My Journey to the IIM !!

Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

PARTICIPANT-OBSERVATION is the process of immersing yourself in the study of people you're not too different from. It is almost always done covertly, with the researcher never revealing their true purpose or identity. If it's a group you already know a lot about, you need to step back and take the perspective of a "martian", as if you were from a different planet and seeing things in a fresh light. If it's a group you know nothing about, you need to become a "convert" and really get committed and involved. The more secretive and amorphous the group, the more you need participation. The more localized and turf-conscious the group, the more you need observation. It's customary in the literature to describe four roles:

Complete participation -- the researcher participates in deviant or illegal activities and goes on to actively influence the direction of the group

Participant as observer -- the researcher participates in deviant or illegal activities but does not try to influence the direction of the group

Observer as participant -- the researcher participates in a one-time deviant or illegal activity but then takes a back seat to any further activities

Complete observation -- the researcher is a member of the group but does not participate in any deviant or illegal activities

It's difficult to say which of these four roles are the most common, probably the middle two. The key point behind all of them is that the researcher must operate on two levels: becoming an insider while remaining an outsider. They must avoid becoming oversocialized, or "going native", as well as being personally revolted or repulsed by the group conduct. Going native is sometimes described as giving up research and joining the group for life, but in most criminological circles, it means losing your objectivity and glorifying criminals. Generally, it takes time to carry out participant-observation, several weeks or months to 2-4 years. Gangs, hate groups, prostitutes, and drug dealers have all been studied by this method.

ETHNOGRAPHY is the process of describing a culture or way of life from a folk peoples' point of view. Another name for it is field research. The folk point of view is the idea of a universe in a dewdrop, each person a reflection of their culture in that all their gestures, displays, symbols, songs, sayings, and everything else has some implicit, tacit meaning for others in that culture. It's the job of ethnography to establish the hidden inferences that distinguish, for example, a wink and a nod in any given culture. Numerous funding opportunities exist both abroad and domestically for ethnographic research.

The ethnographic method involves observation and note taking. The anthropologist Clifford Geertz called it thick description. For about every half hour of observation, an ethnographic researcher would write notes for about two hours. These notes would contain rich, detailed descriptions of everything that went on. There would be no attempt at summarizing, generalizing, or hypothesizing. The notes would capture as factual a description of the drama as possible to permit multiple interpretations, and most of all, to later infer cultural meaning. A coding procedure (much like content analysis) would be used later for this.

One of the assumptions of ethnography is naturalism, or leaving natural phenomenon alone. In essence, the researcher tries to be invisible. There are a variety of ways the researcher develops trust and rapport with the folk group in order to do this, to watch and listen carefully without being noticed. At some point, however, the researcher has to disengage, retreat to a private place, and take notes. The following are some standard rules for taking field notes (adapted from Neuman & Wiegand 2000):

Take notes as soon as possible, and do not talk to anyone before note taking

Count the number of times key words or phrases are used by members of the folk group

Carefully record the order or sequence of events, and how long each sequence lasts

Do not worry that anything is too insignificant; record even the smallest things

Draw maps or diagrams of the location, including your movements and any reaction by others

Write quickly and don't worry about spelling; devise your own system of punctuation

Avoid evaluative judgments or summarizing; don't call something "dirty" for example, describe it

Include your own thoughts and feelings in a separate section; your later thoughts in another section

Always make backup copies of your notes and keep them in a separate location
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

Once in a school, a teacher asks a very rich girl to write an essay on the topic "A Poor Family"

So she writes:

Ek baar ek bahut hee gareeb family thi, husband aur wife dono gareeb they, do bachey they, woh bhi bahut gareeb they!!
ghar ke saare naukar bhi gareeb they,
ghar ka maali, driver, aur guard bhi bahut gareeb they, ghar ke 4 kuttey bhi gareeb they, 2 din sey chicken nahi khaaya tha,
3 mercedeez car thi, unki bahut time se servicing nahi hui thi, ghar ka A.C bhi theek nahi chalta tha ghar mein 1 saal sey paint nahi hua tha family ko holiday ke liye foregin country gaye bhi 6 mahiney ho gaye they ghar ke 5 mein sey 2 TV to chaltey hee nahi they, all in all, bahut he gareeb family thi!!
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

hey friends kal i shall be having my eye operation..............so busy fr net few days...........till then keep going..........
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

Good luck with your eye operation buddy... leme know how it goes.. evn i think ill get my eyes operated on... they just get glued the place they see beau gals :(
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

Hey raj,
there is no need to feel disheartened...i m happy that u have identified a goal in ur life.if u r sincere towards ur goal and really want to turn ur dream into reality then u have to work really hard towards achieving it. Make it clear that come wat my u r going to get it. The most imp thing in realising ur dream is to break them i stages and achieve these stages. It would make u feel that ur climbing up a ladder to reach ur final destination. They may be failures but u have to rise above them all.

bye..
good luck.
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

so my friends latest is that i have send the demand draft ,.....abstract....got call of confirmation.....now working with new eye (though it refuses sometimes to do so) he he but still lot to work.....
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

Survey Design
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Knowing what the client wants is the key factor to success in any type of business. News media, government agencies and political candidates need:bump: to know what the public thinks. Associations need to know what their members want. Large companies need to measure the attitudes of their employees. The best way to find this information is to conduct a survey.
This chapter is intended primarily for those who are new to survey research. It discusses options and provides suggestions on how to design and conduct a successful survey project. It does not provide instruction on using specific parts of The Survey System, although it mentions parts of the program that can help you with certain tasks.




The Steps in a Survey Project

Establish the goals of the project - What you want to learn
Determine your sample - Whom you will interview
Choose interviewing methodology - How you will interview
Create your questionnaire - What you will ask
Pre-test the questionnaire, if practical - Test the questions
Conduct interviews and enter data - Ask the questions
Analyze the data - Produce the reports

This chapter covers the first five steps. The Survey System's Tutorial Chapters 1 and 2 cover entering data and producing reports.




Establishing Goals
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The first step in any survey is deciding what you want to learn. The goals of the project determine whom you will survey and what you will ask them. If your goals are unclear, the results will probably be unclear. Some typical goals include learning more about:

The potential market for a new product or service
Ratings of current products or services
Employee attitudes
Customer/patient satisfaction levels
Reader/viewer/listener opinions
Association member opinions
Opinions about political candidates or issues
Corporate images
These sample goals represent general areas. The more specific you can make your goals, the easier it will be to get usable answers.




Selecting Your Sample
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There are two main components in determining whom you will interview. The first is deciding what kind of people to interview. Researchers often call this group the target population. If you conduct an employee attitude survey or an association membership survey, the population is obvious. If you are trying to determine the likely success of a product, the target population may be less obvious. Correctly determining the target population is critical. If you do not interview the right kinds of people, you will not successfully meet your goals.

The next thing to decide is how many people you need to interview. Statisticians know that a small, representative sample will reflect the group from which it is drawn. The larger the sample, the more precisely it reflects the target group. However, the rate of improvement in the precision decreases as your sample size increases. For example, to increase a sample from 250 to 1,000 only doubles the precision. You must make a decision about your sample size based on factors such as: time available, budget and necessary degree of precision.

The Survey System (and this Web site) includes a sample size calculator that can help you decide on the sample size (jump to the calculator page for a general discussion of sample size considerations).




Avoiding a Biased Sample

A biased sample will produce biased results. Totally excluding all bias is almost impossible; however, if you recognize bias exists you can intuitively discount some of the answers. The following list shows some examples of biased samples.


Sample
Probable Bias
Reason

Your customers Favorable They would not be your customers if they were unhappy, but it is important to know what keeps them happy.
Your ex-customers Unfavorable If they were happy they would not be ex-customers, but it is important to know why they left you.
"Phone in" Extreme Views Only people with a strong interest polls in a subject (either for or against) are likely to call in - and they may do so several times to load the vote.
Daytime Non-working A majority of people who are at home during Interviews the day do not work. Their opinions may not reflect the working population.
Internet Atypical People Limited to people with Internet access. Internet users are not representative of the general population, even when matched on age, gender, etc.. This can be a serious problem, unless you are only interested in people who have Internet access. In many business surveys this limitation might not be a problem. Another concern is that respondents have been known to complete multiple surveys to sway results, unless the software prevents this.


The consequences of a source of bias depend on the nature of the survey. For example, a survey for a product aimed at retirees will not be as biased by daytime interviews as will a general public opinion survey. A survey about Internet products can safely ignore people who do not use the Internet.




Quotas

A Quota is a sample size for a sub-group. It is sometimes useful to establish quotas to ensure that your sample accurately reflects relevant sub-groups in your target population. For example, men and women have somewhat different opinions in many areas. If you want your survey to accurately reflect the general population's opinions, you will want to ensure that the percentage of men and women in your sample reflect their percentages of the general population.
If you are interviewing users of a particular type of product, you probably want to ensure that users of the different current brands are represented in proportions that approximate the current market share. Alternatively, you may want to ensure that you have enough users of each brand to be able to analyze the users of each brand as a separate group. If you are doing telephone or Web page interviewing, The Survey System's optional Sample Management or Internet Module can help you enforce quotas. They let you create automatically enforced quotas and/or monitor your sample during interviewing sessions.




Interviewing Methods
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Once you have decided on your sample you must decide on your method of data collection. Each method has advantages and disadvantages.


Personal Interviews
An interview is called personal when the Interviewer asks the questions face-to-face with the Interviewee. Personal interviews can take place in the home, at a shopping mall, on the street, outside a movie theater or polling place, and so on.

Advantages

The ability to let the Interviewee see, feel and/or taste a product.
The ability to find the target population. For example, you can find people who have seen a film much more easily outside a theater in which it is playing than by calling phone numbers at random.
Longer interviews are sometimes tolerated. Particularly with in-home interviews that have been arranged in advance. People may be willing to talk longer face-to-face than to someone on the phone.
Disadvantages

Personal interviews usually cost more per interview than other methods. This is particularly true of in-home interviews, where travel time is a major factor.
Each mall has its own characteristics. It draws its clientele from a specific geographic area surrounding it, and its shop profile also influences the type of client. These characteristics may differ from the target population and create a non-representative sample.


Telephone Surveys
Surveying by telephone is the most popular interviewing method in the USA. This is made possible by nearly universal coverage (96% of homes have a telephone).

Advantages

People can usually be contacted faster over the telephone than with other methods. If the Interviewers are using CATI (computer-assisted telephone interviewing), the results can be available minutes after completing the last interview.
You can dial random telephone numbers when you do not have the actual telephone numbers of potential respondents.
CATI software, such as The Survey System, makes complex questionnaires practical by offering many logic options. It can automatically skip questions, perform calculations and modify questions based on the answers to earlier questions. It can check the logical consistency of answers and can present questions or answers choices in a random order (the last two are sometimes important for reasons described later).
Skilled interviewers can often elicit longer or more complete answers than people will give on their own to mail, email surveys (though some people will give longer answers to Web page surveys). Interviewers can also ask for clarification of unclear responses.
Some software, such as The Survey System, can combine survey answers with pre-existing information you have about the people being interviewed.
Disadvantages

Many telemarketers have given legitimate research a bad name by claiming to be doing research when they start a sales call. Consequently, many people are reluctant to answer phone interviews and use their answering machines to screen calls. Since over half of the homes in the USA have answering machines, this problem is getting worse.
The growing number of working women often means that no one is home during the day. This limits calling time to a "window" of about 6-9 p.m. (when you can be sure to interrupt dinner or a favorite TV program).
You cannot show or sample products by phone.


