Business Research Process
Study Notes on Business Research Process by Waqas Tariq
Topic: Business
Research Process And Its implementation:-
What is Business Research?
“Business Research is a systematic inquiry that provides information. More specifically, it is a process of planning, acquiring, analyzing, and disseminating relevant date, information, and insights to decision makers in ways that mobilize the organization to act in ways that maximize business performance”.
In general, business research refers to any type of
researching done when starting or running any kind of business. For example,
starting any type of business requires research into the target customer and
the competition to create a business plan. Conducting business market research in existing businesses is helpful in
keeping in touch with consumer demand. Small
business research begins with
researching an idea and a name and continues with research based on customer
demand and other businesses offering similar products or services. All business
research is done to learn information that could make the company more
successful.
Business research methods vary depending on the size of
the company and the type of information needed. For instance, customer research may involve finding out both a
customer’s feelings about and experiences using a product or service. The
methods used to gauge customer
satisfaction may be questionnaires,
interviews or seminars. Researching public data can provide businesses with
statistics on financial and educational information in regards to customer
demographics and product usage, such as the hours of television viewed per week
by people in a certain geographic area. Business research used for advertising
purposes is common because marketing dollars must be carefully spent to
increase sales and brand recognition from ads.
Other than business market research and advertising research, researching is done
to provide information for investors. Business people aren't likely to invest
in a company or organization without adequate research and statistics to show
them that their investment is likely to pay off. Large or small business
research can also help a company analyse its strengths and weaknesses by
learning what customers are looking for in terms of products or services the
business is offering. Then a company can use the business research information
to adjust itself to better serve customers, gain over the competition and have
a better chance of staying in business.
Most
industries have trade journals that include research reports and statistics
that relate to a certain type of business. International information is
especially important to businesses that have ties with other countries and need
to understand more about the cultures and demographics of other nations. For
example, International Business Research is a publication of the Canadian
Center of Science and Education and includes business essays and academic
editorials from businesspeople from different parts of the world such as
Australia, India and Malaysia.
Business Research Process:-
The research process goes through a six-stage process.
Stage 1: Clarifying the Research Question:-
The management-research question hierarchy process of sequential
question formulation leads a manager or researcher from management
dilemma to investigative questions. The process begins with the management dilemma—the
problem or opportunity that requires a business decision. The management dilemma
is usually a symptom of an actual problem, such as: Rising costs, the discovery
of an expensive chemical compound that would increase the efficacy of a
drug, increasing tenant move-outs from an apartment complex, declining
sales, a larger number of product defects during the manufacture of an
automobile and an increasing number of letters and phone complaints
about post purchase service
The management dilemma can also be triggered by an early signal of an
opportunity or growing evidence that a fad may be gaining staying power.
Identifying management dilemmas is rarely difficult. Choosing one dilemma on
which to focus may be difficult. Choosing incorrectly may result in a waste of
time and resources. Experienced managers claim that practice makes perfect in
this area. New managers may wish to develop several management-research
question hierarchies, each starting with a different management dilemma.
Subsequent stages of the hierarchy take the marketer and his or her research
collaborator through various brainstorming and exploratory research exercises
to define the following: Management question—the management dilemma restated in
question format. Research question(s)—the hypothesis that best states the
objective of the research; the question(s) that focuses the researcher’s
attention.
Investigative questions—questions the researcher must answer to
satisfactorily answer the research question; what the marketer feels he or she
needs to know to arrive at a conclusion about the management dilemma.
Management questions—the questions asked of the participants or the
observations that must be recorded. The definition of the management question
sets the research task.
Stage 2: Proposing Research.
