Monday, 6 July 2026

Brainstorming with Generative AI to come up with a preliminary MBA research proposal: on female K-pop groups

Brainstorming with Generative AI to come up with a preliminary MBA research proposal: on female K-pop groups


The following research theme exercise is based my personal interest on this topic.

 

Are there any specific business sector factors in South Korea that tend to create "demanding" treatments of even successful female K-pop groups such as Gfriends and Newjeans?

Yes. South Korea’s K‑pop business model and sector‑specific norms create structural pressures that often make life “demanding” for even very successful female groups like GFriend and NewJeans. These pressures come less from malice toward particular groups and more from how the industry is organized, financed, and regulated.bbc+2

How the K‑pop business model treats idols as products

Several scholars describe K‑pop idols as “products” of a highly industrialized, capital‑intensive system:

  • Idols are recruited young, trained for years, and placed under long, exclusive contracts that give agencies tight control over schedules, image, behaviour, and even personal life.dependency.uni-bonn+2
  • Companies front large upfront costs (training, housing, styling, production, marketing) and then try to recoup these from music sales, touring, CFs (commercial films), and overseas activities. This creates strong incentives to push idols to work extremely long hours and accept tightly managed public personas.icds+1
  • Female idols in particular face additional constraints: tighter appearance standards, more sexualized concepts, and stricter “morality” clauses around dating and behaviour, which increase scrutiny and stress even when the group is commercially successful.bridgew+2

GFriend and NewJeans sit inside this same logic: they are valuable IP for their agencies, but also highly controlled assets whose labour and image are optimized for maximum return.bbc+2

Sector‑specific factors that intensify pressure on female groups

A few Korea‑specific business and institutional features make this especially “demanding”:

1. Weak labour‑law protection for entertainers

South Korea’s labour framework largely treats K‑pop idols as independent contractors rather than employees:

  • In the NewJeans case, the Ministry of Employment and Labor explicitly stated that members like Hanni do not qualify as “workers” under the Labour Standards Act because their contracts are management/profit‑sharing deals, not employment contracts with fixed hours and wages.bbc
  • As a result, idols are not automatically covered by core protections on working hours, rest days, overtime pay, or workplace harassment that regular employees enjoy.theregreview+1
  • Experts note there are still no dedicated laws protecting artists’ working rights, unlike Hollywood’s Talent Agency Act–style regime, leaving idols reliant on individual contracts and agency goodwill.bbc

This legal gap means that even when a group is hugely successful, members can still face grueling schedules and limited formal recourse if they feel mistreated.bbc+2

2. High‑cost, “recoupment” financing and revenue structure

The economics of K‑pop push agencies to maximize output and control:

  • Producing a group can cost hundreds of thousands to over a million USD, covering years of training, housing, staff, and marketing. Domestic music sales alone often cannot recoup this, so companies rely on tours, brand deals, and overseas markets.bbc
  • To service these investments and satisfy shareholders (especially for listed conglomerates like HYBE, SM, JYP), agencies often keep schedules packed and maintain tight control over image and behaviour to protect brand value.thestandard+2
  • Female groups, who are often marketed with strong visual/concept packaging, can be especially sensitive to any perceived “risk” (e.g., dating, personal SNS posts), which can trigger extra monitoring and restrictions.wikipedia+1

For groups like NewJeans, this shows up in boardroom fights between producers, parent companies, and subsidiaries over who controls the group’s direction—and thus its revenue stream—while the members themselves are not recognized as employees in the dispute.thestandard+1

3. Corporate governance and “chaebol” dynamics

K‑pop is dominated by a few large entertainment groups that operate like mini‑chaebols:

  • Agencies are often subsidiaries of bigger holding structures (e.g., HYBE housing multiple labels like ADOR, which manages NewJeans). Internal power struggles—over strategy, branding, and profit allocation—can play out around the group as a strategic asset.thestandard+1
  • When conflicts arise (as between HYBE and ADOR’s former president Min Hee‑jin), the idols’ working environment and public treatment can become collateral damage, even if the group is commercially successful.thestandard
  • Female idols are especially exposed because their public image is tightly linked to the agency’s brand; any controversy can quickly affect valuation and investor confidence, so agencies may respond with stricter internal controls.icds+1