Mail Surveys
Advantages

Mail surveys are among the least expensive.
This is the only kind of survey you can do if you have the names and addresses of the target population, but not their telephone numbers.
The questionnaire can include pictures - something that is not possible over the phone.
Mail surveys allow the respondent to answer at their leisure, rather than at the often inconvenient moment they are contacted for a phone or personal interview. For this reason, they are not considered as intrusive as other kinds of interviews.
Disadvantages

Time! Mail surveys take longer than other kinds. You will need to wait several weeks after mailing out questionnaires before you can be sure that you have gotten most of the responses.
In populations of lower educational and literacy levels, response rates to mail surveys are often too small to be useful. This, in effect, eliminates many immigrant populations that form substantial markets in many areas. Even in well-educated populations, response rates vary from as low as 3% up to 90%. As a rule of thumb, the best response levels are achieved from highly-educated people and people with a particular interest in the subject (which, depending on your target population, could lead to a biased sample).
One way of improving response rates to mail surveys is to mail a postcard telling your sample to watch for a questionnaire in the next week or two. Another is to follow up a questionnaire mailing after a couple of weeks with a card asking people to return the questionnaire. The downside is that this doubles or triples your mailing cost. If you have purchased a mailing list from a supplier, you may also have to pay a second (and third) use fee - you often cannot buy the list once and re-use it.

Another way to increase responses to mail surveys is to use an incentive. One possibility is to send a dollar bill (or more) along with the survey (or offer to donate the dollar to a charity specified by the respondent). If you do so, be sure to say that the dollar is a way of saying "thanks," rather than payment for their time. Many people will consider their time worth more than a dollar. Another possibility is to include the people who return completed surveys in a drawing for a prize. A third is to offer a copy of the (non-confidential) result highlights to those who complete the questionnaire. Any of these techniques will increase the response rates.

Remember that if you want a sample of 1,000 people, and you estimate a 10% response level, you need to mail 10,000 questionnaires. You may want to check with your local post office about bulk mail rates - you can save on postage using this mailing method. However, most researchers do not use bulk mail, because many people associate "bulk" with "junk" and will throw it out without opening the envelope, lowering your response rate. Also bulk mail moves slowly, increasing the time needed to complete your project.



Computer Direct Interviews
These are interviews in which the Interviewees enter their own answers directly into a computer. They can be used at malls, trade shows, offices, and so on. The Survey System's optional Interviewing Module and Interview Stations can easily create computer-direct interviews. Some researchers set up a Web page survey for this purpose.

Advantages

The virtual elimination of data entry and editing costs.
You will get more accurate answers to sensitive questions. Recent studies of potential blood donors have shown respondents were more likely to reveal HIV-related risk factors to a computer screen than to either human interviewers or paper questionnaires. The National Institute of Justice has also found that computer-aided surveys among drug users get better results than personal interviews. Employees are also more often willing to give more honest answers to a computer than to a person or paper questionnaire.
The elimination of interviewer bias. Different interviewers can ask questions in different ways, leading to different results. The computer asks the questions the same way every time.
Ensuring skip patterns are accurately followed. The Survey System can ensure people are not asked questions they should skip based on their earlier answers. These automatic skips are more accurate than relying on an Interviewer reading a paper questionnaire.
Response rates are usually higher. Computer-aided interviewing is still novel enough that some people will answer a computer interview when they would not have completed another kind of interview.
Disadvantages

The Interviewees must have access to a computer or one must be provided for them.
As with mail surveys, computer direct interviews may have serious response rate problems in populations of lower educational and literacy levels. This method may grow in importance as computer use increases.

Email Surveys
Email surveys are both very economical and very fast. More people have email than have full Internet access. This makes email a better choice than a Web page survey for some populations. On the other hand, email surveys are limited to simple questionnaires, whereas Web page surveys can include complex logic.

Advantages

Speed. An email questionnaire can gather several thousand responses within a day or two.
There is practically no cost involved once the set up has been completed.
You can attach pictures and sound files.
The novelty element of an email survey often stimulates higher response levels than ordinary “snail” mail surveys.
Disadvantages

You must possess (or purchase) a list of email addresses.
Some people will respond several times or pass questionnaires along to friends to answer. Many programs have no check to eliminate people responding multiple times to bias the results. The Survey System’s Email Module will only accept one reply from each address sent the questionnaire. It eliminates duplicate and pass along questionnaires and checks to ensure that respondents have not ignored instructions (e.g., giving 2 answers to a question requesting only one).
Many people dislike unsolicited email even more than unsolicited regular mail. You may want to send email questionnaires only to people who expect to get email from you.
You cannot use email surveys to generalize findings to the whole populations. People who have email are different from those who do not, even when matched on demographic characteristics, such as age and gender.
Email surveys cannot automatically skip questions or randomize question or answer choice order or use other automatic techniques that can enhance surveys the way Web page surveys can.
Many email programs are limited to plain ASCII text questionnaires and cannot show pictures. Email questionnaires from The Survey System can attach graphic or sound files.
Although use of email is growing very rapidly, it is not universal - and is even less so outside the USA (three-quarters of the world's email traffic takes place within the USA). Many “average” citizens still do not possess email facilities, especially older people and those in lower income and education groups. So email surveys do not reflect the population as a whole. At this stage they are probably best used in a corporate environment where email is common or when most members of the target population are known to have email.


Internet/Intranet (Web Page) Surveys
Web surveys are rapidly gaining popularity. They have major speed, cost, and flexibility advantages, but also significant sampling limitations. These limitations make software selection especially important and restrict the groups you can study using this technique.

Advantages

Web page surveys are extremely fast. A questionnaire posted on a popular Web site can gather several thousand responses within a few hours. Many people who will respond to an email invitation to take a Web survey will do so the first day, and most will do so within a few days.
There is practically no cost involved once the set up has been completed. Large samples do not cost more than smaller ones (except for any cost to acquire the sample).
You can show pictures. Some Web survey software can also show video and play sound.
Web page questionnaires can use complex question skipping logic, randomizations and other features not possible with paper questionnaires or most email surveys. These features can assure better data.
Web page questionnaires can use colors, fonts and other formatting options not possible in most email surveys.
A significant number of people will give more honest answers to questions about sensitive topics, such as drug use or sex, when giving their answers to a computer, instead of to a person or on paper.
On average, people give longer answers to open-ended questions on Web page questionnaires than they do on other kinds of self-administered surveys.
Some Web survey software, such as The Survey System, can combine the survey answers with pre-existing information you have about individuals
taking a survey.


Disadvantages

Current use of the Internet is far from universal. Internet surveys do not reflect the population as a whole. This is true even if a sample of Internet users is selected to match the general population in terms of age, gender and other demographics.
People can easily quit in the middle of a questionnaire. They are not as likely to complete a long questionnaire on the Web as they would be if talking with a good interviewer.
If your survey pops up on a web page, you often have no control over who replies - anyone from Antartica to Zanzibar, cruising that web page may answer.
Depending on your software, there is often no control over people responding multiple times to bias the results.
At this stage we recommend using the Internet for surveys mainly when your target population consists entirely or almost entirely of Internet users. Business-to-business research and employee attitude surveys can often meet this requirement. Surveys of the general population usually will not. Another reason to use a Web page survey is when you want to show video or both sound and graphics. A Web page survey may be the only practical way to have many people view and react to a video.
In any case, be sure your survey software prevents people from completing more than one questionnaire. You may also want to restrict access by requiring a password (good software allows this option) or by putting the survey on a page that can only be accessed directly (i.e., there are no links to it from other pages).


Scanning Questionnaires
Scanning questionnaires is a method of data collection that can be used with paper questionnaires that have been administered in face-to-face interviews; mail surveys or surveys completed by an Interviewer over the telephone. The Survey System can produce paper questionnaires that can be scanned using Remark Office OMR (available from CRS). Other software can scan questionnaires and produce ASCII Files that can be read into The Survey System.


Advantages

Scanning can be the fastest method of data entry for paper questionnaires.
Scanning is more accurate than a person in reading a properly completed questionnaire.
Disadvantages
Scanning is best-suited to "check the box" type surveys and bar codes. Scanning programs have various methods to deal with text responses, but all require additional data entry time.
Scanning is less forgiving (accurate) than a person in reading a poorly marked questionnaire. Requires investment in additional hardware to do the actual scanning.

Summary of Survey Methods
Your choice of survey method will depend on several factors. These include:


Speed Email and Web page surveys are the fastest methods, followed by telephone interviewing. Mail surveys are the slowest.
Cost Personal interviews are the most expensive followed by telephone and then mail. Email and Web page surveys are the least expensive for large samples.
Internet Usage Web page and Email surveys offer significant advantages, but you may not be able to generalize their results to the population as a whole.
Literacy Levels Illiterate and less-educated people rarely respond to mail surveys.
Sensitive Questions People are more likely to answer sensitive questions when interviewed directly by a computer in one form or another.
Video, Sound, Graphics A need to get reactions to video, music, or a picture limits your options. You can play a video on a Web page, in a computer-direct interview, or in person. You can play music when using these methods or over a telephone. You can show pictures in those first methods and in a mail survey.




Questionnaire Design
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General Considerations
The first rule is to design the questionnaire to fit the medium. Phone interviews cannot show pictures. People responding to mail or Web surveys cannot easily ask “What exactly do you mean by that?” if they do not understand a question. Intimate, personal questions are sometimes best handled by mail or computer, where anonymity is most assured.

While The Survey System will let you easily combine surveys gathered using different mediums; it is not usually recommended that you do so. A mail survey will often not give the same answers as the same survey done by phone or in person. If you used one method in the past and need to compare results, stick to that method, unless there is a compelling reason to change.

KISS - keep it short and simple. If you present a 20-page questionnaire most potential respondents will give up in horror before even starting. Ask yourself what you will do with the information from each question. If you cannot give yourself a satisfactory answer, leave it out. Avoid the temptation to add a few more questions just because you are doing a questionnaire anyway. If necessary, place your questions into three groups: must know, useful to know and nice to know. Discard the last group, unless the previous two groups are very short.

Start with an introduction or welcome message. In the case of mail or Web questionnaires, this message can be in a cover page or on the questionnaire form itself. If you are sending emails that ask people to take a Web page survey, put your main introduction or welcome message in the email. When practical, state who you are and why you want the information in the survey. A good introduction or welcome message will encourage people to complete your questionnaire.

Allow a “Don't Know” or “Not Applicable” response to all questions, except to those in which you are certain that all respondents will have a clear answer. In most cases, these are wasted answers as far as the researcher is concerned, but are necessary alternatives to avoid frustrated respondents. Sometimes “Don't Know” or “Not Applicable” will really represent some respondents' most honest answers to some of your questions. Respondents who feel they are being coerced into giving an answer they do not want to give often do not complete the questionnaire. For example, many people will abandon a questionnaire that asks them to specify their income, without offering a "decline to state" choice.

For the same reason, include “Other” or “None” whenever either of these is a logically possible answer. When the answer choices are a list of possible opinions, preferences, or behaviors, you should usually allow these answers.

On paper, computer direct and Internet surveys these four choices should appear as appropriate. You may want to combine two or more of them into one choice, if you have no interest in distinguishing between them. You will rarely want to include “Don't Know,” “Not Applicable,” “Other” or “None” in a list of choices being read over the telephone or in person, but you should allow the interviewer the ability to accept them when given by respondents.


Question Types
Researchers use three basic types of questions: multiple choice, numeric open end and text open end (sometimes called "verbatims"). Examples of each kind of question follow:




Rating Scales and Agreement Scales are two common types of questions that some researchers treat as multiple choice questions and others treat as numeric open end questions. Examples of these kinds of questions are:





Question and Answer Choice Order
There are two broad issues to keep in mind when considering question and answer choice order. One is how the question and answer choice order can encourage people to complete your survey. The other issue is how the order of questions or the order of answer choices could affect the results of your survey.

Ideally, the early questions in a survey should be easy and pleasant to answer. These kinds of questions encourage people to continue the survey. In telephone or personal interviews they help build rapport with the interviewer. Grouping together questions on the same topic also makes the questionnaire easier to answer.

Whenever possible leave difficult or sensitive questions until near the end of your survey. Any rapport that has been built up will make it more likely people will answer these questions. If people quit at that point anyway, at least they will have answered most of your questions.

Answer choice order can make individual questions easier or more difficult to answer. Whenever there is a logical or natural order to answer choices, use it. Always present agree-disagree choices in that order. Presenting them in disagree-agree order will seem odd. For the same reason, positive to negative and excellent to poor scales should be presented in those orders. When using numeric rating scales higher numbers should mean a more positive or more agreeing answer.

