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Second Edition

Research Methods for Business Students Mark Saunders, Philip Lewis and Adrian Thornhill. Second Edition. Chapter 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Research Methods for Business Students . Dr. Wasim Al-Habil. Chapter Seven. Research Methods for Business Students . Key Topics .

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Second Edition

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  1. Research Methods for Business Students Mark Saunders, Philip Lewis and Adrian Thornhill Second Edition Chapter 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Research Methods for Business Students Dr. Wasim Al-Habil.

  2. Chapter Seven Research Methods for Business Students

  3. Key Topics • To identify the full variety of secondary data that are available. • To appreciate ways in which secondary data can be utilized to help to answer research question and to meet objectives. • To understand the advantages and disadvantages of using secondary data in research projects. • To use a range of techniques, including published guides and the Internet, to locate secondary data. • To evaluate the suitability of secondary data for answering research question and meeting objectives in terms of coverage, validity, reliability and measurement bias. • To apply the knowledge, skills and understanding gained to your own research project.

  4. Wish to research The research Process Formulate and clarify your Research topic Critically review the literature Choose your research approach and strategy Negotiate access and address ethical issues Plan your data collection and collect the data using one or more of : Sampling Secondary data Observation Semi-structured and in-depth interviews Questionnaires Analyse your data using one or both of: Quantitative methods Qualitative methods Write your project report Submit your report

  5. Questions a literature review can answer What are the key sources ? What are the key concepts, theories and ideas? What are the major issues and debates about the topic? Literature search and review on your topic What are the political standpoints? What are the main questions and problems that have been addressed to date? What are the origins and definitions of the topic? How have approaches to these questions increased our understanding and knowledge?

  6. Documentary sources • Life Histories • The Diary • Newspapers and magazines • Letters • Stories, essays and other writings • Official documents and records • Research reports

  7. Documentary sources • Acts of Parliament • Government reports and inquiries • Public records • Surveys/censuses • Advertisements • Pamphlets

  8. Documentary sources • Manuscripts • Treatises • Accounts • Minutes/memos • Handbills • Maps, paintings • Films, photographs

  9. Databases - PROMT Over 4m records

  10. 7.1 Introduction • Secondary data include both raw data and published summaries. • Most organizations collect and store a variety of data to support their operations. • Some of these data are available only from the organization that produce them, and so access will need to be negotiated. • Others are widely available in published forms as well as on CD in university libraries and increasingly via the Internet.

  11. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Secondary data include both quantitative and qualitative data, and they can be used in both descriptive and explanatory research. • Types of secondary data • See figure 7.1 in page 190

  12. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Documentary data: Documentary secondary data are often used in research projects that also use primary data collection methods. • Written documents: Notices, correspondence, minutes of meetings, reports to shareholders, diaries, transcripts of speeches and administrative and public records. • Non-written documents: Tape and video recordings, pictures, drawings, films and television programs, DVD/CD.

  13. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Survey-based secondary data: Survey-based secondary data refers usually to data collected by questionnaires that have already been analyzed for their original purpose. • It will have been collected through three distinct types of survey: • Censuses • Continuous/regular surveys • Ad hoc surveys

  14. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Survey-based secondary data: 1. Censuses are usually carried out by governments and are unique because, unlike surveys, participation is obligatory. Consequently, they provide very good coverage of the population surveyed. 2.Continuous and regularsurveys are those surveys, excluding censuses, that are repeated over time. They include surveys where data are collected throughout the year, and those repeated at regular intervals.

  15. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Census and continuous and regular survey data provide a useful resource with which to compare or set in context your own research findings. • Survey secondary data may be available in sufficient detail to provide the main data set from which to answer your research question and to meet your objectives. • Alternatively, they may be the only way in which you can obtain the required data.

  16. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research 3. Ad hoc survey are usually one-off surveys and are far more specific in their subject matter. They include data from questionnaires that have been undertaken by independent researcher as well as surveys undertaken by organizations and governments. You will probably find it more difficult to discover relevant surveys.

  17. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Multiple-source secondary data: • Multiple-source secondary data can be based entirely on documentary or on survey data, or can be an amalgam (mixture) or the two. • The key factor is that different data sets have been combined to form anotherdata set prior to your accessing the data.

  18. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Multiple-source secondary data: • The way which a multiple-source data set has been complied will dictate the sorts of research question or objectives with which you can use it. • Extract ad combine selected comparable variables from a number of surveys or from the same survey that has been repeated a number of times to provide a time-series of data. • Compile for the same population over time using a series of “snap-shots” to form cohort studies. • For the data have the same geographical basis, to form area-based data sets.

  19. 7.2 Types of secondary data and use in research • Finding relevant secondary data requires detective work: • Establishing that the sorts of data you require are likely to be available as secondary data. • Locating the precise data you require.

  20. 7.3 Locating secondary data • The availability of secondary data • Books and journal articles on your chosen topic • Reference for unpublished and documentary • Tertiary literature such as indexes and catalogues • On-line indexes and catalogues • Informal discussions

  21. 7.3 Locating secondary data • Finding secondary data • Precise references are often given in published guides, and a full reference should exist. • Data that are held by organizations are more difficult to locate. • Data on the Internet can be located using site guides. • Once you have located a possible secondary data set, you need to be certain that it will meet your needs.

