Thursday, 25 June 2026

An exploratory exercise to come up with a concrete MBA research theme: on animal welfare

An exploratory exercise to come up with a concrete MBA research theme: on animal welfare

 

I am a part-time MBA student, currently learning how to carry out a dissertation project. My personal interest is animal welfare in Hong Kong but I have no ideas how to come up with a research theme that is appropriate for an MBA dissertation proposal. As a brainstorming exercise, could you suggest 4 MBA research themes for me to consider that is related to animal welfare?

Yes — for an MBA dissertation, the best animal-welfare topics are usually framed through management, strategy, CSR, operations, marketing, sustainability, or stakeholder value, rather than animal welfare as a purely veterinary or legal issue. In Hong Kong, that gives you several strong and practical research angles.

4 MBA research themes

1.    Corporate social responsibility and animal welfare in Hong Kong firms
You could study how companies support animal welfare through CSR, employee volunteering, donation campaigns, or cause-related marketing, and whether these activities improve brand image or stakeholder trust. This fits well with MBA themes like CSR, reputation management, and stakeholder theory.

2.    Business models for pet-food and shelter-support enterprises
You could examine how Hong Kong social enterprises or commercial firms create sustainable business models while supporting shelters, stray animals, or pet adoption. This is a good topic if you want to connect animal welfare with entrepreneurship, social innovation, and circular economy ideas.

3.    Consumer attitudes toward pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands
This theme could explore whether Hong Kong consumers are willing to pay more for products or services from firms that demonstrate strong animal-welfare commitments. It links nicely to marketing, consumer behaviour, and ethical branding.

4.    Animal welfare as part of supply chain and ESG governance
You could investigate how animal welfare is integrated into procurement, sourcing, or ESG reporting, especially in food, retail, or hospitality firms. This is a strong MBA topic because it connects governance, sustainability, risk management, and corporate accountability.

How to make one workable

A good MBA dissertation theme should be narrow enough to research in a few months and broad enough to show management value. For example, instead of “animal welfare in Hong Kong,” you could narrow it to:

  • “The impact of CSR activities on public perceptions of animal welfare brands in Hong Kong.”
  • “The business viability of pet-food donation models for animal shelters in Hong Kong.”
  • “Consumer willingness to support animal-welfare-friendly brands in Hong Kong.”
  • “How Hong Kong firms incorporate animal welfare into ESG and stakeholder management.”

Best fit for MBA

If you want the most MBA-friendly direction, I would prioritize these two:

  • CSR and brand reputation.
  • Business model / social enterprise sustainability.

Those are easier to justify as management research and easier to turn into a proposal with clear objectives, research questions, and data collection methods.

I am interested in the crude research theme of "Consumer attitudes toward pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands". Besides, I would like to consider the following key words for my research theme formulation: ethical branding, consumer behavior, pragmatism, and exploratory research. Could you come up with a more concrete research theme based on these information?

 

A strong concrete theme would be:

“An exploratory study of Hong Kong consumers’ attitudes toward ethical branding in pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands.”

This keeps your original idea, while making it more MBA- and dissertation-ready by adding a clear market context, a consumer-focus, and an exploratory design. It also fits pragmatism well because you can justify choosing methods that help you understand both attitudes and practical business implications.

Slightly sharper alternatives

1.    “Exploring Hong Kong consumers’ perceptions of ethical branding in pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands.”

2.    “A pragmatist exploratory study of consumer behavior toward animal-welfare-oriented branding in Hong Kong.”

3.    “Consumer acceptance of ethical branding among pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands in Hong Kong: an exploratory study.”

Best version for an MBA proposal

If you want the most balanced and academically acceptable wording, I would suggest:

“An exploratory pragmatist study of Hong Kong consumers’ behavior toward ethical branding in pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands.”

This version works well because:

·        Exploratory signals that you are investigating a developing topic.

·        Pragmatist signals a practical dissertation orientation.

·        Consumer behavior gives you a clear business/marketing angle.

·        Ethical branding makes the topic sound more management-focused and academically framed.

Possible refinement

If you want, you can make it even more precise by specifying a sector, such as retail, food, or pet services. For example:

·        “An exploratory pragmatist study of Hong Kong consumers’ behavior toward ethical branding in pet-friendly pet retail brands.”

·        “An exploratory study of consumer attitudes toward ethical branding in animal-welfare-oriented pet food brands in Hong Kong.”