Exhibit 4-3 summarizes the research proposal process. Once the research
question is defined, the manager must propose research in order to allocate resources
to the project. A guide might be that (a) project planning, (b) data gathering,
and (c) analysis, interpretation, and reporting each share about equally in the
budget. Without budgetary approval, many research efforts are rejected for lack
of resources. Types of budgets in organizations where research is purchased and
cost containment is crucial include: Rule-of-thumb budgeting—taking a fixed
percentage of some criterion. Departmental or functional-area budgeting—allocates
a portion of total expenditures in the unit to research activities. Task budgeting—selects
specific research projects to support on an ad hoc basis. There is a great deal
of interplay between budgeting and value assessment in any management decision
to conduct research. In profit-making concerns, business managers are
increasingly faced with proving that the research they initiate or purchase
meets return-on-investment (ROI) objectives. Conceptually, the value of
business research is not difficult to determine. Whether research is conducted
by for-profit or not-for-profit organizations, the value of the research decision
with research—however it is measured—must exceed the value of the decision
without research.
Ex Post Facto Evaluation: If there is any
measurement of the value of research, it is usually an after-the-fact event.
While the post-research effort at cost-benefit comes too late to guide a
current research decision, such analysis may sharpen the manager’s ability to
make judgments about future research proposals.
Prior or Interim Evaluation: Some research
projects are sufficiently unique that managerial experience provides little aid
in evaluating the research proposal.
Option Analysis: Managers can conduct a formal
analysis with each alternative research project judged in terms of estimated costs
and associated benefits and with managerial judgment playing a major role. The
critical task is to quantify the benefits from the research. Estimates of benefits
are crude and largely reflect an orderly way to estimate outcomes under
uncertain conditions.
Decision Theory: When there are alternatives from
which to choose, a rational way to approach the decision is to try to assess
the outcomes of each action. Consider two possible actions (alternatives) as A1
and A2. The manager chooses the action that affords the best outcome—the action
choice that meets or exceeds whatever criteria are established for judging
alternatives. Each criterion is a combination of a decision rule (criterion
for judging the attractiveness of two or more alternatives when using a
decision variable) and a decision variable (a quantifiable characteristic,
attribute, or outcome on which a choice decision will be made). The alternative
selected (A1 and A2) depends on the decision variable chosen and the decision
rule used. The evaluation of alternatives requires that: Each alternative is
explicitly stated. A decision variable is defined by an outcome that may be
measured. A decision rule is determined by which outcomes may be compared.
The Research Proposal: A written proposal is
often required when a study is being suggested. This is especially true if an
outside research supplier will be contracted to conduct the research. A research
proposal may be oral.
Stage 3: Designing the Research Project.
Research Design: The research design is the
blueprint for fulfilling objectives and providing the insight to answer
management’s dilemma. The field of business research offers a large variety of methods,
techniques, procedures, and protocols. The numerous alternatives and
combinations spawned by the abundance of tools may be used to construct
alternative perspectives on the same problem.
Sampling Design: Another step in planning the
research project is to identify the target population (those people,
events, or records that have the desired information and can answer the
measurement questions) and then determine whether a sample or a census is
desired. Who and how many people will be interviewed? What events will
be observed, and how? Which, and how many, records will be inspected? A census
is a count of all elements in a population. A sample is a group of
cases, participants, events, or records constituting a portion of the target population,
carefully selected to represent that population. Probability sampling (every
person within the target population get a nonzero chance of selection)
and non probability sampling may be used to construct the sample.
Pilot testing: The last step in a research
design is often a pilot test. To condense the project time frame, this step can
be skipped. A pilot test is conducted to detect weaknesses in research methodology
and the data collection instrument, as well as provide proxy data for selection
of a probability sample. The pilot test should approximate the anticipated
actual research situation (test) as closely as possible. A pilot test may have
from 25 to 100 subjects and these subjects do not have to be statistically
selected. Pilot testing has saved countless survey studies from disaster by
using the suggestions of the participants to identify and change confusing,
awkward, or offensive questions and techniques.
Stage 4: Data Collection and Preparation.
The gathering of data includes a variety of data gathering alternatives.
