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COLLECTING INFORMATION AND FORECASTING DEMAND | CHAPTER 3 69<br />

A well-researched and well-executed<br />

marketing campaign for the state of<br />

Michigan increased tourism and<br />

state tax revenue.<br />

Companies with superior information can choose their markets better, develop better offerings,<br />

and execute better marketing planning. The Michigan Economic Development Corporation<br />

(MEDC) studied the demographic information of its visitors and those of competing Midwestern<br />

cities to create a new marketing message and tourism campaign. The information helped MEDC<br />

attract 3.8 million new trips to Michigan, $805 million in new visitor spending, and $56 million in<br />

incremental state tax revenue over the period 2004–2008. 3<br />

Every firm must organize and distribute a continuous flow of information to its marketing managers.<br />

A marketing information system (MIS) consists of people, equipment, and procedures to<br />

gather, sort, analyze, evaluate, and distribute needed, timely, and accurate information to marketing<br />

decision makers. It relies on internal company records, marketing intelligence activities, and marketing<br />

research. We’ll discuss the first two components here, and the third one in the next chapter.<br />

The company’s marketing information system should be a mixture of what managers think they<br />

need, what they really need, and what is economically feasible. An internal MIS committee can interview<br />

a cross-section of marketing managers to discover their information needs. Table 3.2<br />

displays some useful questions to ask them.<br />

TABLE 3.2<br />

Information Needs Probes<br />

1. What decisions do you regularly make?<br />

2. What information do you need to make these decisions?<br />

3. What information do you regularly get?<br />

4. What special studies do you periodically request?<br />

5. What information would you want that you are not getting now?<br />

6. What information would you want daily? Weekly? Monthly? Yearly?<br />

7. What online or offline newsletters, briefings, blogs, reports, or magazines would you like to see<br />

on a regular basis?<br />

8. What topics would you like to be kept informed of?<br />

9. What data analysis and reporting programs would you want?<br />

10. What are the four most helpful improvements that could be made in the present marketing<br />

information system?

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