 

With reference to the concrete research theme of "An exploratory pragmatist study of Hong Kong consumers’ behavior toward ethical branding in pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands.”, please provide some information on: (1) related research issues, (2) related Hong Kong public-media reported issues, and (3) 3 relevant academic theories to use, with references in Harvard reference format.

Below is a dissertation-oriented framing for your theme, with the three parts you asked for. I have kept it focused on Hong Kong and on MBA-relevant concepts such as branding, consumer response, and practical managerial implications.emerald+1

A useful research issue is whether Hong Kong consumers actually notice and value ethical branding in pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands, or whether they mainly buy on price, convenience, and product quality. Another issue is whether ethical branding affects outcomes such as trust, purchase intention, brand loyalty, and willingness to pay a premium.emerald

You can also examine whether consumers distinguish between genuine animal-welfare commitment and superficial “green/ethical” messaging, which is relevant to concerns about credibility and brand authenticity. A third issue is whether consumer attitudes differ by pet ownership, age, income, and prior involvement in animal welfare.emerald

For an exploratory pragmatist study, your research issues can be framed as:

·        How Hong Kong consumers interpret ethical branding in pet-related products and services.

·        What factors shape their buying decisions.

·        Whether perceived ethicality translates into real market support.emerald

2. Hong Kong public-media issues

Hong Kong public-facing animal-welfare reporting often highlights rescue, stray-animal care, and community support activities, showing that animal welfare is a visible public concern rather than a niche topic. The SPCA Hong Kong continues to publicise rescue and welfare-related work, and it also promotes pet-friendly locations and public engagement around animal welfare issues.spca+1

The Hong Kong Consumer Council has also stressed sustainable consumption and the need for better consumer information, which is relevant to ethical branding because consumers need credible, understandable claims before they can make informed choices. Its annual report discusses the Council’s efforts to educate and encourage consumers toward more sustainable choices and better product information.hub.hku

A practical local issue is that some brands and organisations promote “ethical” or “green” claims, but consumers may struggle to verify them. That makes Hong Kong a good setting for studying trust, label credibility, and whether ethical brand messages influence consumer behavior in a crowded and fast-moving market.hub.hku+1

3. Three theories to use

Theory 1: Theory of Planned Behavior

This theory is very useful for consumer-behavior research because it explains how attitudes, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control shape intention and behavior. In your topic, it can help explain whether positive attitudes toward animal welfare actually become purchase intention.emerald

Theory 2: Stakeholder theory

Stakeholder theory fits well with ethical branding because it views firms as responsible to multiple stakeholders, not only shareholders. In your dissertation, it can support the idea that pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands create value by responding to customer expectations, social expectations, and community concerns.academic.oup

Theory 3: Ethical consumerism / brand ethicality

This is the most directly relevant lens for your topic because it focuses on how consumers respond to brands they perceive as morally responsible. Research shows that perceived brand ethicality can influence commitment, psychological ownership, and willingness to pay a premium, making it highly relevant to your theme.emerald

4. Possible research angle

A strong dissertation focus could be:

“How do Hong Kong consumers perceive ethical branding in pet-friendly and animal-welfare-oriented brands, and how does this perception affect purchase intention and brand trust?”

That version is narrow enough for an MBA dissertation, but still broad enough to allow exploratory interviews, a survey, or a mixed-method design. It also aligns naturally with pragmatism because you can combine practical market understanding with theory-driven analysis.emerald

Harvard references

Consumer Council (2023) Consumer Council Annual Report 2022-23. Hong Kong: Consumer Council. Available at: https://www.consumer.org.hk/f/annual_report/429305/CCAR22-23_p60-67_Promoting%20Sustainable%20Consumption.pdf (Accessed: 25 June 2026).

Kumar, V. and Kaushal, V. (2023) ‘Brand ethicality as a driver of psychological, affective and behavioral response to a brand’, Marketing Intelligence & Planning, 41(8), pp. 1178–1196. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1108/MIP-05-2023-0193 (Accessed: 25 June 2026).

SPCA Hong Kong (2026a) Home. Available at: https://www.spca.org.hk (Accessed: 25 June 2026).

SPCA Hong Kong (2026b) Pawprint Magazine. Available at: https://www.spca.org.hk/help-advice/pawprint-magazine/ (Accessed: 25 June 2026).



A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.


