Monday, 25 May 2026

A note on some methods used for studying academic articles and books with regard to the literature review task: for MBA students

A note on some methods used for studying academic articles and books with regard to the literature review task: for MBA students

 

I am a part-time MBA student, currently learning to do my dissertation projects. While acknowledging the usefulness of learning generative AI advices on learning academic theories and ideas, I understand that it is also important to study academic articles and books direct for the literature review task of doing dissertation projects. In this regard, could you offer 5 advices on how to more effectively study academic articles and books?

Here are five practical, research-backed ways to study academic articles and books more effectively as a dissertation-stage MBA student.

1. Read with a clear question and role in mind

Instead of “reading to understand everything,” decide what role each source will play in your dissertation before you start. For example: theory background, definitions, methodological example, empirical evidence for/against your hypothesis, or context for your case. Students who use self-regulated strategies like setting specific goals for each reading tend to get more out of AI-supported and traditional reading alike.

A simple routine:

·        Before reading, write 1–2 questions: “What is the main argument?” “What does this say about X in Hong Kong?”

·        Decide: “Is this article mainly for theory, method, or evidence in my dissertation?”

·        While reading, highlight only what helps answer those questions.

What is one typical question you could write at the top of your next article to keep your reading focused?

2. Use structured passes instead of one heavy read

Many study-skills guides now recommend a multi-pass approach (e.g., preview → detailed → selective re-read) to academic reading, especially for dense journal articles in graduate work.

You can adapt it like this:

·        Pass 1 (5–10 minutes): Skim title, abstract, headings, figures, and conclusion. Write a one-sentence guess of the core contribution.

·        Pass 2 (20–30 minutes): Read introduction, theory/literature section, and discussion carefully, but skim methods/results unless they are central to your dissertation.

·        Pass 3 (targeted): Re-read only the parts relevant to your chapter (e.g., their conceptual framework if you are building your own).

Over time, this helps you quickly decide whether to keep, park, or discard a source for your literature review.

How do you currently read a typical journal article, and where in that process do you think a structured “three-pass” approach could help most?

3. Build concept maps and compare sources, not just summarize them

Dissertation-quality literature reviews must show how studies relate to each other, not just list them. Guidance for graduate writing shows that students who interact recursively with tools and strategies (e.g., mapping, comparing, revisiting notes) produce stronger, more synthetic writing than those who only use tools for surface tasks.

Practical habits:

·        After reading 2–3 articles on the same topic (e.g., “employee engagement in SMEs”), draw a quick concept map: key constructs, arrows for relationships, and where each author stands.

·        Keep a “differences notebook”: for each article, note how its theory, context, or findings differ from others you’ve read.

·        Try to write one short “compare and contrast” paragraph after each cluster of papers, focusing on agreements, contradictions, and gaps.

If you chose one narrow concept from your topic (for example, “affordable housing satisfaction” or “REIT governance”), what two recent papers could you put side-by-side to compare in this way?

4. Take notes for future writing, not for the present reading

Research on AI and graduate writing shows that the biggest gains happen when tools are combined with self-regulated strategies like paraphrasing, organizing, and drafting, rather than just checking grammar. This aligns with classic advice from academic skills centres: take notes that you can almost paste into your dissertation as building blocks.

A simple note template for each source:

·        Full reference

·        One-sentence “thesis” of the paper (their main claim)

·        Type of contribution: theory / method / case / evidence

·        3–5 bullet points in your own words: key ideas or findings

·        1–2 direct implications for your dissertation: “This supports my idea that…”, “This suggests a possible variable…”, “This method could be adapted for…”

This way, every time you read, you are also drafting your literature review and methodology chapter indirectly.

How do you currently take notes from articles, and what is one change you could make so your notes are more “ready to use” in your dissertation?

5. Integrate AI deliberately, but always return to the text

Recent guidance from universities emphasizes using generative AI as a scaffold for reading and writing (e.g., clarifying concepts, suggesting questions), while insisting that students still engage closely with original sources for evidence and citation. Studies on graduate-level AI use suggest that the strongest outcomes arise when AI is used recursively—students ask, refine, and check ideas, rather than letting AI replace their own reading.

