Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Title page
- Imprint page
- Table of contents
- Preface
- About the Authors
- List of Tables and Figures
- Chapter 1: Methods of Business Research: An Introduction
- Learning Outcomes
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Business Research Defined
- 1.3 Systematic Research Versus Common Sense
- 1.4 The Nature of Business and Management Research
- 1.4.1 The importance of research to management
- 1.4.2 The managerial value of business research
- 1.5 Types of Business Research Strategies
- 1.5.1 Descriptive research
- 1.5.2 Exploratory research
- 1.5.3 Causal research
- 1.6 Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches
- 1.6.1 Qualitative research
- 1.6.2 Quantitative research
- 1.6.3 Qualitative versus quantitative research
- 1.7 Scientific and Non-Scientific Approaches
- 1.7.1 Reliability and validity
- 1.8 Ethical Issues in Business Research
- 1.8.1 Rights and obligations of parties
- 1.8.2 Rights and obligations of the researcher
- 1.8.3 Rights and obligations of the user
- 1.8.4 Rights and obligations of the respondent
- Case Study 1: The Daimler-Chrysler Merger: Too Much Hunch, Not Enough Research?
- Case study questions
- Case Study 2: No Sweat at Jeep
- Case study questions
- Bibliography
- Chapter 2: The Research Process: How Business Research Is Conducted
- Learning Outcomes
- 2.1 Introduction to the Research Proposal
- 2.2 Research Ideas
- 2.2.1 Research questions versus research themes
- 2.2.2 Generating research questions
- 2.2.3 Safe versus risky research
- 2.2.4 Evaluating research ideas
- 2.2.5 Creating a bad impression
- 2.2.6 Tips: Idea-generation techniques
- 2.3 The Mechanics of Doing a Literature Review
- 2.3.1 What is a literature review?
- 2.3.2 Identification of literature
- 2.3.3 Selection of literature
- 2.3.4 Note-taking
- 2.3.5 Analysis of the literature
- 2.3.6 Synthesis of the literature
- 2.3.7 Some practical advice for conducting a literature review
- 2.3.8 Conclusion
- 2.4 Research Designs
- 2.4.1 Introduction to research designs
- 2.4.2 Research designs
- 2.4.3 The nature of a good research design
- 2.4.4 The threefold classification of research designs
- 2.4.5 Experimental research designs
- 2.4.6 Quasi-experimental designs
- 2.4.7 Non-experimental designs
- 2.5 Data-Collection Methods
- 2.5.1 A brief overview of some basic methods of data collection
- 2.6 Levels of Measurement
- 2.6.1 Introduction
- 2.6.2 Why is level of measurement important?
- 2.6.3 Levels of measurement
- 2.7 Measurement Scales
- 2.7.1 Comparative scales
- 2.7.2 Non-comparative scales
- 2.7.3 Summary
- 2.8 Sampling
- 2.8.1 Introduction
- 2.8.2 What is a sample?
- 2.8.3 What is sampling?
- 2.8.4 What is the purpose of sampling?
- 2.8.5 The reasons for sampling
- 2.8.6 The sampling distribution
- 2.8.7 Accuracy of sampling
- 2.8.8 Types of samples
- 2.9 Sample Size
- 2.9.1 General principles of sample size
- 2.9.2 The 65, 95, 99 per cent rule
- 2.9.3 A brief outline of some common research terms
- Case Study: The Ecology of Leadership
- Research design
- Rationale
- Background
- Methodology
- Budget
- Timeline/Schedule
- Case study question
- Bibliography
- Chapter 3: Techniques for Data Analysis in Business Research
- Learning Outcomes
- 3.1 Basic Elements of Data Analysis
- 3.1.1 Descriptive statistics
- 3.1.2 Selecting a method to analyse data
- 3.2 The Number of Groups in the Study
- 3.2.1 The number of variables in the study
- 3.3 Data Preparation
- 3.3.1 Editing
- 3.3.2 Coding
- 3.3.3 Special data problems
- 3.3.4 The use of percentages
- 3.3.5 Tabulation
- 3.4 Data Presentation
- 3.5 Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
- 3.5.1 The mean
- 3.5.2 The median
- 3.5.3 The mode
- 3.6 The Measurement of Variability: Variance and Standard Deviation
- 3.7 Measures of Location
- 3.8 Graphical Representation of Data
- 3.9 Measures of Relationship (Correlation and Regression)
- 3.9.1 The Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient
- 3.9.2 Simple linear regression
- 3.9.3 Multiple regression
- 3.10 Inferential Statistics
- 3.10.1 Hypothesis-testing
- 3.11 Statistical Testing Procedures
- 3.12 Tests of Significance
- 3.12.1 The one-sample case
- 3.12.2 Parametric tests for one-sample cases
- 3.12.3 Non-parametric tests for one-sample cases
- 3.12.4 The two-sample case
- 3.12.5 Two related samples
- 3.12.6 Parametric test for related samples
- 3.12.7 Two independent samples
- 3.12.8 K-sample case
- 3.13 Some Common Non-Parametric Methods
- 3.13.1 The sign test
- 3.13.2 The Mann-Whitney U test
- 3.13.3 The Wilcoxon signed-rank test
- 3.13.4 Spearman rank-order correlation coefficient
- 3.14 Further Multivariate Statistical Approaches
- 3.14.1 Discriminant function analysis
- 3.14.2 Factor analysis
- 3.15 Concluding Remarks on Statistical Tests and Their Uses
- 3.15.1 The power of a statistical test
- 3.15.2 Practical significance of research results
- 3.15.3 Multi- or meta-analysis
- 3.15.4 Triangulation
- 3.16 The Use of Qualitative Data in Research
- Case Study: MR Manufacturing Company
- Case study question
- Bibliography
- Chapter 4: Communicating Business Research Proposals and Results
- Learning Outcomes
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 The Research Proposal
- 4.2.1 The purpose of the research proposal
- 4.2.2 Example: An abbreviated version of a research proposal for the South African Revenue Service (
- 4.3 Communicating Research Results
- 4.4 The Research Report
- 4.5 Focus on Research Report Writing
- 4.5.1 Research report evaluation criteria
- 4.5.2 Report writing criteria
- 4.5.3 The structure of the report
- 4.6 Formal Referencing in Reports and Dissertations
- 4.6.1 What is referencing?
- 4.6.2 How referencing is done
- 4.7 Some Style Rules for Report and Dissertation Writing
- 4.7.1 Abbreviations and acronyms
- 4.7.2 Plurals of abbreviations
- 4.7.3 Avoiding biased and pejorative language
- 4.7.4 Current use of the terms ‘gender’ and ‘sex’
- 4.7.5 Sensitivity towards labels
- 4.7.6 Language usage in dissertations and reports
- 4.8 Assessment Criteria for Dissertations
- Case Study: Oakridge Hospital: A Report that Tells
- Case study questions
- Bibliography
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.