4. Fan economy and “moral” expectations

South Korea’s fan culture is itself a business sector factor:

  • Fans invest heavily in albums, voting, streaming, and merchandise, but also police idols’ behaviour, especially around dating and “appropriate” femininity. Agencies internalize this by imposing strict conduct rules to avoid fan backlash.bbc+1
  • Female groups often face harsher judgment for the same behaviours that male groups might get away with, reinforcing more demanding management practices around appearance, dating bans, and social media.bridgew+1

Why this hits groups like GFriend and NewJeans

  • GFriend operated under a traditional agency model (Source Music, later part of HYBE) with long contracts, heavy schedules, and intense fan scrutiny typical of mid‑2010s K‑pop. Even as a successful girl group, members have spoken about exhausting schedules and the emotional toll of the industry.icds+1
  • NewJeans, despite rapid global success, sit at the centre of a high‑stakes corporate dispute (HYBE vs. ADOR/Min Hee‑jin) and a landmark labour‑law ruling that explicitly denied them employee status. Hanni’s testimony about feeling disregarded and bullied by senior staff highlights how structural non‑employee status and internal power struggles can create a “demanding” environment even at the top.bbc+1

Bottom line

The “demanding” treatment is not an anomaly; it is baked into South Korea’s K‑pop business sector:

  • Idols are treated as high‑value but highly controlled products.
  • Labour law does not clearly recognize them as workers, limiting protections.
  • Corporate and financing structures incentivize tight control and heavy workloads.
  • Gendered expectations and fan economics add extra pressure on female groups.

Together, these factors make it structurally likely that even very successful female groups like GFriend and NewJeans will experience intense, sometimes harsh, working conditions.

 

As a business management researcher, I am interested in the research theme of "how the market structure and institutional factors South Korean K-pop sector influence the job stress and career worries of the female K-pop groups and what the female K-pop artists could do for their career planning and long-term professional development". I am also interested in considering the following key words for formulating a more concrete research theme: pragmatism, exploratory research, positive psychology.

Your proposed theme is both timely and researchable. Below is a concrete way to sharpen it, embed it in a pragmatist, exploratory, positive‑psychology‑informed design, and link it to the South Korean K‑pop market structure and institutional context you care about.paradigmpress+1

1. A sharper, MBA‑relevant research theme

You can frame the core idea as a bridge between industry structure → job stress & career anxiety → career planning strategies for female K‑pop artists.

A concise working title could be:

“Market Structure, Institutional Constraints, and Female K‑pop Idols’ Career Stress: An Exploratory, Pragmatist Study of Career Planning and Long‑Term Professional Development in South Korea’s K‑pop Sector.”

A one‑sentence problem statement:

In South Korea’s highly concentrated, contract‑driven K‑pop industry, female idols face intense job stress and career uncertainty; this study explores how market structure and institutional factors shape these stresses and how artists can strategically plan their careers for sustainable professional development.dependency.uni-bonn+1

This keeps your focus managerial (career planning, professional development) while still engaging with structural and institutional issues.

2. Linking market structure and institutional factors to stress and career worries

You can build a simple conceptual model with three blocks:

A. Market‑structure factors (industry level)

These are well documented in the literature and press:

·        Oligopolistic/centralized agency market – a few large players (HYBE, SM, JYP, YG) dominate debuts, resources, and distribution; smaller agencies imitate their model, raising overall competition.paradigmpress+1

·        Overcrowded debut market & short product cycles – many groups debut each year; promotional cycles are compressed; groups that do not hit targets quickly are often discontinued.paradigmpress

·        Revenue model based on recoupment and multi‑activity monetization – agencies invest heavily in training and debut, then rely on tours, brand deals, and overseas markets; this drives tight schedules and high output expectations.dependency.uni-bonn+1

These create precarity (short career horizons, high turnover) and performance pressure, which are classic antecedents of job stress.paradigmpress

B. Institutional and socio‑cultural factors (meso/macro level)

These shape how the market structure is experienced, especially by women:

·        Contractual and labour‑law regime – idols are typically independent contractors, not employees, so core labour protections (working hours, overtime, harassment safeguards) often do not apply.dependency.uni-bonn