Question order can affect the results in two ways. One is that mentioning something (an idea, an issue, a brand) in one question can make people think of it while they answer a later question, when they might not have thought of it if it had not been previously mentioned. In some cases you may be able to reduce this problem by randomizing the order of related questions. Separating related questions with unrelated ones can also reduce this problem, though neither technique will eliminate it.

The other way question order can affect results is habituation. This problem applies to a series of questions that all have the same answer choices. It means that some people will usually start giving the same answer, without really considering it, after being asked a series of similar questions. People tend to think more when asked the earlier questions in the series and so give more accurate answers to them.

If you are using telephone, computer direct or Internet interviewing, good software can help with this problem. Software should allow you to present a series of questions in a random order in each interview. This technique will not eliminate habituation, but will ensure that it applies equally to all questions in a series, not just to particular questions near the end of a series.

Another way to reduce this problem is to ask only a short series of similar questions at a particular point in the questionnaire. Then ask one or more different kinds of questions, and then another short series if needed.

A third way to reduce habituation is to change the “positive” answer. This applies mainly to level-of-agreement questions. You can word some statements so that a high level of agreement means satisfaction (e.g., “My supervisor gives me positive feedback”) and others so that a high level of agreement means dissatisfaction (e.g., “My supervisor usually ignores my suggestions”). This technique forces the respondent to think more about each question. One negative aspect of this technique is that you may have to modify some of the data after the results are entered, because having the higher levels of agreement always mean a positive (or negative) answer makes the analysis much easier. However, the few minutes extra work may be a worthwhile price to pay to get more accurate data.

The order in which the answer choices are presented can also affect the answers given. People tend to pick the choices nearest the start of a list when they read the list themselves on paper or a computer screen. People tend to pick the most recent answer when they hear a list of choices read to them.

As mentioned previously, sometimes answer choices have a natural order (e.g., Yes, followed by No; or Excellent - Good - Fair - Poor). If so, you should use that order. At other times, questions have answers that are obvious to the person that is answering them (e.g., “Which brands of car do you own?”). In these cases, the order in which the answer choices are presented is not likely to affect the answers given. However, there are kinds of questions, particularly questions about preference or recall or questions with relatively long answer choices that express an idea or opinion, in which the answer choice order is more likely to affect which choice is picked. If you are using telephone, computer direct, or Web page interviewing, have your software present these kinds of answer choices in a random order.



Other General Tips
Keep the questionnaire as short as possible. We mentioned this principle before, but it is so important it is worth repeating. More people will complete a shorter questionnaire, regardless of the interviewing method. If a question is not necessary, do not include it.

Start with a Title (e.g., Leisure Activities Survey). Always include a short introduction - who you are and why you are doing the survey. If you are asking about different brands, it is often a good idea to give the name of the research company rather than the client (e.g., XYZ Research Agency rather than the manufacturer of the product/ service being surveyed). Many firms create a separate research company name (even if it is only a direct phone line to the research department) to disguise themselves. This is to avoid possible bias, since people rarely like to criticize someone to their face and are much more open to a third party.

In some cases, though, it may help to mention the client. If you are surveying members of an organization, the members may be more likely to respond if they think the organization is asking their opinions on how it can best meet their needs. The same could be true when you are surveying users of a particular service.

Reassure your respondent that his or her responses will not be revealed to your client, but only combined with many others to learn about overall attitudes.

Include a cover letter with all mail surveys. A good cover letter or invitation to take a Web page survey will increase the response rate. A bad one, or none at all, will reduce the response rate. Include the information in the preceding two paragraphs and mention the incentive (if any). Describe how to return the questionnaire. Include the name and telephone number of someone the respondent can call if they have any questions. Include instructions on how to complete the survey itself.

The most effective cover letters and invitations include the following elements: Ask the recipient to take the survey. Explain why taking it will improve some aspect of the recipient's life (it will help improve a product, make an organization better meet their needs, make their opinions heard). Appeal to the recipient's sense of altruism ("please help"). Ask the recipient again to take the survey.

Number mail questionnaires on each page and include the return address on the questionnaire itself, because pages and envelopes can be separated from each other. Envelopes should have return postage prepaid. Using a postage stamp often increases response rates, but is expensive, since you must stamp every envelope - not just the returned ones.

You may want to leave a space for the respondent to add their name and title. Some people will put in their names, making it possible for you to recontact them for clarification or follow-up questions. Indicate that filling in their name is optional. If the questions are sensitive in nature, do not have a space for a name. Some people would become suspicious and not complete the survey.

If you hand out questionnaires on your premises, you obviously cannot remain anonymous, but keep the bias problem in mind when you consider the answers.

If the survey contains commercially sensitive material, ask a "security" question up front to find whether the respondent or any member of his family, household or any close friend works in the industry being surveyed. If so, terminate the interview immediately. They (or family or friends) may work for the company that commissioned the survey - or for a competitor. In either case, they are not representative and should be eliminated. If they work for a competitor, the nature of the questions may betray valuable secrets. The best way to ask security questions is in reverse (i.e., if you are surveying for a pharmaceutical product, phrase the question as "We want to interview people in certain industries - do you or any member of your household work in the pharmaceutical industry?). If the answer is "Yes" thank the respondent and terminate the interview. Similarly, it is best to eliminate people working in the advertising, market research or media industries, since they may work with competing companies.

After the security question, start with general questions. If you want to limit the survey to users of a particular product, you may want to disguise the qualifying product. As a rule, start from general attitudes to the class of products, through brand awareness, purchase patterns, specific product usage to questions on specific problems (i.e., work from "What types of coffee have you bought in the last three months" to "Do you recall seeing a special offer on your last purchase of Brand X coffee?"). If possible put the most important questions into the first half of the survey. If a person gives up half way through, at least you have the most important information.

Make sure you include all the relevant alternatives as answer choices. Leaving out a choice can give misleading results. For example, a number of recent polls that ask Americans if they support the death penalty "Yes" or "No" have found 70-75% of the respondents choosing ”Yes.” Polls that offer the choice between the death penalty and life in prison without the possibility of parole show support for the death penalty at about 50-60%. Polls that offer the alternatives of the death penalty or life in prison without the possibility of parole, with the inmates working in prison to pay restitution to their victims’ families have found support for the death penalty closer to 30%.

So what is the true level of support for the death penalty? The lowest figure is probably truest, since it represents the percentage that favor that option regardless of the alternative offered. The need to include all relevant alternatives is not limited to political polls. You can get misleading data anytime you leave out alternatives.

Do not put two questions into one. Avoid questions such as "Do you buy frozen meat and frozen fish?" A "Yes" answer can mean the respondent buys meat or fish or both. Similarly with a question such as "Have you ever bought Product X and, if so, did you like it?" A "No" answer can mean "never bought" or "bought and disliked." Be as specific as possible. "Do you ever buy pasta?" can include someone who once bought some in 1990. It does not tell you whether the pasta was dried, frozen or canned and may include someone who had pasta in a restaurant. It is better to say "Have you bought pasta (other than in a restaurant) in the last three months?" "If yes, was it frozen, canned or dried?" Few people can remember what they bought more than three months ago unless it was a major purchase such as an automobile or appliance.

The overriding consideration in questionnaire design is to make sure your questions can accurately tell you what you want to learn. The way you phrase a question can change the answers you get. Try to make sure the wording does not favor one answer choice over another.

Avoid emotionally charged words or leading questions that point towards a certain answer. You will get different answers from asking "What do you think of the XYZ proposal?" than from "What do you think of the Republican XYZ proposal?" The word "Republican" in the second question would cause some people to favor or oppose the proposal based on their feelings about Republicans, rather than about the proposal itself. It is very easy to create bias in a questionnaire. This is another good reason to test it before going ahead.

If you are comparing different products to find preferences, give each one a neutral name or reference. Do not call one "A" and the second one "B." This immediately brings images of A grades and B grades to mind, with the former being seen as superior to the latter. It is better to give each a "neutral" reference such "M" or "N" that do not have as strong a quality difference image.

Avoid technical terms and acronyms, unless you are absolutely sure that respondents know they mean. LAUTRO, AGI, GPA, EIEIO (Life Assurance and Unit Trust Regulatory Organization, Adjusted Gross Income, Grade Point Average and Engineering Information External Inquiries Officer) are all well-known acronyms to people in those particular fields, but very few people would understand all of them. If you must use an acronym, spell it out the first time it is used.

Make sure your questions accept all the possible answers. A question like "Do you use regular or premium gas in your car?" does not cover all possible answers. The owner may alternate between both types. The question also ignores the possibility of diesel or electric-powered cars. A better way of asking this question would be "Which type(s) of fuel do you use in your cars?" The responses allowed might be:


Regular gasoline
Premium gasoline
Diesel
Other
Do not have a car

If you want only one answer from each person, ensure that the options are mutually exclusive. For example:

In which of the following do you live?

A house
An apartment
The suburbs

This question ignores the possibility of someone living in a house or an apartment in the suburbs.

Score or rating scale questions (e.g., "If '5' means very good and '1' means very poor how would rate this product?") are a particular problem. Researchers are very divided on this issue. Many surveys use a ten-point scale, but there is considerable evidence to suggest that anything over a five point scale is irrelevant. This depends partially on education. Among university graduates a ten point scale will work well. Among people with less than a high school education five points is sufficient. In third world countries, a three-point scale (good/acceptable/bad) may be all some respondents can understand.

Another issue on which researchers differ is whether to use a scale with an odd or even number of points. Some like to force people to give an answer that is clearly positive or negative. This can make the analysis easier. Others feel it is important to offer a neutral, middle option. Your interviewing mode can make a difference here. A good interviewer can often get a answer, but in a self-administered interview, such as a Web page survey, a person who is frustrated by being unable to give a middle answer may leave a question blank or quit the survey altogether.

Be sure any rating scale labels are meaningful. For example:

What do you think about product X?

It's the best on the market
It's about average
It's the worst on the market

A question phrased like the one above will force most answers into the middle category, resulting in very little usable information.

If you have used a particular scale before and need to compare results, use the same scale. Four on a five-point scale is not equivalent to eight on a ten-point scale. Someone who rates an item "4" on a five-point scale might rate that item anywhere between "6" and "9" on a ten-point scale.

Be aware of cultural factors. In the third world, respondents have a strong tendency to exaggerate answers. Researchers may be perceived as being government agents, with the power to punish or reward according to the answer given. Accordingly they often give "correct" answers rather than what they really believe. Even when the questions are not overtly political and deal purely with commercial products or services, the desire not to disappoint important visitors with answers that may be considered negative may lead to exaggerated scores.

Always discount "favorable" answers by a significant factor. The desire to please is not limited to the third world. Unfortunately, there is no hard and fast rule on how much to do this. It depends on the situation.

The desire to please translates into a tendency to pick agreeing answers on agreement scales. While logically the percentage that strongly agrees that "X is good" should exactly equal the percentage that strongly disagrees that "X is bad," in the real world, this is unlikely to be true. Experiments have shown that more people will agree than disagree. One way to eliminate this problem is to ask half your respondents if they agree that "X is good" and the other half if they agree that "X is bad." You could then reverse the answers given by the second group. This is extra work, but it may be worth it if it is important to get the most accurate percentage of people who really agree with something.

People sometimes give answers they feel will reflect well on them. This is a constant problem for pre-election polls. More people say they will vote than actually will vote. More people say they go to museums or libraries than actually do. This problem is most significant when your respondents are talking directly to a person. People give more honest answers when answering questions on a computer. Mail surveys are in-between.

In personal interviews it is vital for the Interviewer to have empathy with the Interviewee. In general, Interviewers should try to "blend" with respondents in terms of race, language, sex, age, etc. Choose your Interviewers according to the likely respondents.

Leave your demographic questions (age, gender, income, education, etc.) until the end of the questionnaire. By then the interviewer should have built a rapport with the interviewee that will allow honest responses to such personal questions. Mail and Internet questionnaires should do the same, although the rapport must be built by good question design, rather than personality.

Exceptions to this rule are any demographic questions that qualify someone to be included in the survey. For example, many researchers limit some surveys to people in certain age groups. These questions must come near the beginning.

