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Bridging the Chasm between Survey and Case Study Research

Arch G. Woodside (Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA)

Case Study Research

ISBN: 978-1-78560-461-4, eISBN: 978-1-78560-460-7

Publication date: 7 December 2016

Abstract

Synopsis

Chapter 2 describes how behavioral science research methods that management and marketing scholars apply in studying processes involving decisions and organizational outcomes relate to three principal research objectives: fulfilling generality of findings, achieving accuracy of process actions and outcomes, and capturing complexity of nuances and conditions. The chapter's unique contribution is in advocating and describing the possibilities of researchers replacing Thorngate's (1976) “postulate of commensurate complexity” — it is impossible for a theory of social behavior to be simultaneously general, accurate, and simple and as a result organizational theorists inevitably have to make tradeoffs in their theory development — with a new postulate of disproportionate achievement. This new postulate proposes the possibilities and advocates the building and testing of useful process models that achieve all three principal research objectives. Rather than assuming the stance that a researcher must make tradeoffs that permit achieving any two, but not all three, principal research objectives as, Weick (1979) clock analogy shows, this chapter advocates embracing a property space (a three-dimensional box rather than a clock) view of research objectives and research methods. Tradeoffs need not be made; having-your-cake-and-eating-it-too is possible. The chapter includes a brief review of principal criticisms that case study researchers often express of surveys of respondents using fixed-point surveys. Likewise, the chapter reviews principal criticisms of case study research studies that researchers who favor the use of fixed-point surveys express.

Citation

Woodside, A.G. (2016), "Bridging the Chasm between Survey and Case Study Research", Case Study Research, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 17-40. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78560-461-420152015

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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