faster and easier to do it this way. Another thing with BBFC is you know its reliable since it’s a known company.

 

·         http://www.rajar.co.uk/

 

Rajar is a company which tracks how many people listen to radio stations and for how long. They give you quantitative results for the changes using percentages and then give you a description describing more about it. This is important if you are attempting to make your own radio station and you want to know what is popular at the moment to then see how they do it etc.

 

·         www.barb.co.uk  

 

Barb is a non-profit organisation that gets the results of views on TV channels. They track the amount of people that watch a specific programs. You can sort them by amount or channel etc. The company is funded by major players in the industry that Barb supports.

 

·         www.skillset.org

 

Skillset are a Sector Skills Council which is made up of TV, film, radio, interactive media, animation, computer games, facilities, photo imaging, publishing, advertising, fashion and textiles. People trying to find secondary research of these subjects can access all this.

 

·         www.ukfilmcouncil.org.uk

 

The UK Film Council is the BFI who get film statistics. For example the weekend box office figures which shows how much a box office film makes in a weekend. They also get information on theatrical, audiences, exhibition and film on DVD, TV and VOD.

 

·         www.ipsos-mori.com

 

Ipsos MORI is one of the largest and best-known UK research company. They get research mainly of advertising, loyalty, marketing, media CT, social and political, and reputation.

 

Methods of research ; primary

·         Explain in detail the meaning of primary research

 

Primary research is research, which is collected first hand by you. You can do this using questionnaires or focus groups etc.

·         Give a variety of examples of sources of primary research and their purposes. (eg. Test screening of films to a focus group to judge audience reaction and see if any changes need to be made prior to release. For high grades you could show specific examples of where such research has taken place and what the results were, i.e. what changes were decided upon).

 

Every company does primary research on their product to find out what people think. For a food company like Kellogg’s will send out freebies of their new product for people to try and give them feedback. This is about the same as every other product where people test it and give their viewpoint on it.

 

An example of this is JuniorProf. He did research on how people exercise and their gym routine. He asked questions like what works best for your workout etc. By getting all this research he manages to change his own gym routine to benefit him more.

http://juniorprof.wordpress.com/2010/08/21/a-primary-research-paper-has-just-changed-my-gym-routine/

 

·         What are the purposes, benefits and limitations of primary research

 

The advantages of primary research are that it’s reliable since you got the information and know the sources of the answers. Also is you can choose what information to get since it could be missing if you try and get it secondary. This is a huge benefit to primary and most of the time worth it if you have the time to get it in. This can also be put as a limitation since it takes a lot of time to gather the information, which you might not have in some circumstances. In some cases it can be expensive to get all the paper printed for example in a questionnaire.

 

 

Purposes of research:

Consider the following purposes of research;

Detail why you would need to conduct them, what you might need to find out and the methods you could use to do it. For higher grades you could show real examples of where this has been done in industry and how the information was utilised.

 

 

 

 

·         Research about your audience

You need to research about your audience to see their interests etc. This is important because if you make a product for a certain audience and they are not interested in using it then it won’t sell. For example this is a requirement if you have a radio station since knowing what music your audience like is vital or they won’t listen to your radio.  Capital radio’s audience is mainly teens and young adults so they find out what music there into and play them on the radio and this is usually UK Top 40.

 

·         Research about the market for a product

Market research is important so you know the current market and what sells in it. This includes thing such as price, size, etc. For example if Sony want to release a new MP3 Player then they would need to research popular MP3 players for example the iPod. This tells them what features people want, price their willing to pay and size of the product. If they didn’t do this then they would make something that is inferior and people won’t buy it.

 

·         Pre-production/production research

Production and pre-production research is important because for some examples its needed. If a company making a documentary didn’t do research then it wouldn’t be informative. Research doesn’t just have to be straight forward. For example they could do a radio interview but then ask questions about their documentary which doesn’t have to be aired but could be used for it.

 

 

 

Criteria 1

Notes
What is Research - Why is this important -
Collection of information to base final product
types - primary and secondary
for the researc weve done is content research
another way - content research
content research - primary - stuff we've done ourselves or seen in real life or information youve gathered (has to be gathered by the person)
gather images - primary - camera pictures or draw it yourself (make notes)
primary - talk to people (questionnaire and survays ) focus group(20 people ask them questions
secondary - gettin images off internet , look online

primary research involved the collection of original data or data that doesn not already exist . Primary research is often undertaken after the researcher has gained some insight into the issue by collecting socondary data
some good sources are interviews,ovserevations,questionnaires ,surveys, types of questions,focus groups , audience panals , participation in interenet forums ,data gathering agencies , eg proadcasters audience research board , radio joince audience reseach , self generated eg own video , audio or photograpic records of events

secondary research is the collection of existing research material or daya

some good sources are books journals , reference based books and directories , periodicals , newspapers , film archives , photolibraries , world wide web , seaeching internet forums , cd rom databases , audio matrerial , ratings , circulation figures , goverment statisitcs

quantitative is statistics - pie chart bar chart - use ampling techniques such as surbeys - good examples programme ratings , readership circulation figures , hits on a website , box office figures , sales of cd and dvd - help estimate future events or quantities (closed questions)

qualitative is used to help understand how people feel and why they deel as tehy do . It is concerned collecting in depth information asking questions such as why do you say that? Some good examples are film reviews , game reviews , fanzine websites , attitunes to media products , responeses to news converage , responses to advertising campaigns and discussions (open questions)

Research is important because it tells you stuff which you dont know. There is two forms of research, quantitative and qualitative. Each of which is to describe what type of results you get.

Firstly is quantitative. This is numerical answers and statistics. With this you can make pie charts, bar charts, etc. You can use ampling techniques such as surveys to get numerical results. These are usually closed questions where you can organize the results.