CASE METHODOLOGY - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

CASE METHODOLOGY

Description:

By- Prof. Bholanath Dutta Department of MBA CMR Institute of Technology THE CASE METHOD How the Case Method Works When students are presented with a case, they place ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:70
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: Har4179
Learn more at: http://www.mtcglobal.org
Category:
Tags: case | methodology

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CASE METHODOLOGY


1
CASE METHODOLOGY CASE DISCUSSION
By- Prof. Bholanath Dutta Department of MBA CMR
Institute of Technology
2
THE CASE METHOD
  • How the Case Method Works
  • When students are presented with a case, they
    place themselves in the role of the
    decision-maker as they read through the situation
    and identify the problem they are faced with. The
    next step is to perform the necessary analysis -
    examining the causes, considering alternative
    courses of action - to come to a set of
    recommendations.

3
THE CASE METHOD
  • To get the most out of cases, students must read
    and reflect on the case and then often meet in
    small study groups before class to "warm up" and
    discuss their findings with other classmates. In
    class - under the questioning and guidance of the
    professor - students probe underlying issues,
    compare different alternatives, and finally,
    suggest courses of action in the light of the
    company's objectives.

4
THE CASE METHOD
  • As a case study unfolds in class, students do
    85 of the talking, as the professor steers the
    conversation by making occasional observations
    and asking questions. This classroom interaction
    is enriched by the 80-90 individuals from diverse
    industries, functions, countries, and
    experiences.

5
THE CASE METHOD
  • During the course of their management education,
    students study and prepare hundreds of cases - a
    transforming experience that helps them to
    recognize the unique aspects of different
    situations, define problems, suggest further
    avenues of analysis, and devise and implement
    action plans. Once they finish the program,
    management graduates have the confidence they
    need to go off and tackle the many business
    challenges they will face in their careers.

6
CASE STUDY IN MANAGEMENT EDUCATION
  • In a manner similar to that used in law and
    medical education
  • May deal with an organization or a sub-unit
  • Multi-functional Diversification, merger,
    restructuring, corporate planning
  • Functional Human resources management,
    interpersonal skills, organizational behavior,
    accounting/ finance, marketing
  • Fosters critical thinking
  • Facilitates structured learning in groups

7
WHAT IS A CASE?
  • Narrative of an actual or realistic situation or
    problem (in written or filmed form), which needs
    a decision
  • A case for teaching usually presents information,
    but not analysis
  • It is an exercise in building analytical bridges
    between theory and actual or simulated real
    life situation
  • Cases are written to highlight specific aspects
    of a situation to serve as a manageable teaching
    aid

8
WHY CASES?
  • Simulates events in the corporate world
  • Provides practical orientation and value addition
    to theory
  • Not possible to have extended internships
  • Management is a very vast field with many
    divisions
  • More comprehensive coverage of subjects

9
MORE ON WHAT IS A CASE?
  • Information supplied in the case is frequently
    partial and, at times, even misleading or biased
  • Alternatively, the sheer volume of information
    given is overwhelming
  • To further complicate matters, the problems
    presented are both ambiguous and complex (and so
    are real life situations too)
  • Generally, a case has no single correct answer.
    There are only choices, and the reasons behind
    them some better and some worse than the others

10
LEARNING THROUGH CASES
  • Requires working together in a group to analyze
    and solve a problem
  • Unlike lectures, case discussion demands your
    ideas and active participation (from passive
    listener to active contributor)
  • One cannot learn driving by listening to a
    lecture about it. Likewise, analyzing and
    decision making have to be learnt through practice

11
LEARNING THROUGH CASES...
  • Requires more intensive effort, particularly on
    the part of the students, but offers
    corresponding rewards
  • Repeated exposure to cases improves skills in
    analyzing and dealing with ambiguous situations
    and incomplete information there may be no
    easy, definite or correct solutions
  • Encourages participative learning, learning from
    alternative opinions presented by others
    listening and articulating

12
SOME DOUBTS ABOUT CASES
  • Students may ask
  • What are we supposed to do?
  • What are we learning?
  • Why doesnt the teacher teach?

13
RESPONSES TO THE DOUBTS
  • Case method advocates student-centered learning
    rather than instructor-centered teaching
  • Student experience as a process of continuous
    discovery
  • Creates a context for learning
  • Orchestrates targeted, yet flexible discussion
  • Motivates and elicits student participation
  • Synthesizes student-generated ideas
  • Faculty plays the role of devils advocate

14
TYPES OF MANAGEMENT/BUSINESS CASES
  • Specific evaluation cases
  • Describes what a company has done.
  • Purpose to understand and evaluate the companys
    actions.
  • Specific decision cases
  • Company faces a specific problem.
  • Purpose to consider alternative actions and
    arrive at a decision.
  • General evaluation and appraisal cases
  • Case includes unstructured information.
  • Purpose evaluation, appraisal and recommendation.

15
CASE LEARNING PHILOSOPHIES
  • Provides a context in which students can use and
    test analytical tools and models.
  • Not just about description but understanding
    underlying patterns.
  • Interest should be in concepts, tools and models
    rather than chunks of reality.
  • Don't learn cases, learn with cases!

16
ARRIVING AT A SOLUTION
  • Depends on the nature of the case.
  • Quantitative problems require specific solutions.
  • Subjective/judgmental matters may not be solved
    by one unique outcome/decision.
  • When the class is struggling with the case it
    sometimes helps to hear the teachers view.
  • For some cases the teacher may know what the
    company actually did.
  • It is very important that the recommended course
    of action is consistent with the analysis.

