Deirdre Nissenson Kurzweil is currently serving as a market research manager in the Office of Publications and Marketing at Cornell University.
Prior to her role at Cornell, Kurzweil was affiliated with Art & Science Group's market research through its field house, Widener-Burrows & Associates. Kurzweil has experience in all phases of marketing and market research, both qualitative and quantitative. She has utilized a variety of advanced analytic techniques -- including trade-off analysis (conjoint, discrete choice), segmentation analysis, discriminant analysis, and factor analysis -- on behalf of a diverse clientele in the non-profit sector, as well as the financial services and consumer products industries.Previously, she was a project manager at Total Research Corporation and Opinion Research Corporation in Princeton, New Jersey. She has also worked as senior research analyst for Merrill Lynch, where much of her work focused on assessing the impact of various advertising efforts.
Deirdre Kurzweil received her undergraduate degree from Dickinson College.
Telephone interviews, which we are all very familiar with because we all get calls at dinnertime from people annoying us to do a survey. The reason why they are powerful is that they have the lowest non-response bias, so in layman's terms that means more people will do a telephone survey than any o...(Full transcript available to logged in subscribers.).
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