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MBA 2005/2006
INTEGRATIVE BUSINESS RESEARCH PROJECT GUIDELINES
Candidates for the Masters of Business Administration Degree (MBA) are
required to undertake and document research in partial fulfilment of the
degree. In order to complete this process, students will have to select a
suitable topic, prepare a research proposal, carry out independent research
and write up the research project according to a defined format. A research
project is a formal investigation conducted independently over a number of
months in a focused area addressing a clear question or defined problem.
The purpose of the research project is to give the student an opportunity to
demonstrate that s/he can self-manage a problem solving/knowledge-creation
exercise on a complex business topic of their choice within a limited time
frame. They must demonstrate that they can design, execute, analyse and
report on such work to specified standards. They must show that they can do
this in a logical and coherent way and meet the standards for applied
research in an academic environment, as required for a post-graduate
degree. The research project provides an opportunity for students to integrate
the theory and concepts learned on the whole MBA across a range of
subjects and apply them to a specific problem. It is estimated that students
will spend approximately 350 hours on their research projects.
1
A SELECTING A RESEARCH TOPIC The choice of topic for research should depend on a number of factors:
• The selected topic should be in a field in which there is real need for
the research.
• The research outcomes must be useful. Although research into
practical problems experienced in the workplace is encouraged,
students may not undertake market research which would advantage a
specific company. The research has to be of academic relevance. All
university research is within the public domain and hence no research
project can be treated as confidential.
• The student should be realistic about the scale of the task to be
undertaken and its scope. The research must be achievable within a
defined time and budget.
• The topic should be amenable to methods of research.
• It is important to align the students’ interests, abilities and career plans.
• Access to the data must be ensured before the proposal is written.
• A topic could well be selected to be relevant to both the student and
their company.
B RESEARCH METHODLOGY COURSE During the research methodology course, students will be asked to hand in
two assignments – the marks from these assignments will contribute 10% to
the final research project mark.
C WRITING THE RESEARCH PROPOSAL Students need to submit a research proposal to the MBA Programme
Manager by 8h00 on 1st of June. The proposal will count 15% towards the
final research project mark. The research proposal should be approximately
ten pages in length. The proposal is later expanded into the final research
2
project. The proposal must demonstrate familiarity with the prescribed
research methodology textbook
Format of the Proposal The following guidelines are designed to cover the essential elements of a
proposal:
Title Page The title should be concise, but descriptive. Ideally a title should be less than
ten words. It is advisable to avoid ‘catchy’ titles and words such as “A study
of…” or “An investigation into…” are redundant and should be avoided. Titles
should not be in a question format. The student’s name, contact details and
student number must be shown on this page.
Definition of Problem The research problem or question must be clearly and simply stated at the
start of the proposal. The student should distil the problem into a short,
concise sentence. A brief background to the problem, together with a
rationale for conducting the research is required. Ensure that the scope of the
research is specified. The following questions should be addressed:
• Why was this problem selected?
• What evidence verifies the identification of the problem?
• What is the relevance of this topic to business in SA?
At least three references should be used in this section indicating the need for
the research.
Theory and Literature Review A brief description of the relevant theory base should be reported and related
to the research problem. It is important to note that the emphasis should be
on the application of the theory to the research problem rather than merely on
a description of the theory. The theory should be critically reviewed. This is
also the opportunity to assess what other work has been done in the field of
3
your research. A full literature review is not necessary at the proposal stage,
but key references should be identified and discussed. You should indicate
the major headings you will use in the literature review. At least ten
references must be used and correctly referenced both in the body of the
research proposal and in the reference list. References must be current and
focused on the specific research problem. At the end of the literature review
you must restate your research problem in terms of hypotheses or
propositions or research questions.