17
PREPARING FOR A CASE
  • Get a quick sense of the whole case from the
    title, headings, outline, introduction
    conclusions
  • Does it require a decision, if so by whom, about
    what and with what objectives? Who are the other
    parties in the case and what are their
    objectives?
  • Now re-read the case carefully, underlining or
    highlighting the main facts
  • Identify key problems or issues on paper. Then
    sort out relevant information for each problem
    and the resources constraints associated with
    each
  • Identify and rank alternative policies/decisions,
    possible courses of action and their consequences

18
CASE ANALYSIS
  • Real life situations are multi-faceted avoid
    being confined to a few symptoms understand the
    problems and issues in their totality
  • The obvious solution could be based on
    assumptions not validated, and may be quite
    superficial
  • Evaluate backgrounds and behavior of significant
    people, deduce limitations imposed by the
    environment, question assumptions, consider
    alternatives, weigh pros and cons of each
    possible action before deciding on specific
    actions

19
PROBLEM SOLVING
  • Comprehend and capture the core information and
    issues
  • Reflective observation Stand back and assess the
    situation without premature value judgment or
    fixing blame
  • Draw upon relevant theories and concepts to place
    the data in a conceptual framework and put
    boundary limits on the problem
  • Develop and test alternative hypotheses to arrive
    at possible decisions and solutions

20
IMPORTANT FACTORS TO BE CONSIDERED
  • Nature of industry/product and technology
    involved
  • Size of the organization
  • Type of ownership/management - its culture/style
  • The informal and formal organization structure
  • Resources in terms of money, people, etc.
  • Strengths and weaknesses of the organization and
    individuals
  • Organizational and individual objectives
    conflicts, if any
  • Competition, business environment other
    external factors

21
CASE DISCUSSION
  • Be prepared to present your views with conviction
  • Be prepared to listen to others with an open mind
  • Complete the discussion on one point, before
    moving on to the next.
  • Try to link your comments to those of others
    minimize repetition
  • Ensure that the discussion moves forward towards
    a constructive solution. Stay focused
  • Give opportunity for all to contribute
  • Do not hesitate to admit confusion, seek
    clarification or simply be wrong
  • Avoid over dominating and mundane comments

22
CASE PRESENTATION
  • Identify important points, organize them
    logically, and state them succinctly while noting
    important assumptions
  • Provide supportive evidence and persuade others
    to accept your positions
  • Be willing to answer questions, respond to
    criticism
  • Consider new evidence and be prepared to modify
    an earlier position when warranted

23
WORKING AS ATEAM MEMBER
  • Ensure that the division of labour is equitable
  • Communicate with your other team members
  • Work as a team
  • Plan and structure team meetings

24
EFFECTIVE CASE ANALYSIS PROCESS Step 1
  • GAINING FAMILIARITY
  • Determine who, what, when, where, how why
  • Identify places, persons and activities of the
    organization
  • Recognize the degree of certainty/uncertainty of
    the available information

25
EFFECTIVE CASE ANALYSIS PROCESS Step 2
  • RECOGNIZING PROBLEMS/SYMPTOMS
  • List issues/problems
  • Ensure that symptoms are not assumed to be the
    problems

26
EFFECTIVE CASE ANALYSIS PROCESS Step 3
  • IDENTIFYING THE GOALS
  • Identify critical statements by major parties
  • List all goals that can be reasonably inferred

27
EFFECTIVE CASE ANALYSIS PROCESS Step 4
  • CONDUCTING ANALYSIS
  • (a) Decide which models/ideas/theories seem
    useful
  • (b) Apply these conceptual tools to the situation
  • As new information and insights are revealed,
    loop back to items (a) and (b) above

28
EFFECTIVE CASE ANALYSIS PROCESS Step 5
  • MAKING THE DIAGNOSIS
  • Identify goal inconsistencies
  • Identify problems discrepancies between goals
    and performance
  • Prioritize problems

29
EFFECTIVE CASE ANALYSIS PROCESS Step 6
  • ACTION PLAN
  • Specify and prioritize criteria used to choose
    action alternatives
  • Discover/invent alternatives
  • Examine the consequences of each alternative
  • Select a course of action
  • Design an implementation schedule/plan
  • Create a plan for assessment of the plan to be
    implemented

30
CAUTION( to be followed in both written and oral
case analyses, discussions and presentations and
also in real life situations)
  • Avoid overstatements, emotionally laden words or
    premature value judgments that may cloud ones
    perceptions
  • Avoid dealing with broad generalizations or
    policy issues rather than the specifics of the
    case
  • Avoid impractical statements that would require a
    sudden personality or behavioral change
  • Go beyond the obvious, look for cues or nuances
    that may suggest other approaches. Avoid quick
    fix solutions
  • Dont be superficial, examine alternatives, think
    carefully

31
CAUTION( to be followed in both written and
oral case analyses, discussions and presentations
and also in real life situations)
  • Avoid looking for who is to blame rather than
    trying to understand why people behaved as they
    have. Most people are well intended and try to do
    their best under the given circumstances
  • Avoid the temptation to fire someone,
    reorganize or form a task force. These things may
    prove useful after analysis, but are often used
    to avoid the needed analysis

32
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com