Do not have an interviewer ask a respondent's gender, unless they really have no idea. Have the interviewer fill in the answer themselves.

Paper questionnaires requiring text answers, should always leave sufficient space for handwritten answers. Lines should be about half-an-inch (one cm.) apart. The number of lines you should have depends on the question. Three to five lines are average.

Leave a space at the end of a questionnaire entitled "Other Comments." Sometimes respondents offer casual remarks that are worth their weight in gold and cover some area you did not think of, but which respondents consider critical. Many products have a wide range of secondary uses that the manufacturer knows nothing about but which could provide a valuable source of extra sales if approached properly. In one third world market, a major factor in the sale of candles was the ability to use the spent wax as floor polish - but the manufacturer only discovered this by a chance remark.

Always consider the layout of your questionnaire. This is especially important on paper, computer direct and Internet surveys. You want to make it attractive, easy to understand and easy to complete. If you are creating a paper survey, you also want to make it easy for your data entry personnel.

Try to keep your answer spaces in a straight line, either horizontally or vertically. A single answer choice on each line is best. Eye tracking studies show the best place to use for answer spaces is the right hand edge of the page. It is much easier for a field worker or respondent to follow a logical flow across or down a page. Using the right edge is also easiest for data entry.
The Survey System lets you create a Questionnaire Form with the answer choices in two columns. Creating the form that way can save a lot of paper or screen space, but you should recognize doing so makes the questionnaire a little harder to complete. It also slows the data entry process when working with paper questionnaires.

Questions and answer choice grids, as in the second of the following examples, are popular with many researchers. They can look attractive and save paper, or computer screen space. They also can avoid a long series of very repetitive question and answer choice lists. Unfortunately, they also are a bit harder than the repeated lists for some people to understand. As always, consider whom you are studying when you create your questionnaire.

Look at the following layouts and decide which you would prefer to use:

Do you agree, disagree or have no opinion that this company has:


A good vacation policy - agree/not sure/disagree.
Good management feedback - agree/not sure/disagree.
Good medical insurance - agree/not sure/disagree.
High wages - agree/not sure/disagree.

An alternative layout is:

Do you agree, disagree or are not sure that this company has:



Agree Not Sure Disagree
A good vacation policy 3 2 1
Good management feedback 3 2 1
Good medical insurance 3 2 1
High wages 3 2 1

The second example shows the answer choices in neat columns and has more space between the lines. It is easier to read. The numbers in the second example will also speed data entry, if you are using a paper questionnaire.

Surveys are a mixture of science and art, and a good researcher will save their cost many times over by knowing how to ask the correct questions.


Additional Tips for Web Surveys
Web page surveys are still relatively new, and researchers are still learning what works best. One principle is to consider good Web page design when creating your survey pages. Do not use too many colors or fonts. They are distracting. On the other hand, bolding, italicizing, and changing the colors of key words, used appropriately, can make your questions easier to understand. Using color and/or a smaller font size to make instructions distinct from question text can make your questionnaire easier to follow.

Always specify a background color, even if it is white (usually a good choice). Some browsers may show a background color you do not expect, if you do not specify one. Background images usually make text harder to read, even when they make a page more attractive at first glance.

Use graphics sparingly. Most home Internet users still connect via modems, and graphics slow download times. Remember that showing a large graphic at a small size on a Web page does not reduce the time needed to download the graphic. Create or modify the graphic to a file size that is no bigger than you need. If your sample consists of people at work, you may be able to use somewhat more graphics, since those people usually have faster connections, but even they appreciate faster downloads. Use video only if that is what you are testing (e.g., a commercial).

Make sure you do not require people to scroll horizontally to view part of the survey page. Most people find horizontal scrolling annoying. Question text wraps to fit the available space, but you can make a grid that is wider than some screens. Since only about two percent of people still use 640x480 screen resolution, you may want to design your pages to be up to 760 pixels wide, but no wider. Many people still use 800x600 resolution. Pages designed for that width will still look fine on screens with a higher resolution.

Include an introduction or welcome page. Explain the reason for the survey (as far as you can without compromising the survey). Put instructions at the point they are needed, instead of grouping them on the first page.

Make sure your page and question layout are consistent. Do not put answer choices on the right for some questions and on the left for others. Use color consistently. For example, always use the same color to represent an instruction, which is not part of a question per se. Use a different color (or bolding) any time you want to highlight words within questions.

Recognize that requiring that questions be answered will likely increase the number of people who drop out of a survey in the middle. If you do require answers, consider doing so only on key questions. Whenever you require an answer make sure the available options include all possible answers, including “don’t know,” “decline to state,” or “not applicable,” if there is any chance that these may represent some people’s answers.

Consider your sample when designing the pages. Using answer grids and presenting answer choices in two or more columns can look attractive, save space and help avoid vertical scrolling. Unfortunately, these formats are a bit harder for some people to understand than a simple vertical list of answer choices. If you think your target population may have some trouble understanding how to fill out the survey, use these formats sparingly.

Allow space for long replies to comment type questions. Some people will type in longer answers on a Web page than they would write on a paper questionnaire or say to an interviewer.

Drop-down lists save space on the screen, but be careful using them. Lists that require scrolling to see some choices can bias the results. Use them only if there is only one possible choice a person can make. One example is state of primary residence. If you present a list of choices that people have to think about, and only some of the choices are initially visible, there will be a bias in favor of those initially visible choices.

Researchers have been looking into the issue of whether it is better to present a survey in one or more long scrolling pages or in a series of separate pages that do not need scrolling. Research has not yet provided a clear answer. There is some evidence that grouping several similar questions on a page may result in answers that are more similar than if the questions were on different pages. Some people may dislike scrolling down a long page, while others may dislike the brief wait between questions when each is on a different page. Having your questionnaire split into multiple pages has the advantage that if someone quits partway through, at least you have the answers they have already given. You will also need to split your survey into multiple pages, if you want some people to not see certain questions, or if you want the answers given for some questions to affect those shown for later questions.

When you have finished creating the survey and have it up on your Web site, test it thoroughly. Make sure that all the pages look as you wish and that all skips, randomizations and other logic work as you intend. A test on your own PC or a paper copy of the questionnaire does not guarantee that the copy on the Web will look and act the same. We also recommend you monitor the live results as your survey progresses (good Web survey software allows this). Doing so can help you spot any problems that did not appear during your testing. Despite their best efforts most researchers occasionally miss something.




Pre-test the Questionnaire
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The last step in questionnaire design is to test a questionnaire with a small number of interviews before conducting your main interviews. Ideally, you should test the survey on the same kinds of people you will include in the main study. If that is not possible, at least have a few people, other than the question writer, try the questionnaire. This kind of test run can reveal unanticipated problems with question wording, instructions to skip questions, etc. It can help see if the interviewees understand your questions and giving useful answers.

If you change any questions after a pre-test, you should not combine the results from the pre-test with the results of post-test interviews. The Survey System will invariably provide you with mathematically correct answers to your questions, but choosing sensible questions and ad ministering surveys with sensitivity and common sense will improve the quality of your results dramatically.
 

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Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

just laugh yaar...............


एक गांव में एक स्त्री थी । ऊसके पती आई टी आई कार्यरत थे । वह आपने पती को पत्र लिखना चाहती है पर अल्पद्नानी होने के कारण उसे यह पता नहीं होता है कि पूर्णविराम कहां लगेगा । ईसीलीये ऊसका जहां मन करता है वहीं पुर्णविराम लगाती है ।

और इस प्रकार चिट्टी लिखती है ।

मेरे प्यारे जीवनसाथी मेरा प्रणाम आपके चरनोमे । आप ने अभीतक चिट्टी नहीं लिखी मेरे सहेलीकॊ । नोकरी मिल गयी है हमारी गाय ने । बछडा दिया है दादाजीने । शराब शुरु कर दी मैने । तुमको बहुत खत लिखे पर तुम नहीं आये कुत्ते के बच्चे । भेडीया खा गई दो महीने का राशन । छूट्टी पर आते वक्त ले आना एक खुबसुरत औरत । मेरी सहेली बन गई है । और इस वक्त टी व्ही पर गाना गा रही है हमारी बकरी । बेच दी गयी है तुम्हारी मां । तुमको याद कर रही है एक पडोसन । हमें बहूत तंग करती है तुम्हारी बहन । सिरददर से लेटी है तुम्हरी पत्नी
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

came away from quizzing a climate change expert settled about the science but unsure about its ramifications. Articles November 20, 2006 09:30 AM | The other night, I found myself sitting next to a climate change expert at the Times Higher Education Supplement awards ceremony. Following the recent knock-about between and on these pages - on the rights and wrongs of the science - I thought I must seize my chance and ask for a third party opinion
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

The Independent Russia is not the all-powerful energy superpower it claims to be and will struggle to keep Europe reliably supplied with natural gas unless it takes urgent multi-billion pound action, a leading academic has claimed
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

In what could be another plus for India, the country is all set to play a major role in providing research and development expertise for the euro 39.7 billion Anglo-Dutch consumer products giant, Unilever. In a fresh review, Unilever has recognised India and China could be focus areas in Asia in future for R&D.

While Unilever's R&D laboratory in Bangalore has contributed significantly to research in foods, its importance is expected to increase among the six exclusive R&D facilities of Unilever in the world.

The other five Unilever research centres are: Colworth House and Port Sunlight in UK, Vlaardingen in the Netherlands, Trumbull in the US and Shanghai in China.

"Unilever, recognising the capabilities in our region, especially in India and China, plans to expand its R&D presence in Asia," said Hindustan Lever ED Dr AS Abhiraman.

As yet, what impact the new focus would have on India is unclear. It is being conjectured that some part of Unilever's R&D elsewhere in the world could be done out of Asia on a larger scale. However, there is no confirmation on this. But, what is certain is that this would lead to demand for more scientists in India. The total R&D spend by the Unilever group was euro 953 million in calendar year 2005.

The decade-old Bangalore R&D centre houses over 80 scientists (mostly PhDs from reputed institutions from around the world) and 130 research associates (who are engineering graduates or post-graduates in engineering and science). Dr Abhiraman said growth of the Bangalore research centre in future will be governed by its performance. "Since we are confident of its high performance, both in terms of accomplishment and potential, we expect it to grow commensurately," he added.

HLL is Unilever's subsidiary, in which the parent has a 51.43% holding. The Rs 11,060 crore HLL has traditionally been a company that incorporates the latest technology in all its operations. Some of the recent innovations in India include the technology in Surf Excel that reduces water consumption, and Purit water purifier, which does not require electricity.

The Bangalore research centre carries out research on foods, corporate research. Here, home and personal care programmes co-exist and synergies between the three are leveraged extensively.

The laboratory also retains an in-house knowledge on perfumery. Research programmes on skin/hair health, water
purification, laundry cleaning, skin cleansing, tea science and nutrition are undertaken here.

Shanghai research centre, which is a dedicated chemistry laboratory, focused on developing and delivering novel molecules and functional materials across all home and personal care categories.

The Hindustan Lever Research Centre, Andheri (Mumbai) set up in 1958, is said to be the largest private sector industrial, with 300 patents
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

The World Health Report 2006 - Working together for health contains an expert assessment of the current crisis in the global health workforce and ambitious proposals to tackle it over the next ten years, starting immediately. The report reveals an estimated shortage of almost 4.3 million doctors, midwives, nurses and support workers worldwide. The shortage is most severe in the poorest countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, where health workers are most needed. Focusing on all stages of the health workers' career lifespan from entry to health training, to job recruitment through to retirement, the report lays out a ten-year action plan in which countries can build their health workforces, with the support of global partners.
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

Is it the salad itself or the dressing used and the way it is presented that makes the dish more appealing? The analogy, and the answer, are apt when it comes to discussing a resume as well.

The perfect resume must excel in both content and format. Spruce your resume with these simple, effective tips and you will definitely get those interview calls.

What a resume is not
~ It is not a biography.

~ It is not a statement of purpose listing your short-term and long-term goals.

~ It should not just be a long list of landmarks in your professional career.

