Primary Research
Question Description
Primary research is research that you, yourself have conducted. For your business report you will be required to conduct both secondary and primary research. Upon completion of this assignment you will have the primary research questions for your Written Business Report.
As part of your primary research, you will conduct an interview with one person. It can be someone in the field, a professor that teaches the area, or someone currently doing the job. I suggest interviewing via email so you can copy/paste the answers in the appendix of your paper. This will also allow you to easily do in-text citations.
Once you have done the interview, you will take the results from the interview and use them in both your paper and presentation. In your paper you can use them as quotes and will create a graph/chart of the findings (one graph chart is required, but you can do more if you choose). In your Business Report presentation in Week 6 you will give the highlights of your primary research – Student Video Example (Links to an external site).
SAMPLE QUESTIONS for Interview (these should be put into your own words if you use them, and you will need to create an additional question to have the required 10):
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- What type of degree do you think I need for this field? Why?
- Where should I go to school for this degree? Why?
- Are there any certifications/training that I should consider?
- Are there any certifications that are required for this field?
- Where do you see the job opportunities in this field over the next five years? (industries or job titles)
- In your opinion, what are the advantages/disadvantages of working in this field?
- If I was your relative, would you recommend that I go into this field? Why/Why not?
- What should I be doing right now to enhance my skills to get a job in this field?
- ** Based on 100 percent being the total, what are the main tasks and associated percentage you are involved with on a daily basis. A minimum of three quadrants are required for the graph. ** Required question
- Create your own question based on what you want to know.
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I encourage you all to do an interview, but you can also do a SURVEY. If you decide to do a survey you will need 10 questions with a minimum of three types of survey questions (not all True/False, or all multiple choice). When creating your questions remember that you will use the results to create a pie, line or bar chart for your report. Review Chapter 12, page 372 and consider using an online survey tool (not required, but encouraged): www.surveymonkey.com, https://freeonlinesurveys.com, and https://surveyplanet.com
INSTRUCTIONS:
1.) Post your Business Report topic and what type of primary research you plan to conduct (interview or survey) with your 10 questions.
2.) Respond to your classmates with your feedback on their questions.
3.) Read the Quantifying Data and Citing Sources Lecture and moving forward details below.
POINTS |
PRIMARY RESEARCH PEER REVIEW GRADING RUBRIC |
0 – 5 |
Post your Business Report topic and what type of primary research you plan to conduct (interview or survey) |
0-10 |
Post your 10 interview/survey questions in the discussion area |
0-10 |
One question is quantifiable and can be put in a pie/line/bar graph Example: “Based on a 100% scale…” or “Ranked by order of importance, what are your daily tasks…” |
TOTAL POINTS = 25 |
STEP 2: MOVING FORWARD (ongoing)
Once your interview or survey questions are developed, start your primary research.
- Begin to think about which information you can gather in the interview/survey to use to create your pie, line or bar chart
- List of interview/survey questions will be in the appendix section of report
- Write about some of the most important or most relevant data that you collected during your interview/survey in the body of your report. The rest of the information will come from the research that you do on your topic (information from primary and secondary research, whether summarized or quoted, needs to be cited in the body of your report as well as on the Work-Cited page).
Next week you should complete your survey or interview using the questions you developed as part of the Primary Research Peer Review. You will also need to appropriately cite your primary and secondary data. Review the Quantifying Data and Citing Sources file for more detail. (Links to an external site.)
If you haven’t started gathering your secondary data (researched by others) now is a good time to do so. Below you will find a few of my favorite (credible) secondary research websites for this paper.
- https://www.bls.gov/ooh/ (Links to an external site.) – Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook with details on pay, education, on the job training, industry growth rate
- https://www.onetonline.org/ (Links to an external site.) – O*NET OnLine has detailed descriptions of the world of work for use by job seekers, workforce development and HR professionals, students, researchers, and more!
- https://www.bls.gov/careeroutlook/about.htm (Links to an external site.) – Career Outlook articles provide data and information on a variety of topics—including occupations and industries, pay and benefits, and more. These articles are helpful for students, career counselors, jobseekers, and others planning careers.
- https://www.careeronestop.org/ExploreCareers/Learn/learn-about-careers.aspx (Links to an external site.) – many useful resources to explore careers.
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