Proposed Research Methods It is crucial to define clearly what method will be used during the study e.g.
documentary research, survey by face to face interviews. The methodology
must be appropriate to the research objective and questions / propositions /
hypotheses. You need to indicate why your chosen methodology is suitable
for your research problem, i.e. you need to demonstrate congruence
throughout the research process. A well-selected and clearly justified
methodology at proposal stage will assist in ensuring the production of a
successful research project. After specifying and defending the choice of
methodology, details must be given of the proposed unit of analysis,
population, sampling method and size, data gathering process and analysis
approach. If you intend to use a questionnaire in your research, a draft
questionnaire must be included. An indication of the research limitations must
be given. The text book for the research course should be used and
referenced to defend the research details in this section.
Time-Line The proposed time-line for the various phases of the planned research
process should be given.
References It is important that the work undertaken by other researchers and writers is
formally acknowledged. Plagiarism is the unacknowledged use of published
4
materials. Plagiarism is unacceptable and will not be condoned and if found
will lead to disciplinary procedures.
The method of referencing shown at the end of this document must be
adopted and applied consistently throughout the proposal and the research
project. References are used to enable readers to consult the original sources
for further reading and to acknowledge the authors from which the information
was taken. This is done by clearly identifying the sources and precisely stating
where the information was found. Essential components of a reference are:
author, year of publication, title of book or article and journal; edition, place of
publication, publisher, numbering, and pagination. Referencing systems are
the bane of research students’ lives, but the onus rests on the student to
master the system.
Literary Style Writing good formal English is an important business skill. Both the proposal
and the research project must be written in a formal academic literary style in
the third person. British and not American conventions of spelling should be
followed (in Word this is signified by the “English (U.K.)” setting). Slang and
colloquialisms should be avoided at all times; the rules of grammar should be
followed. The proposal should be written in the future tense, the report should
be written in the past tense and the literature review in the present tense (i.e.
the author states…). Do not begin sentences with numerals. All words that are
in a language other than English should be typed in italics e.g. et al. The first
person should not be used, i.e. you may not say “I conducted 15 interviews”
you need to say “Fifteen interviews were conducted”. Supervisors should
indicate to students whether professional assistance with editing and/or proof
reading is advisable for the final report. The use of footnotes is discouraged.
Tables and Figures All tables and figures must be numbered in numerical order and must have
the table and figure number and heading at the top. Tables are usually
presented in single spacing. Figures take the form of models and graphs.
5
Consistency Matrix You must complete a consistency matrix as given in Appendix 1 of this
document as the last page of your proposal. This table enables you and the
supervisor to check for consistency, i.e. are the research problem, the
literature, the research methodology and the proposed method of analysis all
aligned, i.e. will the data, if analysed in the proposed way, answer the
research problem and is there a theoretical basis for the research problem.
Submission of the Proposal Once a proposal has been completed, it must be submitted by June 1st 2006,
17h00, to the MBA Programme Manager. A supervisor will then be allocated
by the Academic Committee based on faculty member’s areas of expertise.
The supervisor will mark the proposal according to the guidelines below. The
mark will count 15% toward the final research project mark. Students should
consult their supervisor to receive feedback.
If the proposal is approved, the Academic Administration office will record the
title and the name of the supervisor. Only in exceptional circumstances are
either of these changed.
Students should not proceed with the research project until the proposal has
been approved.
Where a proposal requires revision, the appointed supervisor will notify the
student. The areas of the proposal, which require revision, will be discussed
with the supervisor and a revised proposal must be submitted. A maximum
period of two weeks will be granted for revision. The original mark will,
however, be used for mark purposes.
6
Suggested marking guidelines for research proposal Student Name:
Proposed Title:
Problem Formulation 20%
Comments:
Theory Base/Literature Review 20%
Comments:
Methodology 40%
Defence of methods Comments:
Unit of Analysis/Population/Sampling Comments:
Procedure/Data collection/Instrument Comments:
Data Analysis Comments:
Project Time-Line Comments:
Referencing 10%
Comments:
Literary style 10%
Comments:
7
Overall Mark: (NB This counts 15% of the final Research Project) /100
Decision: Proceed
(please tick relevant option) Re-submit ( by .……………..)
Supervisors Name ……………………………Signed:……………………………..