·        Neoliberal developmentalism and state cultural policy – the state has promoted K‑pop as a cultural export; this reinforces a “national project” narrative that can normalize overwork and self‑sacrifice as patriotic or entrepreneurial.library.binus.ac+2

·        Patriarchal and gendered norms – female idols face stricter appearance standards, sexualized concepts, dating bans, and moral policing from fans and media; this intensifies scrutiny and limits autonomy.bridgew+2

Together, these factors produce structural constraints (limited control over work, image, and career trajectory) and normative pressures (expectations of femininity, resilience, and self‑blame when things go wrong).scholarsarchive.byu+2

C. Individual outcomes: job stress and career worries

You can conceptualize these as:

·        Job stress: emotional exhaustion, anxiety about schedules and performance, fear of making “mistakes,” body‑image stress, and relational stress with staff/management.dependency.uni-bonn+1

·        Career worries: concerns about short career span, post‑idol transition, financial insecurity, reputation damage, and lack of control over long‑term professional identity.paradigmpress

Literature already points to high emotional toll, burnout, and early career termination for many idols, especially in a saturated market.paradigmpress

3. Integrating pragmatism, exploratory research, and positive psychology

Pragmatism as your research philosophy

Pragmatism fits well because:

·        Your aim is practical: to understand what works for female idols’ career planning and development, not to settle metaphysical debates about “true” reality.

·        You can use whatever methods best help you answer the research question (interviews, document analysis, maybe some basic surveys), prioritizing usefulness over purity of paradigm.

·        Pragmatism supports focusing on actionable knowledge for artists, managers, and possibly policymakers.

You can explicitly state: “This study adopts a pragmatist stance, treating knowledge as valuable insofar as it helps female K‑pop artists and stakeholders make better career decisions under real‑world constraints.”

Exploratory research design

Given the sensitivity and limited public data on idols’ lived experiences, an exploratory qualitative design is appropriate:

·        Semi‑structured interviews with:

o   Current or former female K‑pop artists (if accessible),

o   Managers, trainers, or agency staff,

o   Industry observers (journalists, scholars, labour advocates).

·        Document analysis of:

o   News reports, parliamentary testimonies (e.g., bullying, workplace conditions),

o   Industry reports on market structure and debut trends,

o   Academic work on K‑pop labour, gender, and neoliberalism.bridgew+3

Your research questions could be:

1.    How do female K‑pop artists perceive the influence of market structure and institutional factors on their job stress and career worries?

2.    What strategies do they currently use (or wish they had) for career planning and long‑term professional development?

3.    How could agencies, associations, or policymakers support more sustainable career pathways for female idols?

Positive psychology as a lens for “what artists can do”

Positive psychology lets you focus on strengths, resources, and thriving, not just strain:

·        Key constructs you can use:

o   PERMA (Positive emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, Accomplishment),

o   Psychological capital (hope, efficacy, resilience, optimism),

o   Career adaptability (concern, control, curiosity, confidence).

·        You can ask:

o   Which personal and social resources help some female idols cope better and plan more effectively?

o   What practices (e.g., skill diversification, networking, mental‑health support, financial literacy) are associated with greater sense of control and future orientation?

o   How could agencies and industry bodies institutionalize these supports?

This aligns well with your managerial focus: you’re not just describing stress; you’re identifying levers for better career development.

4. A workable conceptual framework (for your dissertation)

You can visualize (and later test qualitatively) a framework like:

·        Market structure (oligopoly, overcrowding, short cycles, recoupment model)
→ shapes

·        Institutional context (contractual status, labour law, state cultural policy, gender norms)
→ produces

·        Work conditions (long hours, tight control, image policing, moral scrutiny)
→ leads to

·        Job stress & career worries (burnout, anxiety, short‑termism, fear of post‑career insecurity)

·        Moderated/mediated by:

o   Individual resources (psychological capital, career adaptability, skills, social support),

o   Agency/organizational practices (mental‑health support, career transition programs, training in non‑performance skills).paradigmpress

From a pragmatist angle, you then ask: Given this structure, what concrete actions can artists and organizations take to improve outcomes?