Think from a recruiter's point of view


Your potential employer may not have enough time on his or her hands to read a 10-page masterpiece, so ensure your resume does not extend beyond a couple of pages. Leading newspapers have realised not all their readers have the time to read each and every article, which is why you see the present trend of using summary boxes for long-winded articles.

When you draft your resume, think from a recruiter's point of view. Provide information that a prospective employer needs to know and not the kind of information you want him/ her to read.

An oft-quoted line amongst book critics is that Bill Clinton's autobiography, My Life, was a 1,000-page book that had everything in it except what people really wanted to know. Keep this in mind when you are drafting your resume.

The purpose of a resume
A resume or curriculum vitae is a window to you, your personality and your skill sets. Its raison d'etre is to convince a recruiter that you deserve to be called for an interview. It should present you in the best possible light and convince a prospective employer that you can add value to the company.

It should tantalise enough to make an employer pick up the phone and dial your number. Your resume should not simply inform; it should also excite a would-be employer.

The resume can also act as a sample of your skills. If done well, it can show how you can organise a large amount of data in a few words. It can also showcase your skills if you plan to opt for a career in designing, advertising or copywriting.

Summary
Here are points you must definitely include:

i. Experience in your profession

Give valuable insights; for example, if you are in the advertising industry, you could mention the big players and important names you have worked with.

ii. Skills gained in the field

Apart from skills you are expected to gain in your field of work, do highlight skills you may have picked up as extras. For example, if you are a teacher, your expected skills would include your command over the language concerned, the ability to handle students and your knowledge about the subject concerned.

However, if you are also involved in organising workshops for teachers, you can also mention your ability to organise events and liaison effectively.

iii. General skills

This could include interpersonal skills, a knowledge of computers, etc. If you know computer packages apart from MS Office, such as Photoshop and Adobe page maker, and if you know how to make a Powerpoint presentation, do mention it. Many recruiters are on the look out for personnel who can multi-task.

iv. Accomplishments in concrete terms

Mention successful projects that you have handled/ been part of.

Focus on career progression, especially if you have been promoted in a short space of time.

If you have won any award or citation such as Best Employee Of The Month, mention it; this will present you in a positive light.

v. Academic record

Give your record in reverse chronological order, mentioning your most recent qualification first.

Packaging and content
Packaging is as important as content -- both should go hand in hand.

~ Your name, address, telephone number and e-mail address should lead your resume.

~ The format you use should be consistent. Do not use too many stylistic fonts and don't change the font size too often.

~ The first impression is the last impression, so the first few lines must be really impressive. List about three to four major skills and two achievements in the first summary section. The qualities you focus on should be compelling, not generalised.

~ Using a job objective as a starting point is a good focal point. Here is an example:

Job objective: Senior-level assignments in the area of logistics and supply chain management in the Office Automation, IT/ Telecom industry in a dynamic organisation.

~ What a prospective employer really wants to know is what you can do for them. Instead of just listing your achievements, try and tailor your resume to the needs of the company concerned. It may simply mean changing a few lines here and there on a resume you have already created.

~ Don't be too humble. You have to sell yourself. Nobody else is going to do it for you. Give concrete achievements. For example, if you increased sales by six percent or created a database of clients, mention it instead of making generalised statements like 'used problem-solving skills' or 'created aggressive marketing strategies' that do not speak of actual results.

~ If you have progressed up the ladder in a particular company, you need to point this out. For example, if you joined as a trainee and were then promoted to a managerial level within two years, mention it instead of simply saying you are a manager.

What to avoid

~ Lousy spellings are a real put-off. Talk about your career prospects instead of your 'carrier' prospects.

~ Standardise your language. Use either American English or British English, not a sprinkling of both.

~ Don't exaggerate your skills. It may get you the job, but you will have difficulty retaining the post if you cannot deliver.

~ Don't talk about unrealistic goals: 'I want to progress from a cub reporter to a reporter independently handling a political beat' is realistic, while 'I aim to be editor of the newspaper soon,' is highly unrealistic.
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

The competition is stiff in the job market.

Everyone wants a well-paying job, with great growth prospects, in a good company.

How does the recruiting panel cope with this surge of applicants?

Don't be surprised if you find yourself taking psychological tests.

In fact, corporates like, TCS, Escosoft Technologies, ICICI, TVA Infotech, UB, Bharati and LG often use what are known as psychometric tests.

These work as a filter and helps the human resources department select the most suitable candidate for their company.

What are psychometric tests?

~ Designed by psychology professionals, these are highly standardised, scientific tools that measure various aspects of human performance or behaviour.

~ Psychometric tests cover areas ranging from intelligence, aptitude, values, emotions, motivation, personality, etc.

~ They have been created for three main reasons:

i. It is easier to get information from candidates through tests rather than through interviews/ counselling.

ii. The information from these tests is more scientifically consistent than the information from an interview/ counselling session.

iii. It is harder to get away with lying on a test than in an interview/ counselling session.

~ Depending on diverse factors like the need, age group and situation, psychometric tests have a wide variety of applications, right from recruiting candidates for employment, to diagnosing children with learning problems in school.

~ Besides recruitment, they are also used for career guidance, self-awareness, understanding strengths and weaknesses, training and clinical purposes (to diagnose mental abnormalities and certain specific disorders).

~ Apart from catering to selection needs, tests also furnish employers with details regarding skills or personality traits that need to be upgraded/ worked upon.

This is taken care of by providing training programmes either on technical skills or in areas like stress management, assertiveness training, risk taking ability, time management, etc.

~ Employers also use these tests to evaluate an individual's suitability for promotion.

Testing more that just aptitude

Taking into consideration the global scenario, most companies are in constant need of individuals who fit job requirements very precisely -- not just in terms of knowledge, skills and background, but also in terms of personal attributes.

Employers, while scanning applications for a specific profile, look out for candidates who can perform in a particular way.

They may use tests that assess aptitudes for manual dexterity and speed, mechanical ability, spatial ability, reasoning, abstract reasoning, clerical work, and numerical and verbal abilities.

Other than aptitude tests, there are tests which give employers an indication of your personality by placing you on a scale of introversion/ extroversion, assertiveness/ submissiveness, self-reliance/ group dependence, etc.

For example, if the post were that for a sales staff, employers would look out for a profile of a candidate who is confident, persuasive and outgoing.

How valid are such tests?

One could refute the validity of psychometric tests on the ground that candidates will answer in a way they think will please the employers.

But a small word of caution to prospective job applicants -- it is extremely important that you refrain from faking in the tests.

Psychometric tests (especially the personality tests) have an in-built mechanism of detecting false responses. This is done by means of differently worded statements, which measure candidates on the same feature.

For instance, if extroversion/ introversion is assessed by the test, the presence or absence of the same trait could be gauged by your responses to five different statements.

i. I take the initiative in introducing myself to others in any social gathering.

ii. I'm usually in the limelight at a party.

iii. I wait for other people to come and talk to me in a party.

iv. I often feel totally out of place in a social gathering.

v. I seem to make friends about as quickly as others do.

Besides, employers almost never use test results in isolation. They base their decision of recruiting candidates on test results, but they give more weightage to the insights they gather from the interview.

So, even if you happen to give acceptable answers in the test, the interviewers will sense the discrepancy between what you claim you are in the test and how you respond to questions and present yourself in the interview.

Even if you sail through the test and interview undetected, and somehow get the job, employers will still see through it simply because your performance will not be as good as indicated by the test and in the interview.

There is also a more important reason to desist from faking.

As already mentioned, a particular job will require you to have a certain combination of traits.

Giving false responses would only land you a job you are not cut out for, resulting in job dissatisfaction.

So just be yourself and answer honestly and hope for the best.

5 useful insights

i. There are generally no 'right' or 'wrong' answers.

ii. Do not ponder too long over a question. Give the first response that comes to your mind when you read the question.

iii. Do not miss any question.

iv. Be honest; give answers that you feel describe you best.

v. If you feel stuck on a question, mark the answer that would best describe how you would behave in eight situations out of 10.

8 tips to help you do well in psychometric tests

Many of these points may seem like common sense, but it would help if you follow them.

i. Get a good night's sleep.

ii. If you wear glasses or a hearing aid, carry them along.

If you have any disability, inform the test administrator about it beforehand.

iii. Don't go for the test on an empty stomach. Research shows that skipping meals reduces intellectual performance.

iv. Stay calm; anxiety can affect your performance adversely.

Try to remember that ability tests usually measure underlying potential rather than overt knowledge.

v. Psychometric tests normally need no prior preparation.

If you have an idea of what type of test to expect, for example, numerical ability, then you might practice a few sums before you appear for the actual test.

vi. Try to maintain both speed and accuracy, especially for timed tests.

vii. You will almost certainly be taken through a practice or instruction stage before the test begins.

This will give you the chance to try one or two practice items, before the actual test.

Listen carefully to the instructions given by the test administrator.

viii. Get the most out of the examples or practice session. Do not hesitate to ask questions.

If you need a little more time for practice, ask for it.

The bottomline is -- to try and look at psychometric tests as an aide to the right job rather than as an obstacle, which must be overcome.
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

Long and hectic work schedules, lack of sleep, colleagues you dislike, a domineering boss -- these and other factors could lead to one becoming snappy at work. The result -- we slam doors, yell at co-workers, pull faces, snap at our boss, and end up saying things we may regret later.

It takes years to build up a reputation, and only seconds to destroy it. No matter what, you shouldn't snap. Replace negative emotions with self-confidence and manage difficult situations with grace. Here's how you can keep your emotions under control at work and maintain an unblemished reputation.

Identify your hot buttons
Be alert to the types of situations that put you on the burner. Is it waiting in a long queue at the departmental store or being put on hold by the customer service person from your bank? As far as possible, stay away from situations that trigger an impulsive and unpleasant reaction, especially while you are at work or just before you get to the office. You may realise that the real reason you are angry with traffic is because of your inability to start from home on time. Wake up early instead.

Be prepared

Anticipating and planning a positive reaction will help defuse your anger before the situation gets to you. For instance, if you don't like questions interrupting your presentation, plan how you will handle interruptions. You could give out an FAQ leaflet at the start of the presentation or ask the audience to e-mail questions to you for an elaborate response. Create a back-up plan for the possibility of a technical glitch freezing your PowerPoint presentation. For instance, you could have an overhead projector and some transparencies or hand-outs.

If it's a performance review meeting you are attending, have some accomplishments ready to offset any negative feedback, so you don't respond in anger. The bottom-line: Be on the offensive.

Clarify before reacting
We sometimes misunderstand the other person and react impulsively. Is your boss asking what time you arrived because he's keeping an eye on you or is it because he was also stuck in a traffic jam? Ask a lot of questions before jumping to conclusions. If need be, repeat what the other person just said. This ensures you understand the comment and gives your colleague or client the opportunity to clarify any miscommunication.

Don't throw tantrums

In the age of team work, a 'head-heavy' attitude will get you labelled as the spoilt brat in the office. Learn to be more accommodating. The 'my way or the highway' approach will not get you any points. If your idea has been overruled by the boss or ridiculed, talk to him and understand his/her perspective rather than losing your temper. If you are dealing with nasty colleagues who keep shooting you down, smile and behave in a cordial manner. Refer to our earlier story on how to deal with problematic colleagues.

Don't call or e-mail when upset

Wait before writing a strong emotional e-mail or phone call. Never disrespect others, even if you're right. The angry mail you sent three months ago may make a surprise appearance at the performance appraisal meeting. Hold that strong e-mail or letter until the next day and re-read it. Ask someone to proof-read any correspondence you think may be construed as surly, condescending or rude.

Be ready to say "I am sorry'"

If you end up erupting in a meeting, criticise a colleague's work or make ill-timed comments that you regret, how can you bounce back? Apologise immediately to the targeted person and to everyone around. Don't offer a long justification about work pressure or the misunderstanding. Just say "I should not have reacted that way and I am sorry". This will show that you are professional and will reflect positively on your character.



 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

In a technology-enabled world, even your resume has to be tailored to find a good job. Most companies prefer receiving job applications via e-mail, as it is convenient, simple and also environment-friendly.