Date:……….
D NATURE AND EXTENT OF SUPERVISION Once appointed, supervisors will be required to interact with their designated
students approximately three times. The student may expect guidance with
regard to the planning, execution and compilation of the project. The
supervisor should be available to the student within two weeks of a meeting
being requested, if at all possible. Finding sources and references is the
responsibility of the student and not that of the supervisor. A supervisor will
be responsible for pointing out poorly substantiated or poorly expressed
statements, but the student is responsible for correcting these.
A supervisor is not responsible for the correction of language, spelling or
grammatical errors, but should point out to the student that there are such
errors in his/her work. The student is responsible for the language editing of
his/her project. It is the responsibility of the supervisor to provide guidance on
sections of work which require revision. The meetings should be initiated by
the student, who would usually submit the draft document to the supervisor at
least a week before the meeting.
A schedule of meetings with a supervisor should be set up by the student as
follows:
First meeting: Following the submission of the proposal the student should meet with the
supervisor to receive feedback on the proposal. At this meeting the final
methodology should be agreed on. This meeting should occur in June.
8
Second meeting: Once the project is underway, but before the data is collected and processed,
the supervisor should receive a draft of the first half of the research project,
i.e. up to and including chapter 4 and should provide feedback to the student
on it. The details of the proposed data collection and analysis methods should
also be agreed on. This meeting should occur by mid of August.
Third meeting: This meeting should take place when the data has been processed and
chapters 5 and 6 written in draft form and submitted to the supervisor. This
meeting should occur by mid October.
The student and the supervisor should record the number of meetings held
and the nature of the discussions. If the student is having great difficulty in
setting up meetings with their supervisor they may contact the head of MBA
research to discuss the way forward.
Data Collection Should the student plan to interview respondents or send out questionnaires
the MBA Programme Manager will provide them with an official generic letter
stating that they are bona fide students and that assistance with their research
project would be appreciated.
E LAYOUT AND REQUIREMENTS OF THE RESEARCH PROJECT The body of the report should be between 75 and 80 pages of text – 15 000 to
18 000 words (this excludes any appendices, table of contents, references,
etc).
The report should be printed in A4 format on one side only, on good quality
paper with double spacing and a left margin of 35 mm and a right margin of
25 mm. The font choice and size should facilitate easy reading, e.g. Arial 12.
The text should be justified, i.e. aligned left and right, as is this document. A
9
good quality printer should be utilised for the final print. The colour of the ink
for the text should be black. Colour may be used in figures.
The report should include the following:
1. Title page The title page should include the title [as approved in the
research proposal] followed by the author’s name, the statement
below and the date.
The statement should be worded as follows:
A research project submitted to the Gordon Institute of Business
Science, University of Pretoria, in partial fulfilment of the
requirements for the degree of Master of Business
Administration.
The date should be the month and year of completion of the
project. (e.g. November 2006)
2. Abstract The abstract should appear on the next page and should be
limited to 200 words. The abstract should start with a sentence
that describes the major theme of the research. The purpose
and methodology of the research and the outcome should then
be briefly described.
3. Declaration
The following declaration should appear on a separate page:
I declare that this research project is my own work. It is
submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree
of Master of Business Administration at the Gordon Institute of
Business Science, University of Pretoria. It has not been
10
submitted before for any degree or examination in any other
University.
The name and signature of the student and the date should
follow the declaration.
4. Acknowledgements It is a convention to acknowledge the role of a supervisor and
other persons and/or organisations instrumental in the
completion of the research.
5. Table of Contents Under the heading “Contents”, this will include the starting page
numbers of the preliminary material, chapter and section
headings, references and any appendices. Generally the first
page of the text would be numbered 1. Any preliminary pages
would be given numbers in small roman numbers (i.e. i, ii, etc)
6. Text of research project
The text of the conventional research report is divided into
logical chapters. On reading the whole report the process of
logical reasoning of the whole research process must be made
apparent. A typical layout would be:
Chapter 1: Introduction to Research Problem. This chapter
indicates clearly the need for the research and what the
research objectives are. The relationship between the research
problem and the research objectives must be explained and the
scope of the research defined. This is where the context of the
research is made clear and the choice of the topic is defended,
with reference being made to literature.
