Monday, 22 June 2026

Lecture note on research methods design criteria for mixed methods research design: for MBA students

Lecture note on research methods design criteria for mixed methods research design: for MBA students

 

Highlight 3 main research methods design criteria and offer 3 practice advices on how to improve the mixed methods research design, based on pragmatism, in the context of doing a part-time fourth-month MBA dissertation project.

For a part-time MBA dissertation using mixed methods research grounded in pragmatism, the three main design criteria and three practical improvement advice are:

Three Main Research Design Criteria (Pragmatism-Based)

According to pragmatist mixed methods literature, design decisions should be:

Criterion

What It Means for Your MBA Dissertation

Practical

The design must work within your part-time constraints (4 months elapsed, limited time access to participants, word limits) 

Contextually responsive

The design must fit your specific business/MBA context—addressing real organizational problems rather than abstract theory 

Consequential

The design must produce findings that matter—solutions or insights with actual application value for business practice 

Pragmatism places the research question at the center and links all methodological decisions to answering it, rather than prioritizing methods themselves.


Three Practice Advices to Improve Your Mixed Methods Design

1. Treat integration as a third strand—not just "two halves"

Mixed methods has three components: qualitative strand + quantitative strand + integration. Don't just collect both types of data; explicitly plan how you'll pull them together to generate insight "greater than the sum of the parts".

·        Action: In your methods section, write a dedicated subsection on integration plans—how you'll triangulate, compare, or weave qualitative and quantitative findings together.

2. Start writing the methods section immediately

At month 4 of a part-time dissertation, you're at a critical juncture. Writing what you're doing and how reveals holes in your research plan before you waste time.

·        Action: Draft your methods section now, including data collection procedures, analysis plans, and integration strategy. This will help you identify access issues, timeline problems, or overly broad questions.

3. Align research questions tightly with feasible methods

For part-time students, a common pitfall is asking questions too broad for the timeline. Each question must be realistically answerable through your chosen interviews/surveys/case evidence.

·        Action: Apply the "few sentences test": if you can't explain in 2–3 sentences how your data will answer each question, the design is too wide. Narrow your topic, reduce sample size, or focus on one core business problem.


Key pragmatism reminder: Ask "what works" for your research problem, not what's methodologically pure. Use methods instrumentally based on applicability to your MBA context.


Please clarify your ideas a bit with regard to the MBA dissertation research theme of "to evaluate the influence of corporate talent management policy on the middle-managers' innovation behavior in ABC Hotel Ltd of Hong Kong via the lens of pragmatism, using semi-structured interview, employee questionnaire survey and internal document study".

 

Let me clarify how those pragmatist design criteria and improvement advice apply directly to your MBA dissertation theme:


Your Research Theme Breakdown

Topic: Evaluate how corporate talent management policy influences middle managers' innovation behavior at ABC Hotel Ltd, Hong Kong
Philosophy: Pragmatism
Methods: Semi-structured interviews + employee questionnaire survey + internal document study (mixed methods: qualitative + quantitative + document analysis)


How the Three Design Criteria Apply to Your Study

1. Practical → Works within your part-time constraints

Constraint

How Your Design Must Adapt

4 months elapsed (June 2026)

You likely have ~8–12 months remaining. Interviews + survey + document study is ambitious but feasible if you limit sample sizes

Part-time MBA (working professional)

Use ABC Hotel's existing middle managers as accessible participants—no need for external recruitment 

Hong Kong context

Single organization (ABC Hotel Ltd) = manageable scope; avoid multi-company comparison

Pragmatist check: Does combining three methods genuinely help answer your question better than just one? Yes—interviews reveal why policies affect behavior, surveys show how much and how widespread, documents verify what policies actually exist.


2. Contextually responsive → Fits ABC Hotel's business reality

Your design must reflect:

·        Hotel industry specifics: Middle managers in hotels face unique pressures (guest service, shift work, high turnover) that shape innovation behavior differently than manufacturing/tech sectors

·        Hong Kong labor market: High competition for talent, multicultural workforce, regulatory environment around talent management

·        ABC Hotel's actual policy: Don't study "talent management" abstractly—focus on their specific policy (e.g., training programs, performance appraisal, career development pathways)

Pragmatist check: Are your interview questions and survey items grounded in hotel middle managers' daily work? Example:

·        Interview: "How does ABC Hotel's training policy affect your ability to try new service approaches with guests?"

·        Survey: "On a 1–5 scale, how much does the career development policy encourage you to propose innovation ideas?"


3. Consequential → Produces findings with real business value

Your dissertation should answer:

·        For ABC Hotel: "Should we revise our talent management policy to boost middle managers' innovation?"

·        For Hong Kong hotel industry: "What talent management practices work for encouraging innovation in service businesses?"

·        For MBA learning: "How does stakeholder theory/pragmatism explain the policy-behavior link?"

Pragmatist check: Will your findings lead to actionable recommendations? If yes, the design is consequential. Avoid purely theoretical conclusions.


How the Three Improvement Advices Apply to Your Design

Advice 1: Treat integration as a third strand

Your three methods must be intentionally woven together, not just reported separately:

Method

What It Reveals

How to Integrate

Semi-structured interviews (qualitative)

Deep understanding of why and how policy influences behavior; personal stories, barriers, motivations

Use interview themes to explain survey patterns (e.g., "Survey showed 40% feel policy discourages innovation; interviews revealed this is because...")

