Public Relations Research Part III Research Terminology Overview
Public Relations Research Part III: Research Terminology
Overview I. II. Classifying research methods Some research terms
Different Ways to Classify Research Formal vs. Informal Primary vs. Secondary Quantitative vs. Qualitative
Examples of Formal vs. Informal Formal Methods ◦ Following the Scientific Method ◦ If strict protocols followed, examples include surveys, content analysis, focus groups, and interviewing. Informal Methods ◦ Talking to key informants, people “in the know” ◦ Scanning or searching the Internet (sites and blogs)
Primary v. Secondary Research Primary Research: ◦ ◦ Conduct research for a prime purpose Gather data specifically (for you) Examine evidence collected firsthand Usually means new interviews, surveys or observations Secondary Research: ◦ Examine secondhand evidence ◦ Conducted research for another reason ◦ Previously reported or published ** Archival research can be considered both
Some good secondary sources: Internal documents: brochures, reports, speeches Industry trade media sites (i. e. , Automotive News Market Data Report) Dow Jones Interactive – www. dowjones. com Gallup – www. gallup. com LEXIS-NEXIS – www. lexis-nexis. com U. S. Census Bureau – www. census. gov Books, magazines, reports at Public Libraries Not Wikipedia!
Quantitative v. Qualitative Quantitative techniques ◦ To answer “how many” ◦ Polling – get public’s pulse quickly on issues ◦ Survey method, Experiments, Content analysis Qualitative techniques ◦ To answer “what” and “how” ◦ In their own words and through their own actions ◦ Interviews, focus groups, ethnography, participant observation
Other research terms Methods/Methodologies Data collection Instruments Population Sampling techniques Findings Conclusions Recommendations
End of Part III Please go to Part IV: Key Research Methods
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