Chapter 2: Literature Review. The literature review presents
an argument within academic literature to show the need for
11
your research. You must show that your research is situated
within the relevant, current, academic literature and that you
understand the debates. Your task is to show how the academic
literature sheds light on your topic. The purpose of the literature
review is to refine the statement of the research problem or
question, not to offer a tutorial on the topic. Hence you must
review the pertinent literature, not repeat large passages from a
text. This chapter must make use of subheadings which indicate
your flow of logic. The subheadings usually divide the literature
into a number of major areas and then each area begins with
the more generic theory bases and ends with closely focused
literature on your topic. It is envisaged that not less than thirty
references will be used, all of which must be highly relevant to
your topic, at least half of which must be post 2000 and nearly
all of which must be from accredited academic texts. You will
need to source at least five references from peer reviewed
academic journals. Every paragraph should contain at least one
reference. The conclusion to the literature review must indicate
the need for your specific research.
Chapter 3: Research Questions/ Propositions/ Hypotheses.
In this chapter, usually no more than a page or two, the precise
purpose of the research is defined. Research questions are
used where the literature does not provide likely solutions to the
research objectives. Propositions are used when the researcher
proposes what the findings are likely to be. Hypotheses are
used when the student intends to use statistical hypothesis
testing procedures. The research questions / hypotheses /
propositions must be numbered and stated in such a way that
they are testable or answerable?
Chapter 4: Research Methodology. This chapter must give
details of and defence of, the methodology used, the definition
of the unit of analysis, the population, the sample size and
12
sampling method, the research instrument used, the details of
how the data was collected and the process of data analysis.
The limitations of the research must be specified. Research
methodology references must be used. This chapter must be
written in the past tense.
Chapter 5: Results. Here the results of your research are
presented clearly and concisely with only sparse commentary.
Tables and figures must be correctly presented as discussed
above. This chapter is usually presented with the data being
clustered around the research questions / propositions /
hypotheses.
Chapter 6: Discussion of Results. Here the results are
discussed in terms of the research questions, propositions or
hypotheses and in terms of the literature i.e. the relationship
between this chapter and chapters one, two and three must be
clear to the examiners and other readers. This chapter should
use the research questions/ propositions/ hypotheses as major
headings within the chapter. This chapter should show depth of
insight into your findings in terms of both the context of the study
and in light of the theory base. The chapter must indicate that
the research objectives have been met.
Chapter 7: Conclusion. This chapter highlights the main
findings of the research, pulling the results together into a
cohesive set of findings; includes recommendations to
stakeholders based directly on the findings; and gives
recommendations for future research.
7. Reference List As detailed below.
13
8. Appendices Appendices should be numbered and titled. Each appendix
should be presented both in numerical order and in the order in
which it is encountered in the text of the project. Examples of
what should be included in appendices are a copy of a
questionnaire (if used), data bases, list of respondents etc.
A very approximate guideline to the number of pages for each
chapter is as follows:
Chapter 1 7
Chapter 2 15
Chapter 3 2
Chapter 4 8
Chapter 5 20
Chapter 6 20
Chapter 7 6
F SUBMISSION PROCESS Students are to submit by 17h00 on 14 November to the MBA Programme
Manager
• two ring bound reports,
• one unbound copy,
• and an emailed version of the whole document, in one file, to the Info
Centre at [email protected] .
Students must sign the declaration page on all three copies after printing but
before handing in.
14
No extensions will be granted to this deadline. A mark penalty of 5% per day
or part thereof will be applied. The reports will be forwarded to the respective
supervisors and the external examiner. The supervisors will then mark the
project within a few weeks. The unbound copy of the report will be given to
the Information Centre. If the report receives a mark of 65% or more the
Information Centre will have the report bound and placed on the shelves.