Questionnaires, standardized tests, and observational forms (called checklists)
are among the devices used to record raw data. What are data? Data can
be the facts presented to the researcher from the study’s environment. Data can
be characterized by their abstractness, verifiability, elusiveness, and
closeness to phenomenon. Data, as abstractions, are more metaphorical than
real. Data are processed by our senses. Capturing data is elusive. Data reflect
their truthfulness by closeness to the phenomena. Secondary data are
data originally collected to address a problem other than the one which
requires the manager’s attention at the moment. Primary data are data
the researcher collects to address the specific problem at hand—the research
question. Data are the information collected from participants, by observation,
or from secondary sources. Data are edited to ensure consistency across respondents
and to locate omissions. In the case of a survey, editing reduces errors in the
recording, improves legibility, and clarifies unclear and inappropriate
responses. Coding is used to reduce the responses to a more manageable system
for processing and storage.
Stage 5: Data Analysis and Interpretation.
Managers need information and insights, not raw data, to make
appropriate business decisions. Researchers generate information and insights by
analyzing data after its collection. Data analysis is the editing,
reducing, summarizing, looking for patterns, and applying statistical
techniques to data. Increasingly, managers are asking research specialists to
make recommendations based on their interpretation of the data.
Stage 6: Reporting the Results.
As the business research process draws to a close it is necessary to
prepare a report and transmit the findings, insights, and recommendations to
the manager for the intended purpose of decision making. The researcher adjusts
the style and organization of the report according to the target audience, the
occasion, and the purpose of the research. The report should be
manager-friendly and avoid technical jargon. Reports should be developed from
the manager’s or information user’s perspective. The researcher must accurately
assess the manager’s needs throughout the research process and incorporate this
understanding into the final product, the research report. To avoid having the
research report shelved with no action taken, the researcher should strive for:
Insightful adaptation of the information to the client’s needs and careful
choice of words in crafting interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations.
When research is contracted to an outside supplier, managers and
researchers increasingly collaborate to develop appropriate reporting of
project results and information. At a minimum, a research report should
contain: 1) An executive summary consisting of a synopsis of the problem, findings,
and recommendations 2) An overview of the research: the problem’s background, a
summary of exploratory findings drawn from secondary data sources, the actual research
design and procedures, and conclusions. 3) A section on implementation
strategies for the recommendations. 4) A technical appendix with all the
materials necessary to replicate the project.
Research Process Issues can exist.
Studies can wander off target or be less effective than they should be
for a multitude of reasons.
The Favored-Technique Syndrome:
Some researchers are method-bound; they recast the management question
so that it is amenable to their favorite methodology. Persons knowledgeable
about, and skilled in, some techniques, but not others, are often blinded by
their special competencies. The manager sponsoring the research is responsible
for spotting an inappropriate technique-driven research proposal. Since the
advent of total quality management (TQM), many standardized customer satisfaction
questionnaires have been developed. Managers must not let researchers steamroll
them into use of an instrument, even if it was successful for another client.
Company Database Strip-Mining:
Managers may mistakenly believe that a pool of information or a database
reduces (or eliminates) the need for further research. Managers frequently hear
from superiors, “We should use the information we already have before
collecting more.” Having a massive amount of information is not the same as
having knowledge. Each field in a database was created for a specific reason,
which may or may not be compatible with the management question facing the organization.
Un-researchable Questions:
Not all management questions are researchable, and not all research
questions are answerable. To be researchable, a question must be one for which
observable or other data collection can provide the answer. Many questions
cannot be answered on the basis of information alone.
Questions of value and policy often factor into management decisions.
Additional considerations, such as “fairness to workers” or “management’s right
to manage” may be important to the decision. Questions of value can often be
transformed into questions of fact. Even if a question can be answered by facts
alone, it might not be researchable because currently accepted and tested
procedures or techniques are inadequate.
Ill-Defined Management Problems:
Some problems are so complex, value-laden, and bound by constraints that
they are intractable to traditional forms of analysis. Ill-defined research
questions may have too many interrelate facets to be measured accurately.
Methods may not presently exist to handle questions of this type. Even if such
methods were invented, they might not produce the data necessary to solve such
problems. Novice researchers should avoid ill-defined problems.
Politically Motivated Research:
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