In practice, that can mean:

·        Before reading: asking AI to explain unfamiliar theories in simple terms so you can recognize them in the article.

·        After reading: asking for help to test your understanding (“Here is my summary—what might I be missing?”), not to generate the summary from scratch.

·        During writing: using AI to brainstorm alternative structures or wording, then checking every claim against the original article before keeping it.

Given your interest in doing a serious MBA dissertation, using AI as a thinking partner while keeping the article or book as the “final authority” is a strong, ethical balance.



** the note is supported by perplexity.ai



A note of using additional theories to enrich the MBA literature review task: on Gutman's means-end chain theory

A note of using additional theories to enrich the MBA literature review task: on Gutman's means-end chain theory

 

I am a part-time MBA student learning to do dissertation projects. I have a query about literature review. I would like to employ Gutman's means-end chain theory to examine my research theme of "how a company's ESG policy influence the Gen z consumer buying behavior of shopping goods in Hong Kong". could you suggest 1 academic theory that is complementary to Gutman's means-end chain theory and 1 academic theory that is much less complementary to the Gutman's theory. With these two additional theories, I feel more capable to conduct a richer and more critical literature review for my dissertation project work. Please also provide citations and references of the references in Harvard reference format.

For your topic, the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) is the most complementary theory to Gutman’s means-end chain (MEC) theory, while the Value-Belief-Norm (VBN) theory is a much less complementary choice if your main aim is to extend MEC at the consumer decision-process level. MEC explains how consumers connect product/brand attributes to consequences and personal values, and TPB fits well because it explains how those value-based evaluations translate into intention through attitude, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control. VBN is less complementary because it is designed mainly to explain pro-environmental moral obligation and environmental action, so it shifts the lens from consumer value-structure and purchase cognition toward moral norms and environmental beliefs.

Why TPB fits well

TPB is a strong partner for MEC in your dissertation because ESG policy can be treated as an antecedent that shapes beliefs and evaluations, which then feed into purchase intention and buying behavior. In your case, MEC can uncover the “why” behind Gen Z’s ESG-linked preferences, while TPB can test the “so what” by modeling how those preferences become intention and behavior. This makes TPB especially useful for shopping goods in Hong Kong, where consumer buying is likely influenced not only by values but also by social pressure and perceived control such as price sensitivity, availability, and brand access.

Why VBN is less complementary

VBN is still relevant to ESG consumption, but it is less aligned with MEC because its core logic begins with values, environmental beliefs, and personal norms rather than product-attribute ladders and means-end value chains. In other words, VBN helps you explain why someone feels a moral duty to buy sustainable products, but it is less suited to tracing how a company’s ESG policy is cognitively translated into product-related attributes, consequences, and values in a shopping context. For a dissertation centered on consumer buying behavior of shopping goods, VBN can sit alongside MEC, but it is not as naturally integrative as TPB.

How to use them in your literature review

A useful structure for your review would be:

1.    MEC as the core theory for attribute-consequence-value interpretation.

2.    TPB as the complementary behavioral theory linking ESG perceptions to intention and purchase.

3.    VBN as the contrastive theory showing a more moralized, pro-environmental pathway.

That structure gives you both depth and critique: MEC explains value formation, TPB explains intention formation, and VBN shows an alternative ESG-consumption logic that is less directly tied to shopping-goods buying decisions.

Suggested dissertation framing

A strong conceptual framing could be:

·        ESG policy perception as a stimulus.

·        MEC as the value-translation mechanism.

·        TPB as the intention-to-behavior mechanism.

Then you can argue that Gen Z consumers in Hong Kong may respond to ESG policy not only because it aligns with values, but also because it shapes attitudes, social approval, and perceived ease of purchasing. This gives your literature review a richer and more critical structure than using MEC alone.