Should the project not be deemed to be of an acceptable standard to pass,
and should the supervisor know that some minor adjustments will allow the
project to pass; this feedback will be conveyed to the student by the
supervisor. A two week period for amendments will be set for final
submission. Failure to satisfy the recommendations will result in the candidate
failing to satisfy the requirements for the degree. Students who have to
resubmit their research reports for re-examination will not receive a mark
higher than a D symbol. Should a research report fail to an extent where
more than minor adjustments need to be made, the student will have to repeat
the research methodology course, resubmit their proposal and redo the
research project in the following year.
G CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION
25% of the mark will come from the research methodology course assignments and the proposal. The table below shows the suggested marking schedule for the report.
1. Motivation for Research [25%]
• Quality of analysis of business problem
• Relevance and coverage of related research literature
• Appropriateness of alternative solutions offered and considered
• Clear statement of need for the research (relevance to theory and/or practice)
• Formulation of research propositions/hypotheses or questions and scope of the research project.
Comments:
15
2. Method and Procedure [25%]
• Rationale for choice of methodology (e.g. qualitative vs. quantitative; theoretical)
• Research design (clarity, logic and appropriateness of choices made)
• Implementation of research (accuracy, thoroughness of procedures)
• Information gathering (sampling; data collection; quality controls)
Comments:
3. Analysis and Interpretation of Findings [25%]
• Data analysis and presentation (grasp of techniques used; clarity of presentation)
• Interpretation and evaluation of results (accuracy; validity of inferences; alternatives considered); discussion of findings
• Conclusions drawn within context of the study, relevance to objectives; limitations noted on generalization
Comments:
4. Summary and Recommendations [15%]
• Relevance of recommendations to business problem and knowledge accumulation
• Quality of summary of project and of the Abstract
• Future Research recommendations
Comments:
5. Presentation [10%]
• Overall impression (writing quality and style, organisation and flow, editing, references)
Comments:
16
Mark for Research Project The minimum pass mark for the research project is 50%. All MBA students
must pass the research project. The minimum mark required for a distinction
is 75%. A research project being granted a distinction would meet all of the
requirements above and display originality of thought and depth of critical
insight. Results are usually published late in December. The research project
counts for 20% of the student’s final MBA mark.
H Candidates who fail to submit research project reports Candidates who do not submit their research project on time may apply in
writing, before January 10th of the following year, for permission to re-register.
Should this be permitted the student will have to pay additional fees and will
not graduate with their class. They will have to re-attend the research
methodology lectures, submit the assignments and resubmit their proposal for
approval. A supervisor will then be allocated. They will not be allocated a
mark higher than a C for their final mark. They will have to complete the
research during this subsequent year, failure to do so will constitute a failure
of the MBA programme.
I REFERENCING SYSTEM The referencing style guide specified below is based on the Harvard system
and must be used in research reporting both within the text and in the
reference list. This set of guidelines is an edited version of the full version of
Harvard Referencing and is adapted from Price, J. and Turner, C. (1991)
Study Skills. Bath: College of Higher Education.
17
REFERENCING WITHIN THE TEXT
Each time a reference is given within a text, the author’s surname and the
year of publication is quoted. If the surname is a natural part of the sentence,
the year only is given in brackets. If the surname is not a natural part of the
sentence, then both the surname and year are in brackets.
e.g. Simmons (1989) quotes data to show..... It has recently been stated
(Grandjean, 1988) that.....