A note on reasoning quality improvement: for MBA and Housing Studies students

A note on reasoning quality improvement: for MBA and Housing Studies students

 

Highlight 4 ideas and 3 practice advices on each of these two topics: (1) the The Classical (Aristotelian) Method and (2) The Rogerian Method, in the context of improving quality of reasoning in MBA and Housing Studies dissertation writing.

Here are 4 ideas and 3 practice advices for each method, framed for MBA and Housing Studies dissertation writing.

1) Classical (Aristotelian) Method

Idea 1: Start with a clear claim.
Use a strong thesis that states your position early and precisely. In MBA and Housing Studies, this helps you avoid vague “topic reporting” and move toward a defensible argument.

Idea 2: Build a logical case.
Organize your chapter so each section supports the thesis with evidence, definitions, and reasoning. This improves coherence because the reader can see how each point contributes to the conclusion.

Idea 3: Engage counterarguments directly.
Classical argument expects you to recognize opposing views and respond to them fairly. In dissertation writing, this strengthens your credibility because it shows you understand the debate rather than ignoring inconvenient evidence.

Idea 4: Lead to a firm conclusion.
End by showing why your argument matters for theory, practice, or policy. For Housing Studies, this could mean implications for affordability, governance, or planning; for MBA, it could mean implications for strategy, leadership, or performance.

Practice advice 1: Outline before drafting.
Use a structure of claim, evidence, counterargument, and conclusion before writing full paragraphs. This prevents your dissertation from becoming a collection of disconnected literature notes.

Practice advice 2: Test each paragraph for relevance.
Ask whether every paragraph directly advances the thesis. If a paragraph only “adds information” but does not support the argument, revise or remove it.

Practice advice 3: Use evidence as proof, not decoration.
Do not list sources just to show reading. Instead, explain how each study, case, or statistic supports your reasoning and what limitation it has.

2) Rogerian Method

Idea 1: Begin by showing understanding of the other side.
Rogerian writing starts with empathy and accurate representation of alternative views. In dissertation work, this is useful when policy positions, managerial choices, or theoretical perspectives are contested.

Idea 2: Reduce defensiveness.
Instead of attacking opponents, you show where their concerns are valid. This is especially helpful in Housing Studies topics such as redevelopment, tenant displacement, or public housing reform, where stakeholders may hold different values.

Idea 3: Search for common ground.
The method aims to identify shared goals before proposing your own position. In MBA research, this can help reconcile tensions between profit, sustainability, governance, and stakeholder interests.

Idea 4: Present a negotiated conclusion.
Rogerian argument usually ends with a position that acknowledges complexity and offers a middle path or integrative solution. This often suits dissertation topics where the goal is not “winning” but producing a balanced, credible interpretation.

Practice advice 1: Summarize opposing views fairly.
Before arguing your own case, write the other side in a way its supporters would accept. This improves academic honesty and prevents straw-man argumentation.

Practice advice 2: Use bridge language.
Phrases like “both sides agree,” “a shared concern is,” or “the evidence suggests a possible synthesis” help you connect perspectives. This is valuable when writing about contested housing policy or managerial trade-offs.

Practice advice 3: Reserve judgment until after understanding.
Do not rush to refute. First map the assumptions, values, and concerns behind each position, then build your dissertation argument around the overlap and the remaining disagreement.

Best use in dissertations

For MBA dissertations, the Classical method works well when you need a decisive argument about strategy, governance, performance, or leadership. The Rogerian method works well when the issue involves competing stakeholder interests or when you want a more balanced policy or managerial recommendation.

For Housing Studies dissertations, Classical argument suits work that evaluates one policy or model against alternatives, while Rogerian argument suits topics with strong public-interest conflicts, such as affordability, redevelopment, eviction, or social equity.

A practical approach is to use the Classical method for your overall thesis structure, then borrow Rogerian techniques in sections where you must represent competing viewpoints fairly.

 

Provide 4 academic references on our discussion topic in Harvard reference format.