While traditional techniques like sending a properly formatted, professionally written and eye-catching resume printed out from a computer remains relevant, a Web-based format will enhance your possibilities of finding a good job. This format refers to your approach to resum�-preparation based on how you want it to be delivered to the recipient. We highlight a few formats you must consider:

Text-based CV (also known as ASCII)

A simple version that can be pasted directly into the body of an e-mail. ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) is a code for representing English characters as numbers, with each letter assigned a number from 0 to 127. The format is simplistic and the focus has to be on content. Most computers use ASCII codes to represent text, which makes it possible to transfer data from one computer to another.

As this is a text-based resume, try not to make it flashy. The resume should be readable and any computer system can read a file in this format. The downside is its universal acceptance limits your ability to use graphics and special fonts like italics, etc.

Tip: This format is best suited for non-creative jobs like manufacturing, operations, engineering, technical support, etc.

Scan-able CV
This kind of a resume can be run through a scanner that has character recognition capabilities. The employer can store your resume in their database and search it using key words for any future openings.

Put your name at the top of each page if your resume exceeds one page. Use industry or job-specific keywords so your resume is easily searchable within the database. Some keywords, for instance, could be 'market research', 'sales consultant', 'project manager', 'result oriented', etc. Avoid any graphics or images in this kind of a resume, as it may make scanning difficult.

Tip: This format works best when applying for jobs directly on the company's portal. Your resume gets stored in the company's database, so ease of search must be given the highest priority.

Personal Resume Web site
A very convenient way of sharing (and showing off) your skills, accomplishments and abilities is by creating a personal resume Web site. This doesn't need to be a very complicated site, but it should display your work favourably. It can include articles you have written, artwork and photography you have created, or software you have developed. You can even provide links to reports, papers, studies, brochures, projects, presentations, testimonials, letters of recommendations, any kudos you have received -- from customers, clients, colleagues, past employers, professors, etc. The biggest advantage is having your resume available 24/7 to all potential employers.

A number of sites host Web pages. To find some, try Free Web Space.

Tip: This format is best suited for creative professionals like Web site designers, animation and design professionals, etc.

CD Portfolio
A digital copy of your portfolio can easily be burnt on to a CD that can be used in the CD-ROM drive of a potential employer. A CD can easily fit into your briefcase or bag and you will have a resume that will be on the move with you. Moreover, you will not have to struggle with carrying around a tremendous, oversized binder, or a huge case filled with your samples.

Tip: This format works best if you are an artist, photographer, fashion designer, model, etc and you need to demonstrate a portfolio or body of work to a prospective employer or client.

Word or PDF attachment
If you want to e-mail a fancier version of your resume to an employer by attaching a Word document or Acrobat PDF file, go right ahead. Just make sure the file is of a reasonable size (100K or less) and you still include the plain-text version in the body of your e-mail, just in case your recipient can't open or print the attachment. In case of a PDF file, make sure the font size is a minimum of 14 or readability will take a backseat.

Tip: The benefit of this resume is it is highly compatible and consistent in appearance across platforms, though difficult to place directly into databases. Check out Web-based resumes of Alex Bischoff, a freelance designer.

An online friendly resume will project you as a candidate who takes initiative, is tech savvy and has relevant skills. It will also open multiple doors for you in an extremely competitive job market.




 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

While the college campus may be the perfect forum in which to exhibit your flair for the latest in fashion style, the interview is not the place to do so. With very few unusual exceptions, sandals and sweatshirts are out. Oxfords and business suits are still in. A necktie is still a fact of life in interviewing. Even though many companies have relaxed the internal company dress code, interviews still follow the conservative standard. Don't buck the trend.

Unfortunately, most college grads are woefully underprepared with proper interview dress. They feel they can "get by" with what is already in their wardrobe. Usually not. Dress for the world outside college is quite different from the campus scene. Remember that stylish is not conservative. You should be doing the talking, not your clothes.

This is not to say that you need to go out and buy a whole new wardrobe. Go for quality over quantity. One or two well-chosen business suits will serve you all the way to the first day on the job and beyond. Then, when you are making some money (and have a chance to see what the standard "uniform" is for the company), you can begin to round out your wardrobe. For now, no one will fault you for wearing the same sharp outfit each time you interview. If you desire some variety within a limited budget, you might consider varying your shirt/blouse/tie/accessories as a simple way to change your look without breaking your wallet.

For those of you who need a quick review of the basics, follow these guidelines for successful interview dress:

Men and Women

*Conservative two-piece business suit (solid dark blue or grey is best)
*Conservative long-sleeved shirt/blouse (white is best, pastel is next best)
*Clean, polished conservative shoes
*Well-groomed hairstyle
*Clean, trimmed fingernails
*Minimal cologne or perfume
*Empty pockets--no bulges or tinkling coins
*No gum, candy or cigarettes
*Light briefcase or portfolio case
*No visible body piercing (nose rings, eyebrow rings, etc.)

Men
*Necktie should be silk with a conservative pattern
*Dark shoes (black lace-ups are best)
*Dark socks (black is best)
*Get a haircut; short hair always fares best in interviews
*No beards (unless you are interviewing for a job as a lumberjack!)
*Mustaches are a possible negative, but if you must, make sure it is neat and trimmed
*No rings other than wedding ring or college ring
*No earrings (if you normally wear one, take it out)

Women
*Always wear a suit with a jacket; no dresses
*Shoes with conservative heels
*Conservative hosiery at or near skin color (and no runs!)
*No purses, small or large; carry a briefcase instead
*If you wear nail polish (not required), use clear or a conservative color
*Minimal use of makeup (it should not be too noticeable)
*No more than one ring on each hand
*One set of earrings only

If you are still not sure how to dress for the interview, call them and ask! That's right--call the employer. But this is one time when you do not want to call the Hiring Manager--instead, ask to be put through to Human Resources and say:

"I have an interview with _____ in the _____ department for a position as an _____. Could you please tell me what would be appropriate dress for this interview?"

Sure, you run the risk of someone in HR thinking you are a social imbecile, but that's a lot better than having the Hiring Manager distracted by inappropriate interview dress.

While many work environments have shifted to business casual as the work standard, business suits are still the interview standard. When in doubt, it is almost always better to err on the side of conservatism.

One final note on interview dress: while it goes without saying that your interview clothes should be neat and clean, very few interviewees give the same time and attention to their shoes. Shoes? Yes, shoes. I am aware of at least one Corporate Recruiter who forms first impressions based solely (pardon the pun) on shoes. This person does not have a shoe fetish--he subjectively judges that those who pay attention to details like their shoes are also likely to be diligent in their work life. And it is not just that person's opinion. Many have said that you can judge a person by their shoes. You will find that many ex-military officers (many of whom have found their way into management positions in corporate America) are especially aware of a person's shoes. It is not enough to be clean, pressed, and ironed. Make sure your shoes are conservative, clean, and polished.
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

India is the world's largest democracy and is rapidly becoming one of the most attractive developing nations for doing business. This attractive business environment came about largely because of political and economic reforms that provide foreign investors with incentives for doing business in India. India brought about major economic reforms in the early 1990s, making it possible for business firms located outside India to make direct investments in the Indian marketplace. Due to these reforms, U.S. firms and businesses from other countries have taken advantage of the opportunities there; today the United States is currently the largest foreign investor in India. And while opportunities for doing business in India have led to many success stories, particularly from many large U.S. multinational business organizations, there remain numerous challenges in doing business effectively with India. To understand these challenges and to learn how to effectively do business in India, it is important first to learn how Indian firms and their managers conduct business. Business, as practiced in India, provides a useful model for Western business organizations planning to enter the Indian marketplace.

In contrast to many Western transnational corporations with high technology capabilities and proprietary product systems, many Asian Indian managers rely extensively upon long-term relationship building in their international business encounters. Indian business styles are based upon long-term, vis-a-vis shortterm, priorities in the context of several cultural and functional dimensions. This knowledge should be useful to Western businesses in the development of strategies for India, or for researchers interested in learning more about the way business is conducted in India. To describe the Indian business approach, several organizational dimensions are included to provide an understanding of these issues.

ORGANIZATIONAL DIMENSIONS
POWER DISTANCE.
According to Geert Hofstede, organizations can be defined as "high power distance" instances when less powerful members accept a standard of unequally distributed power and believe that their superiors make sound leadership decisions due, in large part, to the superior's position of power. In contrast, subordinates in low power distance organizations attribute high quality decisions to leadership skills, rather than positions of power. India is a high power distance society. Due to the vertical structure in most Indian business organizations, someone from the United States working in an Indian business environment will need to be willing to accept authority in a more complete sense than he or she is perhaps accustomed to.

INDIVIDUALISM-COLLECTIVISM.
Collectivist organizations nurture group interdependence; in turn the organization has a greater responsibility for its individual members. Collectivist persons give primary attention to the needs of their group and are willing to sacrifice opportunities for personal gain, since their sense of self is an extension of the group. Conversely, individualistic employees see themselves primarily as engineers, managers, professors, etc., and secondarily as group members of specific organizations or institutions. Persons from individualistic cultures pay more attention to their own needs, taking advantage of opportunities for personal gain or enrichment.

An interesting business phenomenon takes place in India. As one doing business in India quickly learns, independence is welcome in carrying out one's assignments, but at the same time supervisors are looked up to and respected for their managerial wisdom (high power distance). An interesting collectivist value in India, as well as most of Asia, is that of" filial piety." This value relates to the obedience to, respect for, and financial support of parents, and the honoring of ancestors as a collectivist value system. In India, according to Sunil H. Rathi, director for Rathi Dye Chem Ltd., "elderly people are very respected. We look to them for advice because they are people who have experienced life and they have more wisdom. An 80-year-old person will have greater wisdom because he has lived a long, practical life. So for them I touch their feet when I greet them," (from an interview with Rathi).

Filial piety within many of India's industries is shown, in large part, in an entrepreneurial spirit, including a group of companies founded by the former J.R.D. Tata—synonymous with India's very best. While outside investors are often welcome, Indian families retain financial and administrative control. In India, society revolves around the entire family rather than an individual's personal priorities. This carries over into the business setting. Top management positions are reserved for family members, although this is changing somewhat, particularly within the ranks of middle management. Still, the family remains very strong in the entrepreneurial functions and investment areas.

LANGUAGE AND SOCIOLINGUISTICS.
Due to the long-term colonization of India, the British Raj cultural traits remain strong to this day. While many languages and multiple dialects are spoken in India, the language of international business is English. While English is the language of industry and large business, it is mixed with Hindi and state dialects, creating somewhat different connotations from British or American English. Thus, miscommunication can occur even between those sharing the same language. The sharing of the same native language is not necessarily sufficient for effective interpretation of business documents.

Beyond simple language differences, paralinguistic meaning can also vary significantly from culture to culture. Speakers of Indian English, for example, routinely increase their voice volume for recognition purposes in business negotiations and other encounters; this paralinguistic behavior can be misinterpreted by standard British or American English negotiators as an expression of anger. In addition to paralinguistics, other nonverbal behavior can also be understood differently.

Nonverbal management symbols relate, for example, to power relationships such as seating patterns at management meetings, body posture, dress, and personal greetings. In India, namaste is a greeting of choice (with hands together as if in prayer and just under the chin). This greeting is appreciated, particularly when a visiting Western businessperson greets a woman in India. Also, respect to elders is shown through the custom of touching of feet and at the same time looking into their eyes. Indian nonverbal responses often vary significantly from other country's norms. For example, moving the head sideways in the United States denotes a negative response; in India, a sideways movement of the head carries a positive connotation of understanding. And while nonverbal cues should be supportive of parallel verbal messages, this is not always the case, as conflicting verbal and nonverbal signals are commonplace.

MARKETING AND POLITICAL CHALLENGES.
While worldwide tastes are becoming more standardized, demand is coming from a more diverse marketplace. For example, in India there are approximately 250 million middle-class people with various Western tastes in the selection of products and services. The Indian middle-class culture, however, is still very much Eastern and also differs from other classes within India. This poses complex marketing challenges for business organizations planning initiatives within India's expanding marketplace.

