A discussion of research types using an MBA research theme of “low-pressure getaways”
Regarding the topic of research types, if my MBA
dissertation research theme is "to evaluate the service quality and
customer experience of low-pressure getaways in Hong Kong", is it
descriptive research, exploratory research or evaluation research? Of considering
the research theme as different research types mean the formulated research
objectives and research question will differ?
Your MBA
dissertation theme “to evaluate the service quality and customer
experience of low-pressure getaways in Hong Kong” is primarily evaluation
research (also called evaluative research), not purely descriptive or
exploratory research.
Why it’s evaluation research
|
Research
Type |
Main
Purpose |
Matches
Your Theme? |
|
Evaluation
research |
Assess the effectiveness,
quality, or value of a program/service/experience; judge against
criteria |
✅ Yes — you’re
explicitly evaluating service quality and customer
experience |
|
Descriptive
research |
Describe “what exists” —
characteristics, current status, who/what/when/where/how |
❌ Only partially
— you’d need to describe features first, but your goal goes beyond
description |
|
Exploratory
research |
Gain initial insights when
little is known; develop hypotheses rather than test them |
❌ No — service
quality and customer experience are well-studied concepts; you’re not
exploring an unknown phenomenon |
Evaluation
research is a type of applied research designed to assess the
effectiveness of social or economic programs/services. Since you’re judging
service quality and customer experience (likely against standards or
expectations), this is evaluative.
Yes — research type affects objectives and
questions
The research type
you choose directly shapes your research objectives and
research questions:
|
Research
Type |
Typical
Research Objective |
Typical
Research Question |
|
Evaluation |
Assess/judge the
effectiveness/quality of X against criteria |
“How effective is X?” /
“What is the quality of X, and does it meet standards?” |
|
Descriptive |
Describe
characteristics/status of X |
“What are the
characteristics of X?” / “What exists regarding X?” |
|
Exploratory |
Gain initial understanding;
develop hypotheses |
“What is happening with X?”
/ “What factors might influence X?” |
For your theme
as evaluation research, your objectives and questions would look
like:
Research Objective
Example:
·
To evaluate the
service quality and customer experience of low-pressure getaways in Hong Kong
against established service quality dimensions (e.g., reliability,
responsiveness, assurance, empathy, tangibles).
Research Question
Example:
·
What is the level
of service quality and customer experience at low-pressure getaways in Hong
Kong, and do they meet expected standards?
·
Which service
quality dimensions most strongly influence customer experience at these
getaways?
If you framed it
as descriptive research, your question would be:
·
“What are the
current service quality characteristics and customer experience features of
low-pressure getaways in Hong Kong?”
If exploratory:
·
“What factors
influence service quality and customer experience at low-pressure getaways in
Hong Kong, and what hypotheses can be developed for future study?”
Practical recommendation for your MBA
dissertation
Since your
explicit aim is to evaluate, you should:
1.
Anchor your
dissertation in evaluation research
2.
Use established
service quality frameworks (e.g., SERVQUAL) as evaluation criteria
3.
Formulate
objectives/questions that assess performance against those criteria
4.
Consider
including descriptive elements (e.g., describing current
service features) as part of your evaluation process, but keep evaluation as
your primary type
This alignment
ensures your research design, methodology, and analysis match your stated
purpose — a key requirement for MBA dissertation quality.
** A collection of lecture notes on the subject of research methods for MBA students, 2026 June
A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.