Research Methods
Research Methods
Research Methods
Inductive methods analyze an observed event, while deductive methods verify the
observed event. Inductive approaches are associated with qualitative research, and
deductive methods are more commonly associated with quantitative analysis.
Conducted
Asking questions Asking questions By using hypotheses.
through
When it comes to customers and market studies, the more thorough your questions,
the better the analysis. You get essential insights into brand perception and product
needs by thoroughly collecting customer data through surveys and questionnaires.
You can use this data to make smart decisions about your marketing strategies to
position your business effectively.
To make sense of your study and get insights faster, it helps to use a research
repository as a single source of truth in your organization and manage your research
data in one centralized data repository.
Qualitative methods
Qualitative research is a method that collects data using conversational methods,
usually open-ended questions. The responses collected are essentially non-numerical.
This method helps a researcher understand what participants think and why they think
in a particular way.
Types of qualitative methods include:
1. One-to-one Interview
2. Focus Groups
3. Ethnographic studies
4. Text Analysis
5. Case Study
Quantitative methods
Quantitative methods deal with numbers and measurable forms. It uses a systematic
way of investigating events or data. It answers questions to justify relationships with
measurable variables to either explain, predict, or control a phenomenon.
1. Survey research
2. Descriptive research
3. Correlational research
Remember, it is only valuable and useful when it is valid, accurate, and reliable.
Incorrect results can lead to customer churn and a decrease in sales.
GATHER INSIGHTS