The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business

Under the “Metrics” link, Google.com/scholar ranks the top twenty journals by impact in 16 subcategories of “business, economics, and management” (e.g., accounting and taxation, economics, finance, marketing, strategic management, tourism and hospitality). This editorial describes bad practices appe...

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Main Author: Woodside, Arch
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51129
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author Woodside, Arch
author_facet Woodside, Arch
author_sort Woodside, Arch
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Under the “Metrics” link, Google.com/scholar ranks the top twenty journals by impact in 16 subcategories of “business, economics, and management” (e.g., accounting and taxation, economics, finance, marketing, strategic management, tourism and hospitality). This editorial describes bad practices appearing in the majority of published articles in the twenty leading journals within all of these 16 subcategories. Unfortunately, bad practices appear in most articles in the Journal of Business Research—even though the JBR is first in marketing and seventh in strategic management in the Google journal h5 impact rankings. Most of the articles in most of the journals in finance, management, marketing, and organizational studies include empirical positivistic methods and findings—and each of these empirical articles likely includes three-to-ten or more bad practices that this editorial describes. The editorial includes how to design-in good practices in theory, data collection procedures, analysis, and interpretations to avoid these bad practices. Given that bad practices in research are ingrained in the career training of scholars in sub-disciplines of business/management (e.g., through reading articles exhibiting bad practices usually without discussions of the severe weaknesses in these studies and by research courses stressing the use of regression analysis and structural equation modeling), this editorial is likely to have little impact. However, scholars and executives supporting good practices should not lose hope. The relevant literature includes a few brilliant contributions that can serve as beacons for eliminating the current pervasive bad practices and for performing highly competent research.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-511292017-09-13T15:37:43Z The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business Woodside, Arch Under the “Metrics” link, Google.com/scholar ranks the top twenty journals by impact in 16 subcategories of “business, economics, and management” (e.g., accounting and taxation, economics, finance, marketing, strategic management, tourism and hospitality). This editorial describes bad practices appearing in the majority of published articles in the twenty leading journals within all of these 16 subcategories. Unfortunately, bad practices appear in most articles in the Journal of Business Research—even though the JBR is first in marketing and seventh in strategic management in the Google journal h5 impact rankings. Most of the articles in most of the journals in finance, management, marketing, and organizational studies include empirical positivistic methods and findings—and each of these empirical articles likely includes three-to-ten or more bad practices that this editorial describes. The editorial includes how to design-in good practices in theory, data collection procedures, analysis, and interpretations to avoid these bad practices. Given that bad practices in research are ingrained in the career training of scholars in sub-disciplines of business/management (e.g., through reading articles exhibiting bad practices usually without discussions of the severe weaknesses in these studies and by research courses stressing the use of regression analysis and structural equation modeling), this editorial is likely to have little impact. However, scholars and executives supporting good practices should not lose hope. The relevant literature includes a few brilliant contributions that can serve as beacons for eliminating the current pervasive bad practices and for performing highly competent research. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51129 10.1016/j.jbusres.2015.09.008 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Woodside, Arch
The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business
title The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business
title_full The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business
title_fullStr The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business
title_full_unstemmed The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business
title_short The good practices manifesto: Overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business
title_sort good practices manifesto: overcoming bad practices pervasive in current research in business
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/51129