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Chapter 2. Research Design Fundamentals. Explain how a study is created based upon a description of the business decision involved. Describe the role of theory and science in business research. Describe the three basic business research designs.
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Chapter 2 Research Design Fundamentals • Explain how a study is created based upon a description of the business decision involved. • Describe the role of theory and science in business research. • Describe the three basic business research designs. • Explain the roles of exploratory and confirmatory research. • Explain the roles of qualitative and quantitative research. • Provide a description of basic qualitative research techniques.
The Basic Research Process Phase I – Formulation: • Develop Theory • Research Questions • Hypotheses • Study Design Decision Making Process Phase III – Analytical • Analyze Data • Draw Inferences • Interpret Results • Acknowledge Limitations Phase II – Execution • Design Data Collection Devices • Collect Data • Check for Errors • Code Data • Store Data
THEORY AND SCIENCE Theory – a set of systematically related statements, including some law-like generalizations that can be tested empirically. Law-like generalizations are expectations of what will happen under specified circumstances that allow predictions of reality.
The Role of Theory in Business Research • The Fuel for Research • Theory offers explanations and predictions. • Normative decision rules suggest what should be done when faced with a situation described by a theory, but there are many gaps in knowledge used to develop normative decision rules. • Theory is Practical • Narrows down things to be studied. • “Law-like generalizations” provide hypotheses. • Hypotheses based on theory determine what must be measured. • Theory-based versus intuition-based explanations.
The Scientific Method • Observation • Discovery • Develop Hypotheses • Data Collection • Analysis • Conclusions Theory
Problem Formulation • Determine the purpose of the research. • Understand and define the complete problem. • Identify and separate out measurable symptoms to determine the root problem versus easily observable symptoms. • Determine the unit of analysis = individuals, households, businesses, objects, geographic areas, etc., or some combination. • Determine the relevant variables, including specifying independent and dependent relationships, constructs, etc.
Law-Like Generalizations Research Question – states a general proposition. Is gender related to job outcomes? Hypothesis – formal, specific statement of some unproven supposition that tentatively explains certain facts or phenomena. Female service employees report higher job satisfaction than male service employees.
Rigor of Science • Data represent facts about hypothesized variables. • Data are analyzed to determine consistency with prediction. • If data and prediction are consistent – hypothesis is supported. • If data and prediction are inconsistent – hypothesis is not supported.
“Good” Science is . . . . • Empirical • Replicable • Analytical • Theory Driven • Logical • Rigorous FLAT OR ROUND?
PARSIMONY • Parsimonious research – means applying the simplest approach that will address the research questions satisfactorily. Complex Pragmatic
Types of Research Designs • Exploratory • Descriptive • Causal
Research Design Objectives • Exploratory – to formulate the problem, develop hypotheses, develop constructs, establish priorities for research, refine ideas, clarify concepts, etc. • Descriptive – to describe characteristics of certain groups, estimate the proportion of people in a population who behave in a given way, and to make directional predictions. • Causal – to provide evidence of the relationships between variables, the sequence in which events occur, and/or to eliminate other possible explanations.
Exploratory Research Designs • Exploratory research is useful when: • Decision maker has little information. • Research questions are vague. • Decision making is in discovery phase. 1 of 3 Basic Business Research Designs Literature reviews Unstructured Interviews Depth interviews Focus groups Delphi technique Projective techniques
Descriptive Research Designs • Descriptive research describes a situation: • Structured interviews are often used. • Studies are: • Cross-Sectional – provide user with a snapshot at a given point in time. • example: sample surveys • Longitudinal – describe events over time. • example: panel data
Causal Research Designs • Causal research tests whether or not some event causes another: • Experiments are used to test for a causal relationship. • A causal relationship means a change in X (the cause) makes a change in Y (the effect) occur.
Causal Designs Does one thing cause another? In testing cause and effect relationships researchers look for four conditions: • Time Sequence • Covariance • Nonspurious Association • Theoretical Support
Experiments • Potential causes are “controlled” by using experimental designs and manipulation: • Manipulation – the causal variable is altered over different conditions. • Lab experiment – manipulation takes place in artificial setting. • maximizes control. • Field experiment – manipulation takes place in the relevant business context. • increases representativeness.
Experimental Designs • Between Subjects Designs • Every “subject” receives one level of experimental treatment. • Within Subjects Designs • Every “subject” receives multiple levels of experimental treatments. • More prone to demand effects = things that allow subjects to guess the hypothesis. • Factorial Designs • Two or more experimental treatments controlled at the same time.
Between and Within Subjects Treatment Assignments “Between Subjects” Manipulation: Treatment 1 Level A Level B Level A “Within Subjects” Level A Level B
Exploratory and Confirmatory Research Purposes • Exploratory research seeks to: • Discover issues. • Generate ideas. • Develop research hypotheses. • Confirmatory research seeks to: • Test specific hypotheses. • Both types of research require data.
Data • Data = information recorded to represent facts: • Objective Data – data that is independent of any single person’s opinion. • Subjective Data – two types: • Data that are an individual’s opinion. • Researcher dependent data.
More on Data • Primary Data - collected for the purpose of completing the current research project. • Secondary Data – collected for some other research purpose. • Saves money and time • Does it fit the purpose? • Is it of high quality? ciber.bus.msu.edu/ginlist www.standardandpoors.com www.census.gov www.usadata.com
Still More on Data • Qualitative Data = descriptions of things made without assigning numbers. • result from unstructured interviews – researcher interpretations needed. • Quantitative Data = measurements in which numbers are used directly to represent properties of things. • ready for statistical analysis.
Qualitative Research • Searches academic & trade/professional literature. • Discovers and identifies ideas, thoughts, feelings, etc. • Exploratory research design. • Uses open-ended, unstructured, probing questions in interviews and focus groups and generates qualitative data. • Provides preliminary insights and understanding. • Limited ability to generalize findings, typically because samples are small and non-random. • Improves conceptualization. • Facilitates drafting questionnaires.
Quantitative Research • Validates facts, estimates, relationships, predictions, etc. • Descriptive and causal designs. • Mostly structured questions. • Larger samples. • Ability to generalize is good with proper sampling design. • Uses quantitative data.
Summary • Introduced the basic business process. • Described the role of theory and science in business research. • Described the three basic research designs. • Discussed exploratory versus confirmatory research. • Compared and contrasted qualitative and quantitative research and data.