Week 5

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Business Research Method

The Scientific approach and alternative


approaches to investigation
Topics Discussed
The Hallmarks of Science
The Building Blocks of Science and Hypothetico-
Deductive Method of Research
The Seven Steps of the Hypothetico-Deductive Method
Other types of Research
Case studies
Action research
The definition of research
Research is an organized, systematic, data-based, critical,
objective, scientific inquiry into a specific problem that needs
a solution.
Managerial decisions based on the results of scientific
research tend to be effective.
What is Meant by a Scientific
Research?
Scientific research focuses on solving problems and pursues a
step-by-step logical, organized, and rigorous method to
identify the problems, gather data, analyze them, and draw
valid conclusions therefrom.
Thus, scientific research is not based on hunches, experience,
and intuition (though these may play a part in final decision
making), but a purposive and rigorous.
What is Meant by a Scientific
Research?
Because of the rigorous way in which the research done,
scientific research enables all those who are interested in
researching about the same or similar issues to come up with
comparable findings when the data are analyzed.
What is Meant by a Scientific
Research?
Scientific research helps researchers to state their findings
with accuracy and confidence.
This helps various other organizations to apply those
solutions when they encounter similar problems.
Scientific investigation tends to be more objective than
subjective, and helps managers to highlight the most critical
factors at the workplace that need specific attention so as to
avoid, minimize, or solve problems.
What is Meant by a Scientific
Research?
Scientific investigation and managerial decision making are
integral aspects of effective problem solving.
Scientific research applies to both basic and applied research.
Applied research may or may not be generalizable to other
organizations, depending on the extent to which differences
exist in such factors as size, nature of work, characteristics of
the employees, and structure of the organization.
The Hallmarks of
Scientific Research
 The Hallmarks or main distinguishing
characteristics of scientific research may be
listed as follows:

1. Purposiveness 8. Parsimony
2. Rigor
3. Testability
4. Replicability
5. Precision
6. Objectivity
7. Generalizability
The Hallmarks of Scientific
Research

Consider the case of a manager who is interested in


investigating how employees’ commitment to the
organization can be increased.
1. Purposiveness
The manager has started the research with a definite aim or
purpose.
The focus is on increasing the commitment of employees to
the organization, as this will be a beneficial in many ways.
An increase in employee commitment will translate into less
turnover, less absenteeism, and increased performance levels,
all of which would definitely benefit the organization.
2. Rigor
A good theoretical base and a sound methodological design
would add rigor to a purposive study.
Rigor means carefulness, and the degree of accuracy in
research investigations.
In the case of example of increasing the
commitment of employees:
Let us say that the manager of an organization asks 10 of its
employees to indicate what would increase their level of
commitment to the organization.
If the manager depends solely on the basis of their responses
reaches to several conclusions on how employee commitment
can be increased, the whole approach to the investigation
would be unscientific.
An approach to an investigation would
lack rigor for the following reasons:

1. Incorrect conclusions because they are based on the responses of just a


few employees (lacks of methodological sophistication).
2. the manner of framing and addressing the questions could have
introduced bias in the responses (lacks of methodological
sophistication).
3. There might be many other important influences on organizational
commitment that this small sample did not verbalize during the
interviews, and the researcher would have failed to include them (lacks
of a good theoretical framework).

Conclusions drawn from an investigation that lacks a good theoretical


framework and methodological sophistications would be unscientific.
3. Testability
After taking random selection of employees of the
organization, and the study of previous research done of the
area of organizational commitment, the researcher develops
certain hypotheses on how employee commitment can be
enhanced. Then these hypotheses can be tested by applying
certain statistical tests to the data collected for the purpose.
 Scientific research tends itself to testing logically
developed hypotheses to see whether or not the data
support the hypotheses that are developed.
4. Replicability
The results of the tests of hypotheses should be supported
again and again when the same type of research is repeated in
other similar circumstances.
If the results are repeated, we will gain confidence in the
scientific nature of our research.
5. Precision and Confidence
Precision refers to the closeness of the findings to reality
based on a sample.
Precision reflects the degree of accuracy of the results on the
basis of the sample, to what really exists in the universe.
Precision and Confidence
 In business research, we are not able to draw “definitive”
conclusions on the basis of the results of data analysis.
The reasons are:
1. We have to base our findings on a sample that we draw
from the universe. The sample may not reflect the exact
characteristics of the phenomenon we try to study.
2. Measurement errors and other problems are bound to
introduce an error in our findings.
Precision and Confidence
We would like to design the research in a manner that ensures
that our findings are as close to reality as possible, so that we
can place reliance or confidence in the results.
Precision and Confidence
Confidence refers to the probability that our estimations are
correct.
It is not enough to be precise, but it is also important that we
can confidently claim that 95% of the time our results would
be true and there is only a 5% chance of our being wrong. This
is also known as confidence level.
The greater the precision and confidence we aim at in our
research, the more scientific is the investigation and the more
useful are the results.
6. Objectivity
The conclusions drawn through the interpretation of the
results of data analysis should be objective.
The conclusions should be based on the facts of the findings
derived from actual data, and not on our own subjective or
emotional values.
The more objective the interpretation of the data, the more
scientific the research investigation becomes.
7. Generalizability
Generalizability refers to the scope of applicability of the
research findings in one organizational setting to other
settings.
The wider the range of applicability of the solutions
generated by research, the more useful the research is to the
users.
8. Parsimony
Parsimony refers to simplicity in explaining the phenomena
or problems that occur, and in generating solutions for the
problems.
Economy in research models is achieved when we can build
into our research framework a lesser number of variables that
would explain the variance far more efficiently than a complex
set of variables that would only marginally add to the variance
explained.
Parsimony
Parsimony can be introduced with a good understanding of
the problem and the important factors that influence it.
A good conceptual theoretical model can be realized through
interviews with the concerned people, and a thorough
literature review of the previous research work in the
particular problem area.
Thank You 

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