How To Analyze A Case Study
How To Analyze A Case Study
How To Analyze A Case Study
This Hands-on Guide presents a structured framework to help you analyze case studies.
Knowing how to analyze a case will help you attack virtually any business problem.
A case study helps students learn by immersing them in a real-world business scenario
where they can act as problem-solvers and decision-makers. The case presents facts
about a particular organization. Students are asked to analyze the case by focusing on the
most important facts and using this information to determine the opportunities and
problems facing that organization. Students are then asked to identify alternative courses
of action to deal with the problems they identify.
A case study analysis must not merely summarize the case. It should identify key issues
and problems, outline and assess alternative courses of action, and draw appropriate
conclusions. The case study analysis can be broken down into the following steps:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
You will have to decide which of these factors-or a combination of factors-- is most
important in explaining why the problem occurred.
3. Specify alternative courses of action. List the courses of action the company can
take to solve its problem or meet the challenge it faces. For information systemrelated problems, do these alternatives require a new information system or the
modification of an existing system? Are new technologies, business processes,
organizational structures, or management behavior required? What changes to
organizational processes would be required by each alternative? What
management policy would be required to implement each alternative?
Remember, there is a difference between what an organization should do and
what that organization actually can do. Some solutions are too expensive or
operationally difficult to implement, and you should avoid solutions that are
beyond the organizations resources. Identify the constraints that will limit the
solutions available. Is each alternative executable given these constraints?
4. Evaluate each course of action. Evaluate each alternative using the facts and
issues you identified earlier, given the conditions and information available.
Identify the costs and benefits of each alternative. Ask yourself What would be the
likely outcome of this course of action? State the risks as well as the rewards
associated with each course of action. Is your recommendation feasible from a
technical, operational, and financial standpoint? Be sure to state any assumptions on
which you have based your decision.
5. Recommend the best course of action. State your choice for the best course of action
and provide a detailed explanation of why you made this selection. You may also want to
provide an explanation of why other alternatives were not selected. Your final
recommendation should flow logically from the rest of your case analysis and should
clearly specify what assumptions were used to shape your conclusion. There is often no
single right answer, and each option is likely to have risks as well as rewards.