Research Design: Week 6 - February 22, 2017
Research Design: Week 6 - February 22, 2017
Research Design: Week 6 - February 22, 2017
Research Design
MK4103 Business Research Method
NO YES
Research Onion
Research design focuses
upon turning
research question and
objectives into a
research project.
It considers:
Research strategies
Research choices and
Time horizons
More Certain
More Defined
Purpose of Study
Example:
Our sales are What kind of people Will buyer purchase
declining and we dont buying our product? more of our products in
know why. Who buys our a new package?
competitors product?
Would people be What feature do buyers Which of two
interested in our new prefer in our product? advertising campaigns
product idea? is more effective?
Differing Strategies
The strategy you choose will enable you to answer your particular
research question(s) and meet your research objectives.
Each strategy can be used for exploratory, descriptive, and explanatory
study. But! Some of these more clearly belong more closely to the
deductive approach, others to the inductive approach.
The strategies are NOT mutually exclusive.
The strategies are:
Experiment
Survey
Case Study
Action Research
Grounded Theory
Ethnography
Archival Research
Differing Strategies: Experiment
The purpose of an experiment is to study causal links between
variables, to establish whether a change in one independent
variable (e.g. the running of a sales promotion) produces a
change in another dependent variable (e.g. the level of sales).
Steps:
1. Identify and define the issue that is to be studied
2. Formulate research hypotheses
3. Design the experiment:
4. Run the experiment and collect the data.
5. Assemble the data and apply relevant tests to ensure
statistical significance of the findings.
Differing Strategies: Survey
Survey: a research strategy which involves the
structured collection of data from a sizeable population.
Data collection may take the form of questionnaires,
structured observation and structured interviews.
Surveys are particularly suitable for asking questions
such as: who? what? where? how much? and how
many?. These types of question make them useful for
exploratory and descriptive research.
Sampling in survey makes it possible to generate
findings that are representative of the whole population
at a lower cost than collecting the data for the whole
population.
Differing Strategies: Case Study
Case study: a research strategy which involves the
investigation of a particular contemporary topic within
its real-life context, using multiple sources of evidence.
Suitable for why? question, although the questions of
what?, how? are also relevant.
Data collection techniques used in a case study may be
varied and include a combination of interviews,
observation and documentary analysis as well as
questionnaires.
Differing Strategies: Action
Research
Action research: research strategy concerned with the
management of a change and involving close
collaboration between practitioners and researchers.
Focusing on purpose and concerned with action, so it is
particularly useful for how questions.
The researcher becomes part of the organization.
Promotes change within the organization.
The action research spiral:
Diagnosing Planning Taking action Evaluating
Start all over
Differing Strategies: Grounded
Theory
Grounded theory: a research strategy in which theory
is developed from data generated by a series of
observations or interviews principally involving an
inductive approach.
Belongs principally to the inductive approach to
research because you develop theory from data
generated by a series of observations or interviews.
Is an interpretative process, not a logico-deductive one
Differing Strategies:
Ethnography
Ethnography: a research strategy that focuses on
describing and interpreting the social world through
first-hand field study.
Is very time-consuming since it takes place over an
extended time period.
Involves extended participant observation.
Differing Strategies: Archival
Research
Archival research: a research strategy which analyses
administrative records and documents as the principal
source of data, be minutes of meetings, memos or
emails containing information or instructions, accounts,
contracts or letters.
Concentrates on past events and may allow changes
over time to be charted. But the extent to which you
use the archival strategy will depend on the availability
of key documents.
Combining Research Strategies
Combining Research Strategies
Multi method approach
refers to those combinations where we use more than one data
collection technique but restricted within either quantitative or
qualitative world view.
Causal Correlational
Causal Correlational
Causal Correlational
Causal Correlational
Example:
WARNING!
Read Sekaran (2003) to study the example of unit of analysis from each level: individual,
dyads, group, division, industry, countries, organization, and culture.
Time Horizon
Cross-Sectional Longitudinal
Longer
Remember! Whether a study is a causal or a correlational one thus depends on the
type of research questions asked and how the problem is defined.
Type of Investigation
Cross-Sectional Longitudinal
Called one-shot.
A study can be done in which data are gathered just once, perhaps over
a period of days or weeks or months, in order to answer a research
question.
Type of Investigation
Cross-Sectional Longitudinal