How to Write a Case Study: A Step-by-Step Guide (+ Examples)
by Todd Brehe
on Jan 3, 2024
If you want to learn how to write a case study that engages prospective clients, demonstrates that you can solve real business problems, and showcases the results you deliver, this guide will help.
Weâll give you a proven template to follow, show you how to conduct an engaging interview, and give you several examples and tips for best practices.
Letâs start with the basics.
What is a Case Study?
A business case study is simply a story about how you successfully delivered a solution to your client.
Case studies start with background information about the customer, describe problems they were facing, present the solutions you developed, and explain how those solutions positively impacted the customerâs business.
Do Marketing Case Studies Really Work?
Absolutely. A well-written case study puts prospective clients into the shoes of your paying clients, encouraging them to engage with you. Plus, they:
- Get shared “behind the lines” with decision makers you may not know;
- Leverage the power of “social proof” to encourage a prospective client to take a chance with your company;
- Build trust and foster likeability;
- Lessen the perceived risk of doing business with you and offer proof that your business can deliver results;
- Help prospects become aware of unrecognized problems;
- Show prospects experiencing similar problems that possible solutions are available (and you can provide said solutions);
- Make it easier for your target audience to find you when using Google and other search engines.
Case studies serve your clients too. For example, they can generate positive publicity and highlight the accomplishments of line staff to the management team. Your company might even throw in a new product/service discount, or a gift as an added bonus.
But donât just take my word for it. Letâs look at a few statistics and success stories:
5 Winning Case Study Examples to Model
Before we get into the nuts and bolts of how to write a case study, letâs go over a few examples of what an excellent one looks like.
The five case studies listed below are well-written, well-designed, and incorporate a time-tested structure.
1. Lane Terralever and Pinnacle at Promontory
This case study example  from Lane Terralever  incorporates images to support the content and effectively uses subheadings to make the piece scannable.
2. WalkMe Mobile and Hulyo
This case study  from WalkMe Mobile  leads with an engaging headline and the three most important results the client was able to generate.
In the first paragraph, the writer expands the list of accomplishments encouraging readers to learn more.
3. CurationSuite Listening Engine
This is an example of a well-designed printable case study . The client, specific problem, and solution are called out in the left column and summarized succinctly.
4. Brain Traffic and ASAE
This long format case study (6 pages) from Brain Traffic  summarizes the challenges, solutions, and results prominently in the left column. It uses testimonials and headshots of the case study participants very effectively.
5. Adobe and Home Depot
This case study  from Adobe and Home Depot  is a great example of combining video, attention-getting graphics, and long form writing. It also uses testimonials and headshots well.
Now that weâve gone over the basics and showed a few great case study examples you can use as inspiration, letâs roll up our sleeves and get to work.
A Case Study Structure That Pros Use
Letâs break down the structure of a compelling case study:
Choose Your Case Study Format
In this guide, we focus on written case studies. They’re affordable to create, and they have a proven track record. However, written case studies are just one of four case study formats to consider:
- Infographic
If you have the resources, video (like the Adobe and Home Depot example above) and podcast case studies can be very compelling. Hearing a client discuss in his or her own words how your company helped is an effective content marketing strategy
Infographic case studies are usually one-page images that summarize the challenge, proposed solution, and results. They tend to work well on social media.
Follow a Tried-and-True Case Study Template
The success story structure weâre using incorporates a “narrative” or “story arc” designed to suck readers in and captivate their interest.
Note:  I recommend creating a blog post or landing page on your website that includes the text from your case study, along with a downloadable PDF. Doing so helps people find your content when they perform Google and other web searches.
There are a few simple SEOÂ strategies that you can apply to your blog post that will optimize your chances of being found. Iâll include those tips below.
Craft a Compelling Headline
The headline should capture your audience’s attention quickly. Include the most important result you achieved, the clientâs name, and your companyâs name. Create several examples, mull them over a bit, then pick the best one. And, yes, this means writing the headline is done at the very end.
SEO  Tip:  Let’s say your firm provided “video editing services” and you want to target this primary keyword. Include it, your company name, and your client’s name in the case study title.
Write the Executive Summary
This is a mini-narrative using an abbreviated version of the Challenge + Solution + Results model (3-4 short paragraphs). Write this after you complete the case study.
SEO  Tip:  Include your primary keyword in the first paragraph of the Executive Summary.
Provide the Clientâs Background
Introduce your client to the reader and create context for the story.
List the Customerâs Challenges and Problems
Vividly describe the situation and problems the customer was dealing with, before working with you.