Employee questionnaire survey (quantitative)

Statistical patterns: strength of relationship, prevalence across departments, demographic differences

Survey results guide which interview participants to select (e.g., target low-innovation scorers for deeper interviews)

Internal document study

Objective verification of policy content, implementation guidelines, HR records

Documents confirm what policies actually exist vs. what employees report in survey/interviews

Integration example:

"Survey data showed middle managers in the Front Office department scored innovation behavior 1.5 points lower than Rooms Division (p<0.05). Interview analysis revealed Front Office managers face stricter guest-service protocols limiting experimentation. Document review confirmed Front Office has more rigid talent management procedures. Together, these explain why the policy's influence varies by department."

This is integration—not just "qualitative said X, quantitative said Y" but "qualitative + quantitative + documents = deeper insight".


Advice 2: Start writing the methods section immediately

At month 4, draft your methods section now to expose problems:

What to write now:

1.    Sampling strategy: How many interviewees? How many survey respondents? How do you select ABC Hotel middle managers?

2.    Data collection timeline: When will you conduct interviews? When will survey launch/close? When will you access documents?

3.    Analysis plan: How will you analyze interview transcripts (e.g., thematic analysis)? How will you analyze survey data (e.g., SPSS regression)? How will you analyze documents (e.g., policy content coding)?

4.    Integration plan: Explicitly describe when and how you'll combine methods (e.g., "After survey analysis, I will select interview participants based on survey scores")

Common pitfalls you'll catch:

·        Can you realistically get 50+ survey respondents from ABC Hotel middle managers in 2 months?

·        Do you have HR approval to access internal documents?

·        Are your interview questions aligned with survey items for integration?

Writing reveals these gaps before you waste time.


Advice 3: Align research questions tightly with feasible methods

Your current theme is one broad question. Break it into 2–3 focused sub-questions that your methods can actually answer:

Suggested research question structure:

Question

Method That Answers It

Feasibility Check

RQ1: What is the content and implementation of ABC Hotel's corporate talent management policy?

Internal document study

Easy (HR documents)

RQ2: How strongly does the talent management policy correlate with middle managers' innovation behavior?

Employee questionnaire survey (regression analysis)

Needs 30–50 respondents

RQ3: How do middle managers perceive and experience the policy's influence on their innovation behavior?

Semi-structured interviews (thematic analysis)

Needs 8–12 participants

RQ4: How do survey patterns, interview insights, and document evidence combine to explain the policy-behavior relationship?

Integration of all three methods

⚠️ Requires careful planning

Why this works:

·        Each RQ is answerable by one or more methods

·        No RQ is too broad ("evaluate the influence" → broken into correlation + perception + mechanism)

·        Integration (RQ4) ties everything together pragmatically

Pragmatist reminder: If you can't explain in 2–3 sentences how your data answers RQ2, the question is too wide. Narrow it: "What is the correlation coefficient between policy satisfaction score and innovation behavior score?".


Pragmatism in Your Specific Context

Why pragmatism fits your study:

Pragmatist Principle

Your Study Application

Research question drives methods

You chose interviews + survey + documents because together they best answer "how policy influences behavior" 

"What works" over methodological purity

You're not doing pure qualitative OR pure quantitative—you're using what's practical for a hotel business problem 

Real-world problem solving

Your findings will help ABC Hotel improve talent policy to boost innovation 

Multiple truths acknowledged

Documents show policy what, survey shows policy extent, interviews show policy experience—all valid perspectives 

Avoid positivism trap: Don't assume survey correlation = "objective truth." Pragmatism says survey + interviews + documents = better understanding than any single method.

Avoid interpretivism trap: Don't assume only interviews reveal "real meaning." Pragmatism says survey statistics also matter for business decisions.


Quick Feasibility Checklist for Your Part-Time MBA (Month 4)

Task

Timeline

Risk

Get HR approval for documents & survey access

Week 1–2

⚠️ High—if delayed, entire project stalls

Draft interview questions + survey items

Week 2–3

Medium—can revise

Conduct 8–12 semi-structured interviews

Week 4–8

⚠️ Medium—scheduling with working managers

Launch survey to 30–50 middle managers

Week 5–10

⚠️ Medium—response rate uncertainty

Analyze interview transcripts (thematic)

Week 9–12

Low—doable alone

Analyalyze survey data (SPSS/Excel)

Week 11–14

Low—standard stats

Analyze documents (content coding)

Week 10–12

Low

Integrate findings (write RQ4)

Week 13–16

⚠️ High—requires careful thinking

Write full dissertation

Week 17–24

⚠️ Medium—time pressure

Key advice: Start methods section draft this week. If HR approval takes 3 months instead of 2, you need to adjust timeline immediately.


Your design is pragmatically sound if you:

1.    Keep scope single-organization (ABC Hotel)

2.    Limit sample sizes realistically (12 interviews, 40 survey respondents)

3.    Plan integration explicitly (not just "methods A + B")

4.    Write methods section now to expose gaps

5.    Focus RQs on actionable business insights, not abstract theory

This approach respects your part-time constraints while producing consequential findings for Hong Kong's hotel industry.



 

** 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.