  22. 7.4 Advantages and disadvantages of secondary data • Advantages: • May have fewer resource requirements • Unobtrusive (Any method of observation that directly removes the observer from the set interactions or events being studied). • Longitudinal studies may be feasible • Can provide comparative and contextual data • Can result in unforeseen discoveries • Permanence of data

  23. 7.4 Advantages and disadvantages of secondary data • Disadvantages: • May be collected for a purpose that does not match your need • Access may be difficult or costly • Aggregations and definitions may be unsuitable • No real control over data quality • Initial purpose may affect how data are presented

  24. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Secondary data must be viewed with the same caution as any primary data that you collect. You need to be sure that: • They will enable you to answer your research question and to meet your objectives. • The benefits associated with their use will be greater than the costs. • You will be allowed to access to the data.

  25. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • If you are using secondary data, you are at an advantage compared with researchers using primary data. Because the data already exist and you can evaluate them prior to use. • See figure 7.2 in page 205 • Alongside this process you also need to consider the accessibility of the secondary data.

  26. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Overall suitability • Measurement validity: • Secondary data that fail to provide you with the information that you need to answer your research question or meet your objectives will result in invalid answers. • Often when you are using secondary survey data you will find that the measures used do not quite match those that you need. • There are no clear solutions to problems of measurement invalidity.

  27. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Overall suitability • Coverage and unmeasured variables • You need to be sure that the secondary data cover the population about which you need data, for the time period you need, and contain data variables that will enable you to answer your research question and to meet your objectives. • Ensuring that unwanted data are or can be excluded. • Ensuring that sufficient data remain for analyses to be undertaken once unwanted data have been excluded.

  28. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Precise suitability • Reliability and validity • You will probably find the validity of documentary data such as organizations’ records more difficult to assess. • For all secondary data a detailed assessment of the validity and reliability will involve you in an assessment of the method or methods used to collect the data. • For some documentary sources, it is unlikely that there will be a formal methodology describing how the data were collected.

  29. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Precise suitability • Reliability and validity • The validity and reliability of collection methods for survey data will be easier to assess where you have a clear explanation of the methodology used to collect the data. • Where data have been complied, as in a report, you need to pay careful attention to how these data were analyzed and how the results are reported.

  30. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Precise suitability: • Measurement bias • Measurement bias can occur for two reasons: • Deliberate or intentional distortion of data. • Changes in the way data are collected.

  31. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Precise suitability • Measurement bias • Deliberate distortion occurs when data re recorded inaccurately on purpose, and is most common for secondary data sources such as organizational records. • Other distortion may be deliberate but not intended for any advantage. • Unfortunately, measurement bias resulting from deliberate distortion is difficult to detect. • Changes in the way in which data were collected can also introduce changes in measurement bias.

  32. 7.5 Evaluating secondary data sources • Precise suitability • Cost band benefits • The final criterion for assessing secondary data is a comparison of the costs of acquiring them with the benefits they will bring. • Cost include both time and financial resources that you will need to devote to obtaining the data. • Benefits from data can be assessed in terms of the extent to which they will enable you to answer your research question and meet your objectives.

  33. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Overall suitability • Does the data set contain the information you • require to answer your research question(s) and • meet your objectives? • Do the measures use match those you require? • Is the data set a proxy for the data you really need?

  34. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Overall suitability • Does the data set cover the population that is the subject of your research? • Can data about the population that is the subject of your research be separated from unwanted data? • Are the data sufficiently up to date?

  35. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Overall suitability • Are data available for all the variables you require to answer your research question(s) and meet your objectives?

  36. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Precise suitability • How reliable is the data set you are thinking of using? • How credible is the data source? • Is the methodology clearly described?

  37. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Precise suitability • If sampling was used, what was the procedure and what were the associated sampling errors and response rates? • Who were responsible for collecting or recording the data? • (For surveys) is a copy of the q’aire or interview checklist included?

  38. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Precise suitability • (For complied data) are you clear how the data were analysed and complied? • Are the data likely to contain measurement bias? • What was the original purpose for which the data were collected?

  39. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Precise suitability • Who was the target audience and what was their Relationship to the data collector or complier (were there any vested interests)? • Have there been any documented changes in the way the data are measured or recorded including definition changes? • How consistent are the data obtained from this source?

  40. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Precise suitability • How consistent are the data obtained from this source when compared with data from other sources? • Are you happy that the data have been recorded accurately?

  41. Table 7.3 Checklist to evaluate Secondary Data sources • Costs and benefits • What are the financial and time costs of obtaining these data? • Have the data already been entered into a computer? • Do the overall benefits of using these secondary data sources outweigh the associated costs?

  42. 7.6 Summary • Data that have already been collected for some other purpose, perhaps processed and subsequently stored, are termed secondary data. There are tree main types of secondary data: documentary, survey and those from multiple sources. • Most research projects require some combination of secondary and primary data to answer your research question and to meet your objectives. You can use secondary data in a variety of ways.

  43. 7.6 Summary • Any secondary data you use will have been collected for a specific purpose. This purpose may not match that of your research. In addition, the secondary data are likely to be less current than any data you collect yourself. • Finding the secondary data you require is a matter of detective work. • Once located you must asses secondary data sources to ensure their overall suitability for you research question and objective.

  44. 7.6 Summary • You must also evaluate the precise suitability of the secondary data. Your evaluation should include both reliability and any likely measurement bias. You can then make a judgment on the basis of the costs and benefits of using the data in comparison with alternative sources. • When assessing costs and benefits you need to be mindful that secondary data that are not completely reliable and contain some bias are better than no data at all if they enable you partially to answer your research question and to meet your objectives.

  45. Thank you!

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