Harvard references

Ajzen, I. (1991) ‘The theory of planned behavior’, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 50(2), pp. 179–211. Available at: https://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/jobhdp/v50y1991i2p179-211.html

Gutman, J. (1982) ‘A means-end chain model based on consumer categorization processes’, Journal of Marketing, 46(2), pp. 60–72. Available at: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022242982000024

Nature (n.d.) ‘Pro-environmental behavior and value-belief-norm theory’. Available at: https://www.nature.com/nature-index/topics/l4/pro-environmental-behavior-and-value-belief-norm-theory

A related Hong Kong consumer sustainability survey also suggests ESG and sustainability concerns are already influencing buying choices, which supports the local relevance of your topic.



[It is important that the student carries out conventional literature review (including reading and reflecting on the ideas learned to come up with their own review ideas and in their own words. AI is useful to accelerate students' learning and provide illustrative [more comprehensible] examples to them].


** the note is supported by perplexity.ai



Sunday, 24 May 2026

How to refine your first draft of your MBA research theme: some suggestions

How to refine your first draft of your MBA research theme: some suggestions


Mainly due to inexperience of doing an MBA dissertation project, quite some students try to ask a generative AI to suggest a research theme by providing 4-5 key ideas that they happen to be familiar with, probably from their working experience or from some other MBA modules they have been learning. The end result is that the initial research theme is quite messy. Worse still, the generative AI, trying to be helpful, offer a brief overview of a number of possible broad themes in 4-5 management topics. Generative AI might hint at several ways to consider the research philosophy stances and research objectives of the research theme formulation.


I suggest a few directions for the students to pick up and discuss with generative AI to further develop their initial research theme prototype formulation. [Please be reminded also that after about 5 to 8 iterations of the discussion, accompanied by the students doing some preliminary literature review, research methods study and dialogues (e.g. inner dialogues and dialogues with AI and their educated friends, etc.), they need to do another 6 to 8 iterations of their own to come up with a dissertation proposal in their own voice and in their own words, adequately knowledgeable on the dissertation project background and sub-backgrounds (the academic, real-world of practices, and the researcher positionality ones).

The following diagram includes my suggestions on how to refine your initial MBA research theme:




















An illustrative example 


I am an MBA student and a novice on the subject of dissertation projects. I need to come up with an initial research theme. The theme should cover consumer behavior, the blue ocean strategy, e-tailing, corporate ESG policy and consumer trust. Could you suggest a research theme to me?

Based on your requirements to cover consumer behavior, blue ocean strategy, e-tailing, corporate ESG policy, and consumer trust, here is a focused research theme tailored for an MBA dissertation:

Proposed Research Theme

"Creating Uncontested Market Space in E-tailing: How Corporate ESG Policies Drive Consumer Trust and Purchase Behavior in Hong Kong's Online Retail Market"

Alternative Refined Title Options:

1.    "Blue Ocean Strategy through ESG: How Sustainable E-tailing Platforms Build Consumer Trust and Differentiate in Hong Kong's Competitive Online Retail Market"

2.    "The Role of ESG Policy in Creating Blue Ocean Strategy for E-tailers: Consumer Trust and Purchase Intention in Hong Kong's Online Shopping Landscape"


How This Theme Integrates All Five Elements

Element

Integration in the Research

Consumer Behavior

Examines purchase intention, trust formation, and decision-making processes among online shoppers 

Blue Ocean Strategy

Investigates how ESG differentiation creates uncontested market space, avoiding red ocean price competition 

E-tailing

Focuses on Hong Kong's online retail platforms as the research context 

Corporate ESG Policy

Analyzes environmental, social, and governance practices as the strategic differentiation mechanism 

Consumer Trust

Measures trust as the mediating variable between ESG communication and purchase behavior 


Why This Theme Works for Your MBA Dissertation

·        Relevant to Hong Kong context: Your local market access facilitates data collection

·        Timely topic: ESG and sustainability are emerging issues with limited research e-tailing connections

·        Theoretical foundation: Combines strategic management (Blue Ocean) with consumer psychology (trust/behavior)