When there are two authors the surnames of both should be quoted
e.g. Holly and Southworth (1989)
When there are 3 authors or more, then the first surname is quoted followed
by ‘et al’, but only after the first mention which should include all the authors.
e.g. Bradley, Jones and Smith (1983); thereafter, Bradley et al. (1983)
A corporate author may be used when appropriate.
e.g. Open University (1999)
When there is more than one reference to the same author and year of
publication, i.e. the author has published a few items in one year, each entry
is distinguished by a b c etc. following the year.
e.g. (1989a) (1989b)
If direct quotations are being used in the text, the quotations must be given in
inverted commas and the relevant page number(s) must be given.
e.g. “ Documents must be presented in a visually appealing format” (Flack,
1981, p. 74)
18
AN EXAMPLE OF REFERENCING WITHIN THE TEXT FOLLOWS
The world economy has progressed from an industrial economy
to a knowledge economy (Pine and Gilmore, 1998; Dibble,
2004). With knowledge being viewed as a major contributing
factor to organisational success, the purveyors of this
knowledge in organisations deserve to be focused on. Drucker
(1974) first used the term “knowledge worker”; he described
these individuals as employees who carry knowledge as a
powerful resource which they, rather than the organisation, own.
Drucker (1989, p. 175) states “Knowledge workers know that
their knowledge…. gives them freedom to move since
everyone’s knowledge has a multitude of applications in the
information or knowledge age”. A few years later Drucker
(2002, p. 76) wrote that knowledge workers have become the
major creator of wealth and jobs and “…increasingly the
success and even the survival of every business will depend on
the performance of its knowledge workforce”. He goes on to say
that the knowledge economy will increasingly depend on higher
levels of education. Harrigan and Dalmia (1991) define
knowledge workers as key employees who create intangible
value-adding assets, and who often transport those assets in
their heads when they change employers.
Please note, as in the first sentence, that the reference goes in brackets before the full stop.
REFERENCING IN THE REFERENCE LIST
The list of references is given at the end of the text. (Note, a bibliography
containing everything you read is not required, only a reference list of books
and articles that you have referred to in your research report). The link from
the text to the list is the author’s surname and year of publication, so the list is
arranged in alphabetical order by authors, and within authors in ascending
19
date order. It is finally sorted alphabetically by a b c (see example below) if
this device has been necessary. The reference list should not be sectioned
into books, journals etc. Please note that the name of the book or journal is in
italics.
Examples:
Hargreaves, D.H. (1972) Interpersonal Relations and Education. London:
Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Hargreaves, D.H. (1979a) A phenomenological approach to classroom
decision-making. In Eggleston, J. (ed.) Teacher Decision-making in the
Classroom. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Hargreaves, D.H. (1979b) The proper study of educational psychology. New
Universities Quarterly, 33, 155 -165.
Holly, P. and Southworth, G. (1989) The Developing School. London: Falmer
Press.
Referencing Books
The information required is: Author. Year of publication. Title (this must be in
italics). Place of publication: Publisher.
e.g. Minton, D. (1997) Teaching Skills in Further and Adult Education.
London: City & Guilds / Macmillan.
For two authors, both names are given,
e.g. Huddleston, P. and Unwin, L. (1997) Teaching and Learning in Further
Education. London: Routledge.
For three or more authors, all names are quoted,
e.g. Gray, D. Griffin, C. and Nasta, T. (2000) Training to Teach in Further and
Adult Education. Cheltenham: Stanley Thorne.
20
An author may be an editor, so this detail is included after the name,
e.g. Rose, D. (ed.) (1988) Social Stratification and Economic Change.
London: Hutchinson.
An author may be a corporate body in which case this is used as the author,
e.g. Open University (1981) Polymer Production. 2nd ed. Milton Keynes:
Open University Press.
When relevant, an edition statement should be included after the title, and the
year of publication quoted is the year of the particular edition,
e.g. Grandjean, E. (1988) Fitting the Tasks to the Man: A text book of
occupational ergonomics. 4th ed. London: Taylor & Francis.
Certain ‘classic’ books may be reprinted, the year of publication is the original
year, with the reprint date added if it is of importance,
e.g. Darwin, C. R. (1882, reprinted 1928) The Origin of Species. 6th ed.
London: Dent.
Where a reference is to a chapter in an edited book or a compilation, and the
authors are different, the listing would be,
e.g. Green, A. (1995) The European challenge to British vocational education
and training, in Hodkinson & Issit (eds.) The Challenge of Competence:
Professionalism through Vocational Education and Training. London: Cassell.
