Field and tab

MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Monday November 25, 2024
Revision as of 20:02, 22 March 2010 by MyWikiBiz (talk | contribs) (Begin article about "field and tab")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
This article in MyWikiBiz Main article space is published with "all rights reserved" by the component contributor(s) to the article. You must obtain express written permission to copy or re-use this article.


Field and tab refers to a limited set of services provided in the marketing research industry. The name refers to the task of fielding a questionnaire (that is, interviewing consumers or whomever is the target market, to get their response data to an array of questions), then tabulating the resulting data into convenient two-dimensional tables (called "cross-tabulations"), based on answers to at least two of the questions included in a survey.

An example of a cross-tabulation (simple)
Answer choices All Respondents Males Female
Voted for Democrat 55% 50% 60%
Voted for Republican 45% 50% 40%


A field and tab research vendor will typically not be responsible for drafting a questionnaire or assisting on high-level sampling design discussions. Likewise, after the data has been collected and tabulated, the vendor will typically not interpret the resulting data nor prepare a deck of presentation slides. These responsibilities fall on the client (the research buyer) or on a consultant that the client may hire.

Field and tab is always a part of the offering of a full service research vendor. A full-service firm will sometimes offer only their field and tab component when the budget for a particular study is limited.

Bibliography

  • Hague, Paul N., Market research: a guide to planning, methodology & evaluation (3rd edition), Kogan Page publisher, 2002.