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Consultancy tips for OMI projects. OMI and Oxford University Careers Service Michaelmas Term 2012. Phases of a typical project. Structure Problem. Gather data. Formulate conclusions. Communicate findings. Implement. In-house knowledge Industry sources Client Primary research
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Consultancy tips for OMI projects OMI and Oxford University Careers Service Michaelmas Term 2012
Phases of a typical project Structure Problem Gather data Formulate conclusions Communicate findings Implement In-house knowledge Industry sources Client Primary research Modelling Identify options Evaluate options in light of findings Make recommendations Informal and formal reviews Note and respond to issues and concerns Overall planning Prototyping and / or piloting Execution Break problem down Generate hypotheses Specify data needed to validate or refute Develop preliminary work plans
Structure Problem • Ensures you cover all the possible parts of the problem, even if you discount some initially • Keep the overall client objective in mind and make sure that each part of the structure supports it • For each part you have prioritised, make some hypotheses • Competition has lower costs • Customers (or some sub-set) want a different product
Segment each relevant area so you can cope 100s or 1,000s of products, variants, services, customers, sales – you cannot think about them all • Define useful segments of each area • With common characteristics and drivers of behaviour For example, for us, OMI partners fall into three categories • Specific problem • General problem • Don’t know what their problem is
Segmentation of MPI Ecuador project • Everything, • Focus: market analysis
Exercise 1: Think about some segments for Manna Project International (MPI) market analysis and develop several hypothesis for one of them. • Product • Service • Customers • Competition • Pricing • Costs • External environment
Having hypothesised some segments, identify and collect data to test it • Think about what the ideal result will be • Sketch the chart • Think big/wide/ideal world • Work back to identify the best data sources • Industry publications • General articles • Surveys – you don’t need many • Anecdote, ‘nuggets’ from interview • Directionally sound may be sufficient, depending on the data
Comparisons • With the organisation itself over time • Year on year growth • Seasonality • With competitors • In same or different geography • With what the customers want • With absolute standards (eg 100% right first time)
Exercise 2: Describe the data and outputs you want to test your hypotheses • Use your hypotheses and segments • Develop the charts/findings you would need • Sketch results • Suggest how you will source the data you need
Proposal Letters • Set expectations • Demonstrate your understanding • What you’ll do and won’t do • When you’ll do it • Who is doing it • How you’ll do it • What you’ll deliver
Sections of a proposal letter – 1 • Introduction • It was a pleasure to meet you…. • Background • 3rd party non-contentious description of the client • Demonstrate your understanding of the situation • Issues to be addressed / being faced by the client • Easiest to write these as open questions with sub-parts eg • What levels of customer service should XX strive for? • By customer type • By day of week • As measured in lead time and reliability
Proposal letter - 2 • Scope – set the limits • We will focus initially on xxx sector of the market • How we will work with you • Where? If on client site, will you need a room? • How often meet? • Who are the key contacts on each side? • Deliverables • Describe your outputs: meetings, reports • Staffing and Timing • Who is working on the project – include 1 para CVs in appendix • Set some dates • Close warmly
Proposal letter - 3 • MPI template • Legal disclaimer Exercise – draft what you can of a proposal letter; identify the gaps • What questions will you ask in your first client meeting?
Gather data Market Research and Interviewing
Before you go • Designate a Fieldwork Co-ordinator • Daily schedule • Allow for flexibility • Information about transport, public holidays etc • Prepare material: Surveys, interview questions • Keep client informed
Funding • Colleges – DEADLINES • - Hertford: Edmund de Unger Academic Purposes • - Lincoln: Travel Grant, Old Members Fund, Annual Fund • OMI and clients • Other funds and trusts, charity funds at companies eg 02 Think Big • Alumni grants (https://www.alumni.ox.ac.uk/)
Data sources • Primary data sources • Information collected specifically to solve a problem • Observation (mechanical or personal) • Questioning (in depth focus groups, group interviews etc) • Secondary data sources • Previously collected or published information • Inside organisation • Outside organisation
Market Research • Define the audience • How will you collect the data? • Select a sampling method • How will we analyse any data collected? • Speak to the clients requesting the research. Make sure that you agree on the problem! • Go ahead and collect the data • Conduct the analysis of the data • Check for errors, eliminate outliers
Collecting primary data • Qualitative research • Seeks in-depth, open-ended responses, not Yes or No answers • Personal in-depth interview • Focus group interview • Findings can be used as a basis for further quantitative research • Quantitative research • Seeks structured responses that can be summarised numerically • Usually through surveys • Sampling reduces the need to survey everyone
Ways to collect data – Surveying Top 10 things not to do in a survey: • Ask for too much personal info • Bad timing – get people at the wrong time • Survey takes too long to complete • Unclear/ambiguous questions • Unusable scales • Too much free text • Unrelated to hypothesis – collecting irrelevant details/data (see 3) • Leading questions • Sequence is wrong • “How much more of this is there?”
Human resources during fieldwork Work with the client and other local institutions, especially universities ! • BENEFITS • Quick and extensive results by working with a bigger group (eg OMI researchers, client’s HR and local students) • Ethnocentricity & cultural sensibility • Language constraints
Ways to collect data - interviewing • Introduce yourself, your purpose and your time constraints – modify your introductory phrases depending on people’s reactions • Ask open questions and probing questions • MIX & MATCH – quantitative and qualitative questions • Active listening – what is being said and how it is being said • PAIR UP – 1 person taking notes, 1 person interviewing
Structure Problem Gather data Formulate conclusions Communicate findings Implement In-houseknowledge Industry sources Client Primary research Modelling Identify options Evaluate options in light of findings Make recommendations Informal and formal reviews Note and respond to issues and concerns Overall planning Prototyping and / or piloting Execution Break problem down Generate hypotheses Specify data needed to validate or refute Develop preliminary work plans
Formulate conclusions • Do the data support the hypothesis? • Yes • No • Sort of • Refine the hypothesis and collect more data if necessary • Work out what you now have learned – what’s the next level of hypothesis?
The proposal and presentation are your promise and your legacy Communicate findings • Proposal sets expectations • What you’ll do and won’t do • When you’ll do it • Who is doing it • Presentation is an historic record of your quality • Clearly articulates your conclusions and their supporting data • Is accurate and unambiguous • Lays out actions for the client • Is self-standing – can be understood without you there, 6 months later
Report writing is difficult to do well • It is unlike essay or article writing, no flowing English • Relies on inductive logic • Requires strong structure on each page… • …and from one page to the next • Needs a strong ‘red line’ • Your report will be your presentation
Overall report structure • Executive summary – write this last • Body organised around the conclusions of your study • Recommendations for Next Steps at the end • Details in an appendix (perhaps bound separately) • Use the OMI Template
How to write a great report, and have a panic-free project • Layout overall report with ‘place holders’ • Firm up sections as you collect data and confirm hypotheses • Keep reviewing overall order • Check there is an overall story • Polish every word and phrase
Vertical logic leads from the headline, and gives support with bullet points/charts • Structured like a newspaper – headline first, tell the essentials of the story • Make sure it answers “So what?” • Support the headline with evidence on the page • Check for a common mistake: putting your headline in the final bullet point
Final tips to reduce panic and induce calm and order • Draft in the first week • Update and reorder it as you learn • No pride in ownership • Sin of omission is worse than the sin of commission • Discard analyses if they prove nothing or go nowhere • Be ruthless: cut words… • …and choose exactly the right word