Political events in India have an impact on all business. As mentioned earlier, a more relaxed investment climate has developed in India, changing the rules for foreign direct investment in the country. With support from the prime minister and legislative bodies, investment by foreigners in India is now encouraged. There is a sense of excitement in the Indian financial and industrial communities as transnational organizations enter into Indian joint ventures. Political challenges, however, remain real and strong. According to Mohan R. Limaye, writing in Business Horizons, American companies need to be aware of the complexities of the Indian political environment including India's multiparty democracy, the growing power of India's states vis-a-vis the federal government, and a growing Indian political nationalism.

TIME CONSIDERATIONS.
In India, most management persons are time-conscious, meaning that they regulate their business life according to the clock. Many Indian managers tend to follow a linear time frame as is the practice in much of Western Europe or the United States. That is, businesspeople are expected to be punctual for appointments and it is mandatory for workers to arrive on time for work. It can also be noted, however, that trains run on a more flexible schedule and are routinely late. This is important to keep in mind when scheduling appointments; extra time needs to be scheduled to reach business destinations on time. Social contacts can differ from business protocol in relation to time; flexible behavior is much more the norm in social settings.

NEGOTIATIONS.
Successful negotiations are customer oriented in India and follow a long-term communication strategy. When negotiating in Japan, for instance, Indian executives and managers approach business negotiations according to the Japanese communication style; the Indian negotiator presents the proposal in such a way that the Japanese counterparts will be attracted to doing business. Dr. Ramchandra Rathi, managing director of Sudarshan Chemical Industries, Ltd., stated that to accomplish their business objectives, there must first be an understanding of the Japanese culture and then a plan to adjust the negotiating strategy accordingly (in a conversation with the author). In labor contracts, which are generally for three-year periods in India, one rarely refers to the contract prior to the negotiations, as trust between the parties is developed first.

ACADEMIC AND GOVERNMENT COLLABORATIONS.
Currently in India there are relatively few developed collaborations between academic institutions and business practitioners. Consultants are utilized in professional management areas such as legal matters, technology, and marketing. The Indian government offers grants to do so, thus it is profitable to use consultants under grant arrangements. When grants are not available, few Indian companies take advantage of consultants, since they are not viewed as being cost effective.

India is a very bureaucratic country and everything is monitored by government. Banking is nationalized in India as well. Better financing is available through the banking system in India than is normally found in the United States, as Indian banks provide credit of up to 75 percent on inventory loans against export orders.

QUALITY ASSURANCE.
Sudarshan L. Rathi, managing director of Sun Engichem Ltd., believes his charge at all times is to "look after the plant," reflecting a long-term orientation to quality. "The key ingredient for any production success rests with the person in charge—every detail of the plant must be known. This is done by moving around and having dialog with the people. The supervisor must communicate that the people are critical to the organization's success. Teamwork is very important. This must be communicated; then anything is possible" (paraphrase of selected remarks obtained in an interview with Rathi).

LONG-TERM ORIENTATIONS
CONFUCIAN VALUES.
In an article in the Journal of Business Communication, Moyan R. Limaye and David A. Victor discussed the limitations of Western linear paradigms for international business encounters that ignore the uniqueness of other worldviews. The Eastern worldview is worthwhile to examine due to the remarkable economic growth that many of these economies have experienced over the last couple of decades. And while India does not share a heritage of Chinese Confucian philosophy, many connections can be made between Hinduism, as practiced by the majority in India, and the cultures of East Asia.

Confucianism is a set of rules focusing on a longterm versus a short term lifestyle. Confucian teaching includes obligations of relationships, family collectivities, virtuous behavior toward others, and moderate living, i.e., preserving resources—as individuals and as economies. The shared heritage of East Asia provides strong evidence that culture may indeed be a contributing factor for economic growth. The link between Confucian values and economic growth was intuitively thought to be the case for some time: economic growth of Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore (the "Five Dragons") was due in large part to certain key traits that derive their social ideals from Confucian tradition. Proponents of such an argument attribute the economic success of East Asia to common cultural roots; roots providing conditions that contribute to the region's post-World War II competitive business accomplishments.

LONG-TERM ORIENTATION INDEX.
The correlation between long-term Confucian values and economic growth over the past few decades was examined empirically in what Geert Hofstede and Michael Bond call the long-term orientation (LTO) index. The LTO index is a survey designed to quantify certain Confucian values within selected countries. The original survey was titled the "Chinese Value Survey" (CVS). A number of ethnic Chinese social scientists from Hong Kong and Taiwan designed 40 questions listing ten basic Chinese cultural values.

An interesting finding, aside from business practice, is that the LTO index appears to correlate positively with certain economic growth data published by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World Bank) for the period 1965 to 1987. While Hofstede in his 1991 book showed a correlation coefficient between a country's LTO level and percent average gross domestic product (GDP) growth, his statistical method was based upon an assumed linear relationship between these two parameters during the period from 1965 to 1987. While a compelling case can be presented in support of LTO cultural values as being an integral component for economic growth, other factors are also determinants to economic growth; market, economic, and political factors clearly come to bear on GDP results.

Among the first nine countries on the LTO index, however, are China (1), Hong Kong (2), Taiwan (3), Japan (4), South Korea (5), and Singapore (9). All these economies are experiencing rapid economic growth. India is very high and is seventh on the LTO index. While India's economic growth was not as great over the last decade in comparison to some of the East Asian countries, this is now changing, as discussed earlier, due to relaxed financial constraints upon foreign direct investments. There is a widespread sense of excitement within Indian industrial circles, as it is anticipated their country will become a member of the community of rapidly growing nations. The cultural environment that fosters a long term outlook, in addition to the necessary factors of a rapidly expanding middle-class market, and a favorable political environment that encourages investment in India, points toward India as a key growth area over the next several years. Major global corporations are expanding rapidly into India, taking advantage of this window of opportunity.

While the LTO attributes are not all directly related to international business issues, of direct significance is the contrast of quick results versus perseverance towards slow results. The Chinese have a term relating to interpersonal perseverance:guanxi, defined as the linking of people with highly developed relationships through mutual dependencies. This value system includes the concepts of personal connections and mutual dependencies and is a strong trait in Chinese interrelational systems. In effect, guanxi is a value for long-term relationships that combine practical needs with a closeness going much deeper than surface relationships; characteristics necessary to doing business in India. There is no direct translation into English describing the word's meaning, yet the rich semantic intrigue surrounding the concept can be somewhat captured within the creative term "peopleizing": A communication process that develops mutual relationships. But the definition of the term involves much more. Peopleizing is a strategy that prioritizes long-term relationship building over that of the completion of short-term functional business tasks and is a useful strategy for doing business in India.

INDIAN LONG-TERM RELATIONSHIPS.
The success of leading Indian businesses is attributable, in large part, to this strategy of long-term relationship building: Madhu Rathi, a leading industrialist in India, shared the following high context thoughts in a conversation: "Our networking is built on trust. There is some initial risk, of course, but trust builds through very close relationships. What is needed is to find out what the needs are in a country and fulfill those needs. This means knowing the culture and studying the market. We look to the long-term not the short-term. If you look to the short term and fail, there is no long-term."

Providing additional flavor to the long-term cultural values prevalent in Indian business, are remarks by Sunil H. Rathi (a truly international person), director for Rathi Dye Chem Ltd. (from an interview conducted with Rathi):

We have seven industries [in the Rathi Group]. My uncle [Dr. R. J., Rathi] deals with sales at the international level for Sudarshan Chemical Industries. He travels to America, Russia, Europe, France, and elsewhere to develop these markets. He has many friends in all of these places. When people come to India, we show them all of India. These are our potential agents, and through them we get more and more business. And, if you have open-mindedness, lasting business connections can be formed.

CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
The organizational dimensions described above and supported by remarks from leading Indian executives are pertinent to doing business successfully in India; they illustrate Indian relationships that are significant for international business in India as well as to help foster greater human understanding in the global village. Future Western international business accomplishments in India will go to organizations motivated to developing long-term communication strategiesWhile there may be disagreement with this conviction, arguing that culture and communication are not determinants to business success, many in top U.S. management ranks are becoming more convinced that this is indeed the case. Western international business practice is undergoing radical change, reflecting the belief that a focus for the future ought to be, in part, on culture and communication. The connections between long-term strategies and business success, afford rich possibilities for discovering and providing knowledge to international business practitioners entering, or planning to enter, the burgeoning Indian marketplace.
 
Re: WORST CASE SOME ONE!!!

Research Papers
Introduction
This overview of research paper strategies will focus on the type of research paper that uses library resources. For the social sciences or sciences, learn more about strategies for an original research report.

The research paper is a popular academic assignment. Forms of it are used in various professional fields as well. The research paper gives you the opportunity to think seriously about some issue. Building on the research of others, you have the opportunity to contribute your own research and insights to a particular question of interest to you. It also gives you practice in important academic skills such as formulating research questions, conducting research, managing time, organizing information into coherent ideas, substantiating arguments with research in the field, and presenting insights about the research.

Disciplines vary in their ways of conducting research, in writing research papers, and in the form the final copy takes. Individual instructors may also vary in their expectations of a research paper. Some may expect you to write a report that describes your research; some may emphasize analysis of the information you have gathered; some may anticipate a report on original research. Therefore, it is important that you read the assignment carefully and ask clarifying questions. Here are three:


What field of study--humanities, social sciences, or sciences, for example--am I writing for? How will the expectations of that field affect the decisions I make?
What exactly is the teacher asking in this assignment?
Are there suggestions in the assignment or class notes that this paper should incorporate a particular theory discussed in class?
Narrowing Down A Topic
Even if you have written a research paper before, recognize that the procedures surrounding selecting a topic will vary by instructor and by discipline.

Read the assignment sheet to ascertain the specificity of the teacher's expectations. Is there an explicit list of topics, or are you expected to narrow to a topic on your own? Are you to work with a specific theory or course material as you write the paper?

If your instructor hands out a topic list and expects you to operate within those boundaries, keep in mind that those lists are often broad topics, not thesis statements. Other teachers prefer to be intentionally vague in order to give you the freedom to narrow to an area of interest. That means that you will have to search for a topic that you are willing to work with for a considerable amount of time.

Strategies for a topic search:


Note in a research notebook provocative questions that arise in class lecture or discussion, topics in your textbook that appear ripe for further exploration, or issues that come up in your conversations with classmates. Those jottings may prompt a topic that you can narrow for your paper.
Use prewriting strategies such as brainstorming, clustering, or free writing to generate topics.
A readily available source for a topic search is the on-line catalogue in the library. You can select subtopics of interest to get into even more specific topics. The benefit of using the on-line catalogue is that you can narrow to a topic quickly and see what books are available on the topic.
The Internet is also a useful resource, although you must take care to evaluate Internet sources.
Now that you have decided on a topic, narrow your focus. You can begin this process by asking yourself the following questions: Is this topic consistent with the assignment? Does it match what I intend to research? Will anyone want to read about this? What do I know about the topic? What do I want to know? What do I need to know? Skim the literature to help you narrow your topic to a manageable one which meets your instructor's assignment and your interests. As an example, if your initial topic for a 10 to 20 page paper is space exploration, by the time you finish your topic search, you might have narrowed your topic to unmanned U.S. space exploration of planets and even to a specific planet and mission, 1997s Pathfinder mission, let's say.

Asking Research Questions
At the college level, rather than writing an encyclopedia entry that merely reports facts about a topic, college-level writers will create more successful papers if they work from questions that pose a problem or question to be investigated. You need to do more than describe, in other words; you need to analyze, to bring your own insight to a problem or question you have formulated. Try to formulate what you want to know as a how, why, or so what question.

With the Pathfinder mission, the temptation might be to write a paper that reports on the nature of or event surrounding the mission. However, a richer paper will demonstrate not only that you know about the topic but how you have thought critically about some specific aspect of it. Here are some possible research questions narrowed to specific aspects of the topic:


How: How might the technology in the Sojourner rover be applied on Earth to help the disabled?
Why: Given the success of robots exploring Mars, why should a manned mission be considered?
So what? How will this initial success of Pathfinder influence future space programs?
Notice that these questions require a commitment on your part not only to show that you have researched the material but that you have thought about its significance as well. In other words, you will have to provide information and establish the significance of it in terms of the issue you have presented to discuss.

