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This document is the final project report for a quantitative method course. It includes sections on the introduction, literature review, research methodology, results and findings, discussion, and conclusion. The introduction provides background on the issue and objectives of the research. The literature review covers relevant theories and prior empirical evidence. The research methodology describes the research design, data collection techniques, and analytical methods. The results and discussion sections present the findings and interpret them in relation to the literature. The conclusion summarizes the results and recommendations. The report also provides examples of how to format tables, figures, and equations within the text and structure the references section.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views4 pages

Report Template

This document is the final project report for a quantitative method course. It includes sections on the introduction, literature review, research methodology, results and findings, discussion, and conclusion. The introduction provides background on the issue and objectives of the research. The literature review covers relevant theories and prior empirical evidence. The research methodology describes the research design, data collection techniques, and analytical methods. The results and discussion sections present the findings and interpret them in relation to the literature. The conclusion summarizes the results and recommendations. The report also provides examples of how to format tables, figures, and equations within the text and structure the references section.

Uploaded by

artychariot
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Final Project Report

Quantitative Method for Business

A.Author1, B.Author2, C.Author3 and D.Author4


1
Affiliation: dept. name of organization, name of organization, acronyms acceptable, city, country
2
Affiliation: dept. name of organization, name of organization, acronyms acceptable, city, country
3
Affiliation: dept. name of organization, name of organization, acronyms acceptable, city, country

Abstract
Importance: Do Not Use Symbols, Special Characters, or Math in Paper Title or Abstract. The abstract is
defines the research objective, research methodology, finding, originality and implication for the further
research. Maximum words in this abstract 250 words excluding the keywords.
Keywords—Input maximum five words or phrase; in alphabetical; separated by semicolon

Abstrak
Penting: Jangan Gunakan Simbol, Karakter Khusus, atau Matematika dalam Judul Kertas atau Abstrak. Bagian
dari abstrak adalah tujuan penelitian, metodologi penelitian, temuan, orisinalitas dan implikasi untuk penelitian
lebih lanjut. Kata-kata maksimum dalam abstrak ini adalah 250 kata dan tidak termasuk kata kunci.
Kata kunci— Maksimal lima kata atau kata kunci frase; dalam abjad; dipisahkan oleh titik koma

I. INTRODUCTION (HEADING 1)
Introduction covers the background of the issue or problem and the urgency and rationalization of activities
(research or service). The objectives of the activities and problem solving plan are presented in this section.
Relevant literature reviews also included in this section.

II. LITERATURE REWIEW (HEADING 2)


Literature studies are not limited to theory, but also empirical evidence. The research hypothesis (if any)
must be built from the concept of theory and supported by empirical studies (previous research). Reference
inclusion is presented as follows: (author, year). [Times New Roman, 10, normal].
Hypothesis development (if exist), If the paper has a theoretical framework and have a hypothesis, it should
explain in this chapter how the framework and hypothesis is develop which strengthen with the previous
research.
A. Tables
All tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals. Every table should have a caption. Headings should be
placed above tables, left justified. Only horizontal lines should be used within a table, to distinguish the column
headings from the body of the table, and immediately above and below the table. Tables must be embedded into
the text and not supplied separately. Below is an example which the authors may find useful.

Table 1. An example of a table.


An example of a column heading Column A (t) Column B (t)
And an entry 1 2

Article info
Received (dd/month/year)
Revised (dd/month/year)
Accepted (dd/month/year)
[email protected]
DOI:
Copyright@2019. Published by School of Economics and Business – Telkom University
Last name authors

And another entry 3 4


And another entry 5 6

State source of the table

B. Figures
All figures should be numbered with Arabic numerals (1,2,3,….). Every figure should have a caption. All
photographs, schemas, graphs and diagrams are to be referred to as figures. Line drawings should be good
quality scans or true electronic output. Low-quality scans are not acceptable. Figures must be embedded into the
text and not supplied separately. In MS word input the figures must be properly coded so the PDF files will also
properly coded. Lettering and symbols should be clearly defined either in the caption or in a legend provided as
part of the figure. Figures should be placed at the top or bottom of a page wherever possible, as close as possible
to the first reference to them in the paper.
The figure number and caption should be typed below the illustration in 8 pt and left justified [Note: one-line
captions of length less than column width (or full typesetting width or oblong) centered]. Artwork has no text
along the side of it in the main body of the text. However, if two images fit next to each other, these may be
placed next to each other to save space. For example, see Fig. 1.

Fig. 1.example (State the source of the figure)

C. Equations
Equations and formulae should be typed in Mathtype, and numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals in
parentheses on the right hand side of the page (if referred to explicitly in the text). They should also be separated
from the surrounding text by one space.
2
E=m c (1)

where: E = Energy
m = Massa
c = Speed of light
1
f c=
2 π √ LC tot
The symbols in your equation should defined

2
Last name authors

III. RESEARCH METHODOLOGY (HEADING 3)


Research methodology, The research method describes the design of activities, scope or object, main
materials and tools, place, data collection techniques, operational definitions of research variables, and
analytical techniques. [Times New Roman, 10, normal].