Here are 4 Harvard-style references that fit our discussion on the Classical (Aristotelian) method and the Rogerian method in dissertation writing:

1.    Aristotle (2007) On rhetoric: A theory of civic discourse. 2nd edn. Translated by G.A. Kennedy. New York: Oxford University Press.academic.oup

2.    Purdue OWL (n.d.) ‘Rogerian argument’. Available at: https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/academic_writing/historical_perspectives_on_argumentation/rogerian_argument.html (Accessed: 25 June 2026).owl.purdue

3.    Purdue OWL (n.d.) ‘Aristotelian argument’. Available at: https://owl.excelsior.edu/argument-and-critical-thinking/organizing-your-argument/organizing-your-argument-aristotelian/ (Accessed: 25 June 2026).owl.excelsior

4.    Kiefer, K. (n.d.) ‘What is Rogerian argument?’. Colorado State University Writing@CSU. Available at: https://writing.colostate.edu/guides/teaching/co300man/com5e1.cfm (Accessed: 25 June 2026).writing.colostate

A small note: item 1 is a solid scholarly anchor for the classical tradition, while items 2–4 are teaching-oriented academic sources that explain how the methods work in practice.



A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.


Wednesday, 24 June 2026

Lecture note on verification and falsification in quantitative data analysis: for MBA students

Lecture note on verification and falsification in quantitative data analysis: for MBA students

 

In the context of analyzing inferential statistics findings, e.g. from a questionnaire survey on my Hong Kong friends' opinion on CEO branding", how to practice verification and falsification on quantitative data analysis, in the context of doing an MBA dissertation projects. Please highlight 4 ideas on each of these two concepts (i.e. verification and falsification) in your discussion.

In an MBA dissertation using questionnaire data, verification means strengthening confidence that your statistical findings are credible, while falsification means actively trying to disconfirm your hypothesis rather than only looking for support. For your CEO-branding survey, the best practice is to treat every inferential result as a claim that must survive checks for consistency, sampling quality, and alternative explanations.studocu+1

Verification ideas

1.    Match the test to the hypothesis. If you predict that CEO branding is positively associated with purchase intention or trust, use the right inferential test for the variable types and research design, such as correlation, t-test, ANOVA, or regression. A result is more believable when the test logic fits the data structure and the study question.studocu

2.    Check whether the result is statistically and practically meaningful. Do not rely only on the p-value; report effect size and confidence interval as well, because inferential statistics are about estimating population patterns from a sample, not just labeling a result as significant. A small but significant effect may be weak in practical MBA terms, while a moderate effect may matter more for branding strategy.studocu

3.    Look for internal consistency across measures. If several questionnaire items measure the same concept, the pattern should broadly agree across related items, subscales, and descriptive statistics. Consistency across indicators makes your conclusion more trustworthy than a single isolated significant result.hkuspace.hku+1

4.    Use robustness checks. Re-run the analysis with sensible alternatives, such as checking assumptions, comparing parametric and non-parametric tests, or testing models with and without control variables. If the conclusion remains similar, your finding is better verified.studocu

Falsification ideas

1.    State a clear null hypothesis that can fail. For example, “CEO branding has no relationship with brand trust among Hong Kong respondents” is falsifiable because the data can contradict it. In dissertation work, hypotheses should be precise enough that evidence can show they are unsupported.arxiv+1

2.    Actively look for disconfirming patterns. Test whether the relationship disappears in subgroups, such as by age, work experience, or gender, or whether the effect reverses after adding controls. Falsification is not about forcing a rejection, but about asking whether the claim still holds under harder tests.studocu

3.    Check for alternative explanations and bias. A result that seems to support your hypothesis may actually reflect sampling bias, social desirability bias, poor wording, or non-response bias. Hong Kong survey quality guidance emphasizes careful questionnaire design, high response rates, and thorough checking of raw data to avoid misleading conclusions.studocu

4.    Try to reproduce the pattern with a different specification. If the effect only appears with one coding choice, one subset, or one analytic model, the claim is weak. A finding that survives re-coding, re-grouping, or alternative model assumptions is harder to falsify, and therefore stronger.studocu

Applying it to your survey

For an MBA dissertation, the key is to present verification and falsification as part of a disciplined analysis process, not as abstract philosophy. You can write that verification comes from consistency, significance, effect size, and robustness, while falsification comes from null hypotheses, subgroup testing, bias checks, and alternative model comparisons. That framing shows you are not merely “proving” your idea about CEO branding, but testing it rigorously in a way that supports sound managerial conclusions.hkuspace.hku+1

A simple way to phrase this in your dissertation is: “The analysis sought both to verify the hypothesized association between CEO branding and respondent perceptions and to falsify the claim by examining alternative explanations, robustness across subgroups, and sensitivity to model specification”.


** also study the video on Popper and the logic of falsification.


** 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.