·        Practical relevance: Provides actionable insights for e-tailers seeking competitive advantage

·        Methodologically feasible: Can employ quantitative survey methods (PLS-SEM, EFA) similar to existing studies

Suggested Research Questions

1.    How do corporate ESG policies influence consumer trust in Hong Kong e-tailing platforms?

2.    Can ESG differentiation serve as a blue ocean strategy for e-tailers in saturated markets?

3.    What is the relationship between ESG communication, consumer trust, and purchase intention?

This theme aligns with your interests in finance/ESG and provides a clear pathway for literature review, methodology design, and data collection.

 

I am now able to offer a more focused suggestions on ideas to refine my research theme as follows: I will use the research philosophy of pragmatism for my dissertation project; my more research theme is about "Blue Ocean Strategy through corporate ESG policy in the Hong Kong e-tailing shopping product sector for generations z and alpha "; my preferred additional key words are market segmentation and Gutman's Means-End Chain Theory. I am prepared to use questionnaire survey and semi-structured interview for me dissertation project. Could you suggest a more concrete research theme to me and indicate 3 relevant research issues and 3 relevant public media-reported issues to me on my research theme?


Concrete Research Theme

"Blue Ocean Strategy Through Corporate ESG Policy in Hong Kong E-tailing: A Pragmatist Study of Market Segmentation and Consumer Value Perception Among Generations Z and Alpha Using Gutman's Means-End Chain Theory"


Three Relevant Research Issues (Academic/Theoretical)

#

Research Issue

Why It Matters

1

How ESG policy creates value innovation for Blue Ocean Strategy in e-tailing

Blue Ocean Strategy requires simultaneous differentiation AND low cost; ESG typically increases costs. Your study investigates whether ESG can create uncontested market space without sacrificing profitability 

2

Generational differences in ESG-driven consumer value hierarchies

Gen Z (born 1997-2012) and Gen Alpha (born 2013-2025) have distinct value systems. Using Gutman's Means-End Chain, you'll map how ESG attributes → functional consequences → personal values differ between cohorts 

3

Market segmentation effectiveness based on ESG preference clusters

Pragmatism philosophy allows mixed methods to identify which segmentation criteria (values, attitudes, behaviors) best predict ESG-driven purchase intentions in Hong Kong e-tailing 


Three Relevant Public Media-Reported Issues (Real-World Context)

#

Media-Reported Issue

Relevance to Your Research

1

Hong Kong e-tailers facing intense price competition from cross-border platforms (Taobao, Pinduoduo)

Red ocean competition forces local e-tailers to seek Blue Ocean differentiation; ESG may be the differentiator 

2

Gen Z and Alpha consumers increasingly demand sustainable/s Ethical shopping options but show "trust gap" in greenwashing claims

Your study addresses this gap by applying Gutman's theory to understand what ESG attributes genuinely connect to personal values 

3

Hong Kong government's 2025 ESG reporting mandates for listed companies extending to supply chains

Regulatory pressure makes ESG implementation urgent for e-tailers; your research provides practical insights for compliance + competitive advantage 


Why This Theme Works for Your Methodology

Component

Alignment

Pragmatism Philosophy

Justifies mixing questionnaire (quantitative: PLS-SEM for value hierarchies) + interviews (qualitative: exploring means-end chains) 

Questionnaire Survey

Measures ESG awareness, trust, purchase intention across segmented Gen Z/Alpha samples (n≈200-300) 

Semi-structured Interviews

Deep-dive into how ESG attributes connect to personal values (laddering technique from Gutman's theory) 

Hong Kong Context

Your local access facilitates data collection; relevant to your MBA program 


Suggested Research Questions

1.    How do Gen Z and Gen Alpha consumers in Hong Kong perceive corporate ESG policies in e-tailing, and what value hierarchies do these perceptions create?

2.    Can ESG policy serve as a Blue Ocean Strategy for Hong Kong e-tailers to differentiate from cross-border competitors?