IV. RESULT / FINDING (HEADING 4)


Result section presents the results of the study. Research results can be supplemented with tables, graphs
(pictures), and / or charts.

V. DISCUSSION (HEADING 5)
The discussion section describes the results of data processing, interpreting the findings logically, linking
them with relevant reference sources. [Times New Roman, 10, normal].

VI. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION (HEADING 6)


The conclusion contains a brief summary of the results of the study and discussion. [Times New Roman, 10,
normal].

1. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The preferred spelling of the word “acknowledgment” in America is without an “e” after the “g.” Avoid the
stilted expression “one of us (R. B. G.) thanks ...”. Instead, try “R. B. G. thanks...”. Put sponsor
acknowledgments in the unnumbered footnote on the first page.

2. REFERENCES
References must be listed at the end of the paper. Do not begin them on a new page unless this is absolutely
necessary. Authors should ensure that every reference in the text appears in the list of references and vice versa.
Indicate references by (Sekaran & Bougie, 2017) or (Prajogo et al., 2016) in the text. Some examples of how
your references should be listed are given at the end of this template in the ‘References’ section, which will
allow you to assemble your reference list according to the correct format and font size. It should in APA style
and alphabetic. The example for the reference:

● Journal articles
Print
Williams, P, & Naumann, E. (2011). Customer satisfaction and business performance: a firm-level
analysis. Journal of Services Marketing, 25(1), 20 - 32 [Journal titles should be given in full]
Online only
Demers, A. (2009). The war at home: consequences of loving a veteran of the Iraq and Afghan wars. The
Internet Journal of Mental Health, 6(1). [online]
http://www.ispub.com/journal/the_internet_journal_of_mental_health/volume_6_numb
er_1_45/article/the-war-at-home-consequences-of-loving-a-veteran-of-the-iraq-and- afghanistan-wars.html
(Accessed 15 July 2010).
● Books
Smith, A., & Brown, D. (2005). Quantitative Data Analysis with SPSS for Windows, 2nd ed. Routledge,
London.
● Edited books

3
Last name authors

Casson, M. (Ed.). (2008). The Oxford handbook of entrepreneurship. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
● Book chapters
Estrin, S., Meyer, K.E., & Bytchkova, M. (2006). Entrepreneurship in transition economies. In Casson, M.
et al (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Entrepreneurship, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 693–725.
● Ebooks
Lowry, R. (2009). Concepts and Applications of Inferential Statistics [online]. Vassar College,
Poughkeepsie NY. http://faculty.vassar.edu/lowry/intro.html. (Accessed 21 February 2009).
● Theses
Godfrey, K.B. (1993). Tourism and Sustainable Development: Towards a Sustainable Framework.
Unpublished PhD thesis, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, United Kingdom.
● Government publications
Department of Culture, Media and Sport, and Department of Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform.
(2009). Digital Britain: the interim report. DCMS and DBERR, London. (Cm 7548). Department of
Culture, Media and Sport, and Department of Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (2009). Digital
Britain: the interim report [online]. DCMS and DBERR, London. (Cm 7548).
http://www.culture.gov.uk/images/publications/digital_britain_interimreportjan09.pdf. (Accessed 1
February 2009).
● Conference papers
Vaughan, R., Andriotis, K., & Wilkes, K. (2000). Characteristics of tourism employment: the case of
Crete. Paper Presented at the 7th ATLAS International Conference. NorthSouth: Contrasts and
Connections in Global Tourism. 18-21 June 2000. Savonlinna, Finland.
● Reports
Printed
Halliday, J. (1995). Assessment of the accuracy of the DTI’s database of the UK wind speeds. Energy
Technology Support Unit, ETSU-W-11/00401/REP.
Online
Liu, R., & Wassell, I.J. (2008) A novel auto-calibration system for wireless sensor motes. [online]
Technical report UCAM-CL-TR-727, Computer Laboratory, Cambridge University, Cambridge. http://
www.cl.cam.ac.uk/techreports/UCAM-CL-TR-727.pdf (Accessed 18 September 2011)
● Standards
International Organization for Standardization. (2008). ISO 9001:2008: Quality management systems --
Requirements. Geneva, ISO.
● Online papers, preprints
Chandler , D. (2009). Semiotics for beginners. http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/Documents/S4B/sem02.html
(Accessed 26 July 2010).
● Blogs
Shah, V. (2011). Capitalism - what comes next?’ Thought Economics. [online] 1 September.
http://thoughteconomics.blogspot.com/2011/09/capitalism-what-comes- next.html (Accessed 14
September 2011).

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