In AP Business, primary research is original, firsthand data a business collects directly from its target customers through methods like surveys, A/B testing, focus groups, interviews, experiments, and observations to test a business hypothesis (EK 2.3.C.1).
Primary research (the CED calls it primary-source research) is data you go out and collect yourself, straight from the source. Instead of reading a report someone else wrote, the business runs its own surveys, interviews, focus groups, A/B tests, experiments, or observations to learn directly from customers (EK 2.3.C.1).
The whole point is to test a business hypothesis, an assumption about a customer, product, or market that you want to check before betting real money on it (EK 2.3.C.2). Say you assume people want a bigger phone screen. Rather than guessing, you survey customers and ask them to rate screen sizes. That fresh, original data is primary research. It can be quantitative (numbers that answer how many, how much, how often) or qualitative (words and images that answer why and how), and businesses often mix methods to get the full picture (EK 2.3.A.2, EK 2.3.C.3).
Primary research lives in Unit 2: Marketing, Topic 2.3 Market Research, and it's the heart of learning objective AP Business 2.3.C: conduct and interpret primary-source research to test a hypothesis about target customers and preferences. It connects upward to AP Business 2.3.A, which explains why businesses research at all, and pairs with 2.3.B on secondary research. The big idea is decision-making backed by evidence. Before a company commits to a product, price, or campaign, it validates its assumptions, and primary research is how it gets answers no existing report can give.
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Visual cheatsheet
view gallerySecondary Research (Unit 2)
These are the two halves of market research. Secondary research is data someone else already collected (government reports, industry databases); primary research is data you collect yourself. Businesses usually start with cheaper secondary research to size up the market, then run primary research to answer the specific questions no published report covers.
Focus Group (Unit 2)
A focus group is one specific primary research method. It gathers a small group to talk through a product, producing qualitative data that answers the 'why' behind customer feelings, not just the 'how many.'
Data Visualization (Unit 2)
Collecting primary data is only step one. Objective 2.3.D wants you to turn those findings into bar charts, line graphs, or pie charts so stakeholders can actually see the pattern and make an evidence-based decision.
Big Data (Unit 2)
A/B testing and online experiments often generate huge volumes of customer behavior data. That's where primary research feeds into big data, giving businesses massive datasets to spot trends and refine marketing decisions.
Expect multiple-choice stems that hand you a scenario and ask you to name the research type or the data type it produces. For example, a smartphone maker surveys 500 customers and asks them to rate screen sizes from 1 to 10, that's primary research generating quantitative data. A common trap pairs primary with secondary: if a company is reading industry trends and competitor reports, that's secondary research, not primary. On free-response, you may need to recommend a primary research method for a given hypothesis (survey vs. focus group vs. A/B test) and justify whether it yields quantitative or qualitative data. No released FRQ has used the exact phrase, but the skill of choosing and interpreting a research method is squarely in the CED.
Primary research is data the business collects firsthand for its own specific question (surveys, interviews, experiments). Secondary research is pre-existing data someone else gathered and published (government stats, commercial databases, academic studies). Quick test: if your company created the data, it's primary; if you found it already made, it's secondary.
Primary research is original, firsthand data a business collects directly from its target customers.
Its methods include surveys, A/B testing, focus groups, interviews, experiments, and observations (EK 2.3.C.1).
The purpose is to test a business hypothesis before committing money or resources to a decision (EK 2.3.C.2).
Primary research can produce quantitative data (numbers) or qualitative data (words and images), and businesses often combine methods.
Primary research differs from secondary research, which uses data someone else already collected and published.
It's original data a business collects itself, directly from customers, using methods like surveys, focus groups, interviews, A/B testing, experiments, and observations to test a hypothesis about its target market (EK 2.3.C.1).
A survey is primary research because the business creates and runs it to collect fresh data firsthand. If the company instead read survey results published in a government or industry report, that would be secondary research.
Primary research is data you collect yourself for your own question; secondary research is data someone else already gathered and published. Start with secondary research to understand the market broadly, then use primary research to answer your specific hypothesis.
No. Primary research can be quantitative (numbers answering how many, how much, how often) or qualitative (words and images answering why and how). A survey rating screen sizes 1 to 10 is quantitative; a focus group discussion is qualitative.
It's an assumption about a customer, product, or market that a business wants to verify before acting (EK 2.3.C.2). For example, 'customers prefer a larger screen size' is a hypothesis you'd test with primary research like a survey or A/B test.
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