3.    Which market segmentation criteria based on ESG preferences best predict purchase intention among younger generations?

This theme is specific enough for dissertation focus yet flexible enough for pragmatist mixed methods, directly addresses both academic gaps and real-world business challenges in Hong Kong.

 

Could you also suggest 4 research objectives to me as well as 3 additional academic theories for me to use (pleas provide references on them in Harvard reference format).

Four Research Objectives

#

Research Objective

Key Variables/Concepts

1

To examine how corporate ESG policies influence consumer trust and purchase intention among Gen Z and Gen Alpha consumers in Hong Kong's e-tailing sector

Independent: ESG policies; Mediating: Consumer trust; Dependent: Purchase intention 

2

To apply Gutman's Means-End Chain Theory to map the value hierarchies (attributes → consequences → values) connecting ESG policy perceptions to personal values across generational segments

Attributes (ESG practices) → Consequences (trust/benefits) → Values (self-fulfillment, security) 

3

To identify market segmentation clusters based on ESG preferences and value orientations that differentiate Gen Z from Gen Alpha consumers in e-tailing

Segmentation criteria: ESG awareness, values, attitudes, purchase behaviors 

4

To evaluate whether ESG-driven differentiation constitutes a viable Blue Ocean Strategy for Hong Kong e-tailers competing against cross-border platforms

Strategic outcome: Uncontested market space vs. red ocean price competition 


Three Additional Academic Theories (with Harvard References)

1. Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB)

Why use it: Complements your study by explaining how attitudes toward ESG, subjective norms (peer influence), and perceived behavioral control predict purchase intention among younger generations. Works well with questionnaire surveys.

Harvard Reference:
Ajzen, I. (1991) 'The theory of planned behavior', Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 50(2), pp. 179–211.


2. Signaling Theory

Why use it: Explains how corporate ESG policies serve as credible signals to reduce information asymmetry between e-tailers and consumers, building trust. Essential for understanding why ESG communication matters in online shopping where physical product inspection is impossible.

Harvard Reference:
Connelly, B.L., Ireland, R.D., Hitt, M.A., Bromiley, P. and Busenitz, L.W. (2011) 'Corporate signaling: An emerging research agenda', in The SAGE handbook of strategic management. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, pp. 297–315.

Alternative (foundational):
Spence, M. (1973) 'Job market signaling', The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 87(3), pp. 355–374.


3. Stakeholder Theory

Why use it: Provides the ethical/strategic foundation for why companies should implement ESG policies. Explains how e-tailers balancing multiple stakeholders (consumers, employees, environment, shareholders) create long-term value and competitive advantage through ESG integration.

Harvard Reference:
Freeman, R.E. (1984) Strategic management: A stakeholder approach. Boston: Pitman.

Alternative (contemporary):
Freeman, R.E., Harrison, J.S., Wicks, A.C., Parmar, B.L. and de Colle, S. (2010) Stakeholder theory: The state of the art. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.


How These Theories Integrate with Your Framework

Theory

Role in Your Dissertation

Methodology Fit

Theory

Role in Your Dissertation

Methodology Fit

Gutman's Means-End Chain (core)

Maps value hierarchies from ESG attributes to personal values

Laddering interviews + survey analysis

Theory of Planned Behavior

Explains intention-behavior gap; adds attitude/norm/control variables

Questionnaire survey (quantitative)

Signaling Theory

Explains trust-building mechanism through ESG communication

Both survey (trust measurement) + interviews

Stakeholder Theory

Strategic/ethical foundation for ESG implementation

Theoretical framework chapter

Blue Ocean Strategy (core)

Strategic lens for competitive differentiation

Case analysis + strategic recommendations

Pragmatism (philosophy)

Justifies mixed methods approach

Overall research design

This theoretical triangulation strengthens your dissertation's academic rigor while maintaining practical relevance for Hong Kong e-tailers.


Further readings: a systemic picture of dissertation project tasks.; a spiral model of formulating research project proposals.; a conceptual model of the agile literature review approach (academic-oriented type).