5. Possible contributions to business and management

For an MBA dissertation, stress how your work offers:

·        Managerial implications:

o   Recommendations for agencies: structured mental‑health support, career transition planning, diversified skill development (producing, songwriting, business, content creation), and more transparent contract terms.paradigmpress

·        Policy/industry implications:

o   Arguments for better labour protections or industry standards for working hours, rest, and harassment prevention.dependency.uni-bonn

·        Theoretical contribution:

o   Extends cultural‑industries and gender‑and‑work literature by applying a pragmatist, positive‑psychology‑informed lens to a high‑visibility but under‑studied workforce (female K‑pop idols).

6. Practical next steps for your project

If you want to move from theme to proposal:

1.    Refine your research questions using the three‑question set above.

2.    Draft a conceptual framework diagram (market structure → institutions → work conditions → stress/career worries, with positive‑psych resources as moderators).

3.    Specify your methodology:

o   Pragmatist, exploratory, qualitative,

o   Data sources (interviews + documents),

o   Sampling strategy and ethics (especially important given sensitivity and NDAs).

4.    Map constructs to literature:

o   Market structure & institutional factors: K‑pop industry studies, cultural‑industries, neoliberalism/patriarchy in Korea.library.binus.ac+4

o   Job stress & career anxiety: occupational stress, precarious work, creative‑industry careers.

o   Positive psychology & career planning: PERMA, psychological capital, career construction/adaptability.

 

Suggest 3 academic theories that are relevant to study this research theme, in Harvard reference format. As I have to rely more secondary research methods, while still endorsing the usage of mixed methods research, could you come up with a preliminary MBA dissertation title, with 4 research objectives and 3 research questions.

Below are three well‑matched academic theories, followed by a preliminary MBA dissertation title, four research objectives, and three research questions that fit a primarily secondary, but mixed‑methods‑oriented, design.

1. Three relevant academic theories (Harvard references)

1.    Dual subordination / dependent self‑employment framework

o   Explains how K‑pop idols are simultaneously subordinate to agencies and to media/platform conglomerates, bearing disproportionate risk while corporations capture most value. This is directly relevant to job stress, career insecurity, and limited bargaining power for female artists.tandfonline

o   Reference (Harvard style):
Lee, S. (2025) ‘K‑Pop Idols as Dependent Self‑Employment Workers: Exploitation, Subordination, and Labor Protections’, The Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society, 55(4), pp. 231–250.

2.    Psychology of Working Theory (PWT)

o   A career‑psychology framework that links economic constraints and job insecurity to work‑related wellbeing and career outcomes. It has already been applied to Korean artists and can help you connect market/institutional pressures to stress and career worries.tandfonline

o   Reference (Harvard style):
Kim, H. and Lee, J. (2023) ‘Challenges faced by Korean artists: Job insecurity, economic constraints, and work‑related wellbeing through the lens of Psychology of Working Theory’, Cogent Psychology, 10(1), 2260093.

3.    Institutional theory (institutional logics and constraints)

o   Focuses on how formal rules (laws, contracts) and informal norms (patriarchy, developmentalist narratives, fan expectations) shape organisational behaviour and individual career paths. This helps you theorise how South Korea’s K‑pop sector norms and policies constrain female idols’ career options and stress levels.sms.onlinelibrary.wiley+1

o   Reference (Harvard style):
Thornton, P.H., Ocasio, W. and Lounsbury, M. (2012) The Institutional Logics Perspective: Foundations and Applications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

You can argue that dual subordination and PWT operate within broader institutional logics of the Korean cultural industries.

2. Preliminary MBA dissertation title

“Market Structure, Institutional Constraints, and Female K‑pop Idols’ Career Stress: An Exploratory, Mixed‑Methods Study of Career Planning and Long‑Term Professional Development in South Korea’s K‑pop Sector.”

(If your programme prefers shorter titles, you can shorten to: “Market Structure, Institutional Constraints, and Female K‑pop Idols’ Career Stress and Planning: A Mixed‑Methods Study.”)

3. Four research objectives

1.    To map how the market structure (e.g., agency concentration, overcrowded debuts, short product cycles) and institutional factors (e.g., contractual status, labour law, gendered norms, state cultural policy) in South Korea’s K‑pop sector are described in existing literature and industry reports.library.binus.ac+3

2.    To analyse how these structural and institutional factors are associated with job stress and career worries among female K‑pop artists, drawing on secondary qualitative evidence (interview excerpts, testimonies, media reports) and any available survey or statistical data.tandfonline+1

3.    To identify existing or potential career‑planning and professional‑development strategies for female K‑pop artists (e.g., skill diversification, networking, mental‑health support, financial planning, transition pathways) highlighted in academic and industry sources, and to interpret these through positive psychology and career‑development lenses.