Referencing Reports
Reports follow the guidelines as given for books, with the additional item of
the report number(s).
Author(s). Year of publication. Title. Place of Publication: Publisher. Report
number(s).
21
e.g. Department for Education and Employment (DfEE) (2000) Student
Success Rates In Post- 16 qualifications - data from the England and Wales
youth cohort study. London: DfEE.
Referencing Journal Articles
The information required is
Author of article. Year of publication. Title of article. Title of periodical (this
must be in italics). Volume and number . Page number(s) of article.
e.g. Psacharopoulos, G. (1997) Vocational education and training today:
challenges and responses. Journal of Vocational Education and Training,
49(3), 21-36.
Referencing Conferences
These references follow the guidelines for either books or journals depending
on how the conference proceedings are published. If it is printed as a one-off,
then it will follow the guidelines for books. If the conference is one of a series
that regularly publishes its papers, then follow the guidelines for journals.
Referencing e-Journals and Website Sources
The information required is:
Author/editor, Year "Title" [online]. (Edition). Place of publication: Publisher (if
ascertainable). Available from: URL [Accessed Date].
e.g. Hillage P. (2000) Adult learning in England, a Review, London: Institute
of Education Studies Report 369. Summary at http://www.employment-
studies.co.uk/summary/summary.php?id=369 (accessed 24/6/03).
Referencing where there is no author or publisher
In this case use the title of the publication where the author’s name would
usually be found.
22
23
e.g. Guide to Authors (1998) South African Journal of Business.
AN EXAMPLE OF A REFERENCE LIST FOLLOWS
Please note it is in alphabetical order and not numbered.
Armstrong, M. and Murlis, H. (1998) Reward Management.
London: Biddles.
Baron, J. N., Hannan, M.T. and Burton, M.D. (2001) Labor
pains: change in organisational models and employee turnover
in young, high-tech firms. American Journal of Sociology,
106(4), 960 -1010.
Bartlett, C. and Ghosal, S. (2000) Competing on Human
Capital. Book in progress.
http://www.linezine.com/4.2/articles/chsghebip.htm (accessed
12/02/03)
Bennett, J. (2003) Employers have their work cut out. Sunday
Times. Business Times. March 16. Johannesburg, 1.
Branch, S. (1998) You hired ‘em. But can you keep ‘em?
Fortune Magazine, November 9, 101-104.
Brown, J.S. and Duguid, P. (1996) Organisational learning and
communities-of-practice. In: Cohen, M.D. and Sproull, L.S.
(eds). Organisational Learning. Los Angeles: Sage.
APPENDIX 1 CONSISTENCY MATRIX
TITLE__________________________________________________________________
PROPOSITIONS/ QUESTIONS/
HYPOTHESES
LITERATURE REVIEW DATA COLLECTION TOOL
ANALYSIS
1
2
3
4
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CONSISTENCY MATRIX EXAMPLE
TITLE: Methodologies used by stockmarket analysts and fund managers to evaluate the management of companies
PROPOSITIONS/ QUESTIONS/
HYPOTHESES
LITERATURE REVIEW DATA COLLECTION TOOL
ANALYSIS
Research question 1 Do fund managers and analysts take into account the competence of a company’s management in taking decisions on investments?
Dobbs,1998 Hequet, 2004
Question 2 in questionnaire
Frequency analysis on closed-ended question, to give proportions of weightings
Research question 2 What criteria do fund managers and analysts apply to this assessment?
Booth, 1999 Day & Fahey, 2003
Questions 3 & 4 Frequency analysis on fixed sum scale to determine categories and rank order them
Research question 3 How do analysts and fund managers incorporate judgements on the management of companies into their overall assessment of a company?
Booth, 1999 Serwer, 2005
Questions 5&6 Content analysis on open ended questions, to determine range of options and how they are used
Research question 4 What methodologies do analysts use to gather information on the management of companies?
Stewart, 2003 Magnus, 2001
Question 7. Content analysis to uncover types of communication channels
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