corporate field researchers share tricks of the trade

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Corporate Field Researchers Share Tricks of the Trade Comments 1 Email Print Download Share In a panel discussion, several professors shared practical findins and tricks!of!the!trade from recent field research" #mon the discoveries$ ho prompt emplo%ees to et a flu shot" &% Carmen 'o&el The term (academic research( can con)ure imaes of scientists conductin e*periments in a &asement la&orator%, or of tweed!clad professors porin throuh old theories to develop new ones" +ut let s not foret a&out fiel research, which happens &e%ond universit% campuses, out in the so!called real world" #mon economic scholars, field research often takes place within the wal of corporations, non!profits, small &usinesses, or overnment entities" Ideall%, these orani-ations eventuall% can appl% the findins of the res to improve operations within their own workforces" +ut a successful field stud% re.uires a lot of inenuit% and trust from &oth the academics and t field participants" (Doin Empirical Research in, with, and throuh Companies( was the topic of a livel% session last week at the annual /arvard +usiness School Facul Research S%mposium" /eld each 0a%, the event provides the opportunit% for a few facult% mem&ers to share recent work with an audience of doctor students, staff mem&ers, and other professors"

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Corporate Field Researchers Share Tricks of the Trade

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Corporate Field Researchers Share Tricks of the Trade Comments 1 Email Print Download ShareIn a panel discussion, several professors shared practical findings and tricks-of-the-trade from recent field research. Among the discoveries: how to prompt employees to get a flu shot.by Carmen NobelThe term "academic research" can conjure images of scientists conducting experiments in a basement laboratory, or of tweed-clad professors poring through old theories to develop new ones. But let's not forget about field research, which happens beyond university campuses, out in the so-called real world.Among economic scholars, field research often takes place within the walls of corporations, non-profits, small businesses, or government entities. Ideally, these organizations eventually can apply the findings of the research to improve operations within their own workforces. But a successful field study requires a lot of ingenuity and trust from both the academics and the field participants."Doing Empirical Research in, with, and through Companies" was the topic of a lively session last week at the annual Harvard Business School Faculty Research Symposium. Held each May, the event provides the opportunity for a few faculty members to share recent work with an audience of doctoral students, staff members, and other professors.In a panel discussion, several professors shared the practical findings of recent field researchalong with tricks-of-the-trade for field researchers.FORMING A RESEARCH PARTNERSHIPTeresa Amabilediscussed a comprehensive field study in which her research team collected confidential, personal work diaries from 238 white-collar employees at seven disparate companies. The key finding: When it comes to igniting creativity and satisfaction among employees, the single most important factor is a sense ofmaking progress on meaningful work. A related finding: If people are in a good mood on any given day, they'll be more creative. But they'll also be just as creative the next day, regardless of their next-day mood.At the symposium, Amabile explained her rationale for taking her research to the field. "I didn't believe and still don't believe that I could address these questions outside of a company context," she said. "Where else could I track creativity in the wild?"Leslie Perlow, who moderated the panel, shared her admiration for Amabile's project, starting with the data generation. "She managed to convince people to tell her how they were doing every day," said Perlow, the Konosuke Matsushita Professor of Leadership.Amabile explained the importance of approaching field study participants as collaborators. "If you're planning on doing intense research with individual employees, try to make them partners in the research," she said. (HBS professor Nava Ashraf discussed this idea of co-producing knowledge in theWorking Knowledgearticle,Climbing Down from the Ivory Tower.)DEVELOPING EXECUTIVE TRUSTEugene Soltesshared research showing how certain investors spend a lot of time in private meetings with corporate executivesand how thisgives the investors an unfair advantage, in spite of Federal regulations that are supposed to level the investment playing field. In short, private meetings with CEOs apparently led to smarter trades, according to the findings of a study by Soltes, an assistant professor at HBS, and David Solomon, a professor at the USC Marshall School of Business.To conduct the research, the duo obtained investor meeting records from a mid-cap company traded on the New York Stock Exchange, under the condition that they would not reveal the firm's identity in their paper. This required a tremendous amount of good faith on the part of the company, which was crucial for the study."It's really about developing a relationship," said Soltes, whose research also has included corresponding with Stephen Richards, the former global head of Computer Associates, while Richards was doing time in prison for securities fraud. (The correspondence led to the case studyA Letter From Prison.)LISTENING TO THE FIELDEthan Bernsteindiscussed the field research that led to an intriguing conclusion: In a curious phenomenon dubbed the Transparency Paradox, he found thatwatching your employees less closely at work might yield more transparency at your organization. "In a world obsessed with transparency, I'm becoming increasingly obsessed with how it is and isn't productive," said Bernstein, an assistant professor.In the summers of 2008 and 2009, while he was still a doctoral candidate at HBS, Bernstein hired a team of Chinese-born Harvard undergraduates to embed themselves among factory workers on the manufacturing floor of a huge global contractor in Southern China. Bernstein's research, which won awards from both the Academy of Management's Organization and Management Theory Division and Organizational Behavior Division, was largely guided by the information that the factory workers shared with the embedded students."You listen to the field when it speaks to you," Bernstein said.ENCOURAGING EMPLOYEES TO RECEIVE FLU SHOTSThe CDC estimates that from the 1976-1977 season to the 2006-2007 flu season, annual flu-associated deaths in the United States ranged from a low of about 3,000 to a high of about 49,000. In spite of those sobering statistics, a lot of people decline to get a flu shoteven when their company offers free shots to employees on-site.A few years ago, a team of researchers tackled that problem with field research. At the symposium, one of the researchers,John Beshears, described study, in which more than 3,000 employees of a Midwestern utility firm received e-mailed flu-shot reminder e-mails. The catch: Some of them received a standard reminder, with information about when and where the shots would be offered, while others received an additional promptsuggesting that the employees write down the date and time they planned to get a shot.Of those who received the simple prompt, 37.1 obtained a flu shot at the firm's on-site clinican increase of 4.2 percentage points over those who received a standard, no-prompt reminder.Beshears held the research as case in point that field research can be mutually beneficial to the field of academia and the field study participant."There's a [perception] that there's a tradeoff between serving the needs of the organizations and doing rigorous research," Beshears said. "But the organization you're working with doesn't know the answer, either. You really are helping organizations if you give them rigorous tests to run their business."Note to readers: If you think your company might benefit from participating in a corporate field study, please visitThe Research Exchange, where members of the Harvard Business School faculty have listed several studies in search of a site.