how to tackle case studies

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  • 8/9/2019 How to Tackle Case Studies

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    Steps to Follow in Analyzing a Management Case

    1. Identify the central issues: Focus on what seems to be key problems.Separate superficial issues from the key problems. The superficial issues areusually just symptoms of deeper, ingrained problems. Use the planning,organizing, actuating and controlling framework to assist in identifying the

    central issues. Also decide on the management problem-solving approach tofollow.

    2. Organize the pertinent facts: Utilize the central issues as centres aroundwhich substantiating and relevant facts are organized. Put the facts in differentformat if this will assist in their understanding. Charts and matrix forms, forexample, are helpful.

    3. Determine the alternatives: There is always more than one possibleanswer. Think and imagine until at least three or four possibilities are evolved. Insome case studies alternatives are quite clear, while in others some deep

    thinking and probing are required.

    4. Evaluate the alternatives: Basically this involves relating certain importantfacts in support of a certain alternative and repeating this for each alternative.Some facts will support a given alternative; others will indicate preference for adifferent alternative. Also some facts will suggest the consequences of choosingone alternative over another. Judgement and experience will also assist inevaluating the alternatives.

    5. Select the alternative recommended: All things considered, what appearsto be the strongest, most appropriate and most feasible alternative is selectedand recommended. This selection is a natural out-growth of step-4. By this

    means the case solver is aware of the strengths as well as the limitations of achoice.

    Questions for Case Study Analysis

    What is going on here?

    Is there a problem at all?

    What precisely is the problem?

    What has caused it?

    Are we looking at causes or symptoms?

    What are the main issues?

    Why are these issues important?

    Whose problem is it?

    What precisely are his objectives?

    What should he try to do now?

    What possible courses of action are open?

    How realistic is each of the actions/solutions proposed?

    What are their possible effects?

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    Tackling Case Studies A Descriptive Thought for OB /

    HRD

    A case study is a concise description of a situation which exists or a series of events

    which have taken place in an organization. This description may be drawn from

    actual events in a particular organization or it may be a fabricated description which

    draws its inspiration from several parts of the authors experience. Whatever its

    source, this description [perhaps with organization charts and tables of data

    included] is the scenario which you will be asked to analyze. Often these scenarios

    describe a number of things which have gone wrong or indicate things left undone

    which should have been done and sometimes illustrate effective and sometimes

    ineffective practice and management.

    Usually you will be given questions to answer or a course of action to comment on or

    you will be invited to make recommendations which have to be supported by

    argument and analysis.

    This method of learning from case studies has long been the core of most business

    schools teaching. Students learn by participating actively in the business case,

    rather than passively studying the theory behind it.

    In the conventional business school the treatment of case studies usually falls in

    several parts:

    1. The students individually analyze the case and prepare their own commentson the situations they discover, together with some possible solutions.2. They may then discuss the case, formally or informally, as part of a team ofstudents.

    3. They will then attend a classroom session during which the various ideasdeveloped by the individuals and groups will be tested against each other. Theprofessors role in this session will be to chair the discussion ensuring that thestudents fully develop their own ideas.4. At the end of this classroom session the professor will summarize the principallearning points that emerged from the case.

    The most important part of this treatment is [1], the individual analysis. You will gain

    a lot from this element. Your task will be to identify the relevant principles and

    concepts from the course and shoe how they are indeed useful in understanding the

    situation and generating recommendations. To do this, you will not need to know the

    technicalities of the selected industry or organization. Indeed, if you do have some

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    expert or inside knowledge it will be a disadvantage, unless you can resist the

    temptation to dwell on technicalities rather than on the central issue(s) involved.

    Elements [2] and [3] must inevitable be less immediately available since usually

    participation occurs less often than one might imagine. With a typical class size of

    50 or so, a few individuals will almost certainly dominate the discussions. Despite

    the best intentions of the professor, many, if not the majority of the students will be

    spectators, not active participants.

    You will be provided with the full range of opportunities in working on some of the

    case studies in this course but for some of the case studies that may not be the

    case. For these, we may provide the professors view in the given case study but it

    is important to note that, like real life, there is no correct solution; there is one

    opinion among many. The value in each case lies in your developing your own

    opinions which might, quite justifiably, be totally different.

    There are techniques that can make reading and analyzing a case study somewhat

    easier, and certainly faster. They are, incidentally, techniques that can be applied

    almost as productively to the textual material that you are required to study in this

    course but they are particularly applicable to the case studies.

    The first technique is to annotate the case study material. The best way is to use ahighlighter, or fluorescent marker, to emphasize the words and passages you think

    are critical, or at least are relevant to the questions being asked. In addition you can

    use an ordinary ball-point pen, preferable red, to add your comments in the margins.

    By these means you can most easily, and immediately, see which elements of the

    case study to concentrate on. The text may contain a few ideas, albeit often

    unintentional, that can offer insights into how the company really works; in any case

    it will still be meaningful in providing the overall context for the material critical for

    the analysis.

    This leads to the second technique, which is to top read the material several times,

    with different priorities each time. The first read should be quick skim, so that you

    can put the second more detailed reading into perspective. It is often fatal to get too

    quickly immersed in the details at the beginning of the case study, without knowing

    what comes later. The later material may give you a totally different perspective.

    The first skim should also allow you to rule out the most obviously irrelevant

    material, and may already allow you to highlight certain of the key elements.

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    The second read should be more studies, though it will not now cover the irrelevant

    material, and should attempt to abstract all the key points.

    The third, and subsequent, reads can then home-in on those key points to begin the

    analysis proper.

    These techniques can be applied to the statistical material just as much as to the

    textual matter, and it is sometimes worth reworking the key elements of tables into

    ratios that you find more meaningful. But, once more, beware that this can easily

    absorb a great deal of time and is not usually necessary.

    Finally, conduct your reading and subsequent analysis with regard to the questions

    you are being asked.

    ANSWER THE QUESTION POSED AND NOT ONE THAT YOU INVENT.