Brief Guide To Case Study Analysis PDF
Brief Guide To Case Study Analysis PDF
Brief Guide To Case Study Analysis PDF
1) What is a Case?
A Case is essentially a story, usually but not always, a true story. In business schools or
business-related units, a Case typically illustrates challenges and opportunities face by many
organisations, whether they be established organisation or young start-ups. Cases usually
contain a variety of information such as, industry and market data, financials reports, human
resource issues, the organisation’s strategies, including marketing and management
strategies, the protagonist and other characters. Information provided may be quite general
in nature but usually illustrates concepts and theories related to the course you are studying.
A Case usually ends with dilemmas faced by the protagonist, the firm or other main
characters.
1
a) Sometimes a set of questions are asked for students’ response. These questions may be
quite specific to the case, for example “At what point did the whole project fell apart?” or
“Provide creative and workable recommendations for XYZ to more forward”.
b) Other times, students may be asked to provide a synopsis of the Case or an in-depth
analysis of key issues
c) Students may be asked to provide an analysis of the Case. This type of question can be
quite broad. As you approach the analysis of the Case, it might help if you provide a
conceptual framework. Your conceptual framework may include, where appropriate, a simple
SWOT analysis, PESTEL, Porter’s Generic model or 5-Forces model, business model
frameworks, etc.
Use theoretically grounded arguments as much as possible. Apply what you have learnt
from other disciplines such as management (leadership, negotiation, value chain, managing
conflicts and diversity, cross cultural management) and marketing (consumer behaviour,
communication models, adoption models). If you are in finance and accounting, economics,
psychology and sociology, there are many theoretical models that you can use too. For
example, we often use the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) in management, marketing
and entrepreneurship to help explain why people behave the way they do. TPB was in fact
developed by Icek Ajzen, a social psychologist.
2
During discussion, aim to be concise, compelling and distinctive. Learn to listen, do not jump
to conclusion. Respect your classmates’ point of view, be generous to them when they
convinced you. Be ready to add to the discussion, not merely start your own discussion
thread.
Analysis must be relevant to decision-making. We cannot keep analysing with no directions
and no end in sight.
c) Responding to written Case Study analysis
For this, refer to Point 3 above “How to respond to Case Study analysis”.
Use concise writing. Write in a formal style, using business language. Use complete
sentences. Check and adhere to assessment guidelines. Stick to word count, reference
where appropriate and remember to use theoretically grounded arguments.
Bibliography
This Brief Guide is prepared by Dr Frances Chang for Case Study Analysis in
MGMT8027/MGMT7027 and MGMT2080
Many of the guidelines provided in this “Brief Guide to Case Study Analysis” are
sourced from Harvard Business School articles and videos. A good example is,
https://hbsp.harvard.edu/casestudyhandbook/