CH 3 The Problem Definition
CH 3 The Problem Definition
CH 3 The Problem Definition
Types of Variables
1. Categorical variable: Indicates membership in some
group. Also called classificatory variable.
2.Continuous variable: Can take on a range of
quantitative values.
3. Dependent variable: A process outcome or a
variable that is predicted and/or explained by other
variables.
4. Independent variable: A variable that is expected to
influence the dependent variable in some way.
Types of Variables
Examples
1. Categorical variable:[……………………]
2. Continuous variable:[……………………]
3. Dependent variable:[…………………….]
4. Independent variable:[………………….]
6. Writing Research Objectives and
Questions
Research Questions express the research
objectives in terms of questions that can be
addressed by research.
• Help to develop well -formulated, specific
hypotheses that can be empirically tested.
• Help the researcher design a study that will
produce useful results.
• Hypotheses are more specific than research
questions. One key relationship between
research questions and hypotheses is that
hypotheses can generally specify the direction
of a relationship. Research hypotheses are
more specific and therefore require
considerable more theoretical support. In
addition, research questions are interrogative,
whereas research hypotheses are declarative.
Influence of Decision Statement of Marketing Problem
on Research Objectives and Research Designs
The Research Proposal
• The research proposal is a written statement of the
research design. It always includes a statement explaining
the purposes of the study in the form of research objectives
or deliverables and a definition of the problem, often in the
form of a decision statement.
• A good proposal systematically outlines the particular
research methodology and detail procedures that will be
used during each stage of the research process.
• Normally a schedule of costs and deadlines is included in
the research proposal.
• The research proposal becomes the primary
communication document between the researcher and the
research user.
Components of a Research Proposal
Most research proposals include the following
sections:
→ decision description
→ purpose of the research including the research objectives
→ research design
→ sample design
→ data gathering and/or fieldwork techniques
→ data processing and analysis
→ budget
→ and time schedule
Anticipating outcomes
√ The proposal and the final research report will
contain much of the same information. The
proposal describes the data collection,
measurement, data analysis, and so forth, in the
future tense.
√ In the report, the actual results are presented.
In this sense, the proposal anticipates the
research outcome
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