4.    To propose practical, management‑oriented recommendations for artists, agencies, and industry bodies to support more sustainable career pathways and long‑term professional development for female K‑pop idols in South Korea.

4. Three research questions

1.    RQ1: How do existing academic and industry sources describe the influence of South Korea’s K‑pop market structure and institutional factors on the job stress and career worries of female K‑pop artists?

2.    RQ2: In what ways do these structural and institutional pressures shape female idols’ perceived career options, risks, and long‑term professional development concerns, as reflected in secondary qualitative and (where available) quantitative data?

3.    RQ3: Based on the literature and case evidence, what career‑planning and professional‑development strategies can female K‑pop artists adopt, and what organisational or policy supports would most effectively enhance their long‑term career sustainability?

 

Please briefly identify the practical, academic and originality values of this dissertation project.

Practical value

·        Provides actionable career‑planning guidance for female K‑pop artists (e.g., skill diversification, financial and mental‑health strategies, transition planning) that can help them manage stress and extend their professional relevance beyond the idol phase.

·        Offers managerial recommendations for agencies and industry bodies (e.g., better contract transparency, structured career‑development programmes, wellbeing and transition support) that could improve talent retention, brand reputation, and long‑term value creation.

·        Contributes policy‑relevant insights for regulators and industry associations considering labour protections, standard contracts, or codes of practice for entertainers in South Korea’s cultural‑export sector.

Academic value

·        Integrates industry‑structure and institutional analysis with career‑psychology and positive‑psychology perspectives in a single framework, advancing understanding of how macro‑level forces translate into micro‑level stress and career concerns for female cultural workers.

·        Applies and extends theories such as dual subordination/dependent self‑employment, Psychology of Working Theory, and institutional logics to a high‑visibility but under‑studied workforce (female K‑pop idols), enriching literature on precarious creative work, gender, and the cultural industries.

·        Demonstrates how a pragmatist, mixed‑methods‑oriented, secondary‑data design can be used to study sensitive, hard‑to‑access populations where primary data collection is constrained.

Originality value

·        Shifts the focus from fan culture, content analysis, or generic “exploitation” narratives to a systematic, management‑oriented examination of career stress and long‑term professional development for female K‑pop artists.

·        Explicitly links South Korea’s specific market structure and institutional context (agency oligopoly, contractual regime, state cultural policy, gendered norms) to career‑planning strategies, rather than treating stress only as an individual or psychological issue.

·        Brings a positive‑psychology and career‑adaptability lens to the K‑pop labour debate, asking not only “what is wrong?” but also “what resources and strategies enable more sustainable careers?”, which is relatively uncommon in existing K‑pop labour studies.

 

Suggest 4 research issues that can be related to this MBA dissertation topic.

Here are four research issues that fit naturally with your MBA dissertation topic on market structure, institutional factors, and female K‑pop artists’ career stress and planning:

1.    Precarious work and career insecurity in a saturated market
How does the overcrowded debut landscape, short product cycles, and “hit‑or‑drop” logic of the K‑pop sector create chronic job insecurity and career anxiety for female idols, and how do they make sense of and respond to this precarity in their career planning?

2.    Contractual status, labour protection gaps, and power asymmetry
In what ways do idols’ classification as independent contractors (rather than employees), long exclusive contracts, and weak labour‑law coverage amplify stress and limit bargaining power, and what practical strategies or institutional reforms could mitigate these imbalances?

3.    Gendered institutional norms and intensified scrutiny
How do patriarchal expectations, sexualised concepts, dating bans, and moral policing by fans and media disproportionately affect female K‑pop artists’ workload, image control, and mental health, and how do these gendered pressures shape their long‑term career narratives and options?

4.    Building sustainable careers under structural constraints
Given the structural and institutional constraints of the K‑pop industry, what career‑planning practices (e.g., skill diversification, networking, financial literacy, mental‑health support, transition planning) do female artists use or need, and how can agencies and industry bodies better support these pathways for long‑term professional development?





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