Formulating a Thesis Statement
Express the focus and the perspective about it that you intend to pursue in a carefully crafted thesis statement which introduces the topic and what you are going to argue, show, or prove about it. This statement becomes your commitment to your readers. When others read your writing, the thesis statement will inform them what you will discuss and also indicate the organizational structure your writing will take.

At this point in your writing process, the thesis statement will establish perimeters for your discussion. As you write, check back to the thesis statement often to confirm that you remain on topic and that you are adhering to the organizational structure that you have determined is most appropriate for your paper. The organization of your paper will depend on your topic, the argument you intend to make, and the expectations of your audience.

Creating a Working Outline
An outline is a systematic way of organizing your ideas for your paper. A jot list is an informal outline and may work for your purposes. Often, however, you'll want to use of a formal outline to manage your information as your research expands. Besides helping you organize and manage your information as you draft your paper, outlining is helpful when you prepare to revise. Review your paper's organization and development by outlining your draft.

Understanding Your Instructor as Audience
In the case of most research papers, your instructor will be your primary audience. That person can be an intimidating audience for many student writers. How, after all, can you write anything about this topic that your instructor does not already know? Your instructor may indeed know the factual information about the topic, that is true; nevertheless, he or she is anticipating reading the thoughtful insights that you bring to the issue as a result of your thorough research and reflection.

To help students develop an understanding of their expectations, many instructors incorporate check points into the research writing assignment. If yours does not, it may be helpful to set up an appointment with your professor in order to confirm that you are making appropriate progress.

Use your working thesis statement and outline as the basis for the conference. Here are some questions to ask at this point: Is this thesis statement and preliminary outline on track? I'm familiar with MLA citation system. Is that appropriate for this paper? If the answer is no, ask: What form do you recommend, and where can I get the style information? What types of sources (see Primary vs. Secondary Sources) are acceptable for this assignment and this topic? Use your instructor's guidance as you research your paper.

Researching the Paper
Having planned your paper, you are now ready to do comprehensive research. This section will address how to develop a working bibliography, collect information, and credit information.

Your research is more than gathering information, though. College-level research paper writing requires that writers inquire into an issue of significance; therefore, throughout the information-collecting process, ask yourself how what you are learning is reinforcing or countering, clarifying or confusing your working thesis statement. Take the time to reflect on what you are learning. How does the new information that you are gathering modify the thesis statement? Your outline? As you learn more about the topic, your views about it may change. If so, adjust your thesis statement and your outline accordingly.

Developing a Working Bibliography
After creating a working outline, use library and other resources to develop a working bibliography. This bibliography is a list of resources with which you will begin your research. In the process of reading, you will probably use some of the resources extensively; others will probably be repetitious; and still others may be useless for your purposes. For future reference, you may wish to develop an annotated bibliography.

An annotated bibliography consists of the bibliographic entry in the form you are using for this paper and a brief statement about the item listed in the bibliography. The statement may summarize the item, it may comment on the relevance of the item to the project, or it may do both. Typically, the annotation will be placed as a block of indented text under the bibliographic entry.

This is the time in the research process to determine what citation form is appropriate for your paper. If you use the form your instructor has recommended, you will record the information in the order established by the form and, thus, save yourself a return trip to the library. Write the bibliographic citation of your source on a note card, one citation per card, or begin a bibliography on your word processor. Your bibliography will be listed in alphabetical order by the last name of the author on your final paper.

Collecting Information
You will need to organize your notes by outline headings at a later point, so take notes by those headings now. If you are taking notes by hand, use 5" x 7" note cards or half sheets of paper. Because you will have to reorganize the pages of notes later, a spiral notebook or legal pad is less efficient than cards, which can easily be reordered. (If you are using a word processor, a file folder per outline heading with a document for each source will serve your purposes.) Include on a note card only information that fits the heading and the source on that card. You will want to put most of your notes in your own words. You can do that by writing a paraphrase or a summary. Write a direct quotation only when it is the best way to state the idea.

Throughout the research process, you will need to evaluate which information to include and which to eliminate. If you have not done so before, now is the time to learn to distinguish primary and secondary sources appropriate for your topic, especially Internet sources.

Crediting Information
Your instructor is expecting you to provide your insight into this topic; at the same time, you need to give credit to information that you have gained from other sources. Giving credit is an important aspect of academic integrity. Failure to give credit is plagiarism. You need to give credit not only because it is ethical to acknowledge what originated with someone else but also to ground your research in the existing scholarship. Situating your efforts in the carefully selected work of others adds credibility to your own.

In order to give credit, take notes systematically. Whatever method of notetaking you use, you will have to account for your source, the page number, and a key phrase in the upper corner of the note to direct you back to the outline.

Writing the Research Paper
When you have a substantial part of your research completed, you may want to begin drafting. Writing is recursive rather than linear. In other words, you may find that it is necessary to resume researching in the midst of drafting. You may also find that your introduction needs re-working once the body of the paper is drafted. This section will help you


draft the paper
revise the draft
edit the text
Develop a working plan for your paper by revising your working outline into a formal outline with special attention to organization and development. Working from the thesis statement, check the points on the working outline. How will each go back to the thesis? What do you know about each? Modify the key phrases on your note cards to adjust them to the new outline. Some cards may have to be set aside. Reorganize the others to match the order of the outline. If you have taken notes on a word processor, make similar adjustment to your documents and file folders.

Drafting
Drafting is a messy process during which you, the writer, get your ideas in print. In order to focus on the ideas, restrain yourself from cleaning up the paper. Rather, permit yourself to reflect on your topic and your sources as you draft. Begin writing the draft by writing into the outline. Make a copy of the outline and begin writing into it. If you use the outline as the backbone for your paper, you will have your organizational scheme in front of you at all times. If you wish to work out of order on the paper, you can easily do so without losing your place. You will also be able to see at a glance how well your writing has progressed.

You will want to signal the structure of the paper in the thesis statement. However, the drafting process may cause you to re-think your topic, the organization and, thus, the thesis statement. Remain flexible, allowing the organization and development of the body of the paper to emerge from your growing understanding of the topic.

The introduction will focus your reader's attention on your argument by making clear why the paper is written, what is being argued in the paper, and how the author situates the argument in the field's literature. If writing an introduction is difficult, start with the thesis statement and keep writing. Here are some popular strategies to begin the paper:


relate the topic with something that is well known
open with the thesis statement
provide background information to the reader
review the literature
take exception to critical views
challenge an assumption
provide a brief summary
supply data, statistics, and special evidence
define key terms (avoiding "Webster says")
The directness of the introduction varies from field to field. Review exemplary papers or published articles from that field for models, but, most importantly, let the purpose of your paper and your information drive the nature of the introduction.

The body develops the argument by presenting evidence to support the thesis statement. As you use your notes, keep track of the origin of your outside information by jotting down the source information that is on your note card.

The conclusion provides the reader with a summary of the argument as well its implications. Possible concluding strategies include


restating the thesis and going beyond it
closing with an effective quotation
comparing past to present
offering a directive or solution
discussing test results
Revising
This first draft will require revision. To determine what needs reworking, read the entire paper. What works? What doesn't? Now, get more specific. Working through paragraph by paragraph, ask yourself the purpose of each in terms of the thesis. When the second draft is complete, think about the readers, your instructor certainly, but also the educated public. You are, at a minimum, presenting your own original research on a topic, and quite possibly a unique way of looking at that research. Your writing should convey that. The following revision tips incorporate suggestions from Donald Zimmermann and Dawn Rodrigues's Research and Writing in the Disciplines. (Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publisher, 1992.)

Revise for content first. Do not do final revision at any other levels until content revision is complete. Have you explained why you conducted this research? Clarified how this research fits into other research? Given all necessary details? Reported results? Confirmed the logic of your reasoning and inference?

Revise for organization. Do you need to reorganize sections of the paper? Revise main points for clarity? Use headings and sub-headings for clarification? Delete material? Add material? Insert transitions to connect sections of the paper to the thesis?

Check the effectiveness of your organization by glossing the draft and then track your thoughts, outline your draft, or insert trial sub-heads. Improve your organization by inserting transitional phrases or paragraphs, or by adding clarifying and elaborating information.

Revise for coherence. Do you offer a road map of your paper in your thesis statement and through your headings (if you use them)? Incorporate transitional devices? Stay consistent within topics? Use pronouns and repetitions within paragraphs to indicate continuation of the topic? Comment in the document about the significance to your argument of the information (especially direct quotations) that you have introduced?

Improve coherence by incorporating ideas using a consistent organizing principle, inserting transitions between sections, using topic sentences, and inserting headings and sub-headings.

Editing
After you have satisfied yourself with the organization and development of the paper as well as the way it communicates with the audience, edit for punctuation. Pay special attention to quotation marks, commas and semi-colons, spelling, and grammar. Carelessness here undercuts your credibility and casts doubt on the quality of your work.

When you edit, become the reader of your document. You can do that by placing time between yourself and the document. When you return to it, you will bring the eyes of a reader rather than of a writer. If you have not done so before, now is a good time to consider incorporating headings. In lengthy papers, especially ones written in the sciences and social sciences, headings are considered helpful guides to the logic and content of each section. At each level of heading, the parts of speech (nouns, verbs, gerunds, for example) and the form of text (words, phrases, statements, questions) need to be consistent. Besides directing readers through the document, headings will help you review the organization of the document.

In addition to using your eyes differently in order to re-see your document, listen to it. Sometimes what may look fine on the page sounds awkward to the ear. This practice is especially important if what you have written will later be presented aloud. And don't depend on the word processor; the spell checker is not a proofreader.

Edit for clarity and consistency. Improve clarity and consistency by


incorporating strong, active verbs
replacing nominalizations (nouns made from verbs) with strong verbs
reducing "there are" and "it is" constructions
deleting excessive prepositional phrases
replacing hedge or vague words with precise words or phrases
reducing wordiness
maintaining appropriate tense
using parallel structure
maintaining inclusive language
Now that all the other editing is complete, edit for spelling, punctuation, precision in grammar (especially subject-verb and pronoun agreement), and accuracy in information. As you edit, check your citations again. Make certain that all directly quoted information or ideas that are not your own are cited in the citation form appropriate for the assignment. And make sure that you take drafts of your paper to the Writing Center for consultation with a tutor!

Adding an Appendix
Some research projects include information that helps the reader understand the argument but would be distracting if it were to appear in the text. This information may be included in the appendix. These materials should be titled and labeled (for example Appendix A: Questionnaire). The appendix needs to be referred to in the text so that the reader understands additional useful information is available elsewhere in the document.

Adding Explanatory Notes
Explanatory notes refer to additional sources or details on a topic, elaborate on statistics or other information beyond what is essential to the paper, refer the reader to a contrary position, explain variables in the evidence, describe testing procedures, and acknowledge individuals who helped in the research. Signal that you are adding an informational note by typing a superscript number in the text at an appropriate spot, usually at the end of a sentence. Where you place the notes in relation to the rest of the text will vary by the documentation system you are using. If you are using the parenthetical or author/date style, place notes on a page following the manuscript. If you are using end or footnotes, incorporate the notes into the reference notes.

Formatting the Document
Even the best research is undercut if the paper is poorly presented. Protect your research investment by taking the time to package the research properly. Your paper should be typed in standard manuscript form. That is, unless instructed otherwise, double-space it in 10- or 12-point type with one-inch margins. Place a title on the first page of the text and generate a coversheet with pertinent information (title, author's name, date submitted, course and instructor's name) attractively arranged.

Keep in mind that your paper may not include all of the elements and that the order of research paper elements may vary by disciplinary practices. Unless instructed otherwise by your professor, arrange your paper in this order:


title page
abstract (if requested)
outline (if requested)
paper
appendix (if any)
explanatory endnotes (if any)
endnotes (if required by the citation system you use)
works cited, reference, or bibliography
Bind the paper according to your instructor's directions. Now you are ready to submit a paper that provides an insightful look at the topic of your choice. Good
 
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