SEO  Tip:  To rank on page one of Google for our target keyword, review the questions listed in the “People also ask” section at the top of Googleâs search results. If you can include some of these questions and their answers into your case study, do so. Just make sure they fit with the flow of your narrative.
Detail Your Solutions
Explain the product or service your company provided, and spell out how it alleviated the client’s problems. Recap how the solution was delivered and implemented. Describe any training needed and the customer’s work effort.
Show Your Results
Detail what you accomplished for the customer and the impact your product/service made. Objective, measurable results that resonate with your target audience are best.
List Future Plans
Share how your client might work with your company in the future.
Give a Call-to-Action
Clearly detail what you want the reader to do at the end of your case study.
Talk About You
Include a “press release-like” description of your client’s organization, with a link to their website. For your printable document, add an âAboutâ section with your contact information.
And thatâs it. Thatâs the basic structure of any good case study.
Now, letâs go over how to get the information youâll use in your case study.
How to Conduct an Engaging Case Study Interview
One of the best parts of creating a case study is talking with your client about the experience. This is a fun and productive way to learn what your company did well, and what it can improve on, directly from your customer’s perspective.
Here are some suggestions for conducting great case study interviews:
When Choosing a Case Study Subject, Pick a Raving Fan
Your sales and marketing team should know which clients are vocal advocates willing to talk about their experiences. Your customer service and technical support teams should be able to contribute suggestions.
Clients who are experts with your product/service make solid case study candidates. If you sponsor an online community, look for product champions who post consistently and help others.
When selecting a candidate, think about customer stories that would appeal to your target audience. For example, let’s say your sales team is consistently bumping into prospects who are excited about your solution, but are slow to pull the trigger and do business with you.
In this instance, finding a client who felt the same way, but overcame their reluctance and contracted with you anyway, would be a compelling story to capture and share.
Prepping for the Interview
If you’ve ever seen an Oprah interview, you’ve seen a master who can get almost anyone to open up and talk. Part of the reason is that she and her team are disciplined about planning.
Before conducting a case study interview, talk to your own team about the following:
- Whatâs unique about the client (location, size, industry, etc.) that will resonate with our prospects?
- Why did the customer select us?
- How did we help the client?
- Whatâs unique about this customerâs experience?
- What problems did we solve?
- Were any measurable, objective results generated?
- What do we want readers to do after reading this case study analysis?
Pro Tip: Â Tee up your client. Send them the questions in advance.
Providing questions to clients before the interview helps them prepare, gather input from other colleagues if needed, and feel more comfortable because they know what to expect.
In a moment, Iâll give you an exhaustive list of interview questions. But don’t send them all. Instead, pare the list down to one or two questions in each section and personalize them for your customer.
Nailing the Client Interview
Decide how you’ll conduct the interview. Will you call the client, use Skype or Facetime, or meet in person? Whatever mode you choose, plan the process in advance.
Make sure you record the conversation. It’s tough to lead an interview, listen to your contact’s responses, keep the conversation flowing, write notes, and capture all that the person is saying.
A recording will make it easier to write the client’s story later. It’s also useful for other departments in your company (management, sales, development, etc.) to hear real customer feedback.
Use open-ended questions that spur your contact to talk and share. Here are some real-life examples:
Introduction
- Recap the purpose of the call. Confirm how much time your contact has to talk (30-45 minutes is preferable).
- Confirm the companyâs location, number of employees, years in business, industry, etc.
- Whatâs the contactâs background, title, time with the company, primary responsibilities, and so on?
Initial Challenges
- Describe the situation at your company before engaging with us?
- What were the initial problems you wanted to solve?
- What was the impact of those problems?
- When did you realize you had to take some action?
- What solutions did you try?
- What solutions did you implement?
- What process did you go through to make a purchase?
- How did the implementation go?
- How would you describe the work effort required of your team?
- If training was involved, how did that go?
Results, Improvements, Progress
- When did you start seeing improvements?
- What were the most valuable results?
- What did your team like best about working with us?
- Would you recommend our solution/company? Why?
Future Plans
- How do you see our companies working together in the future?
Honest Feedback
- Our company is very focused on continual improvement. What could we have done differently to make this an even better experience?
- What would you like us to add or change in our product/service?
During the interview, use your contact’s responses to guide the conversation.
Once the interview is complete, itâs time to write your case study.
How to Write a Case Study⌠Effortlessly
Case study writing is not nearly as difficult as many people make it out to be. And you don’t have to be Stephen King to do professional work. Here are a few tips:
- Use the case study structure that we outlined earlier, but write these sections first: company background, challenges, solutions, and results.
- Write the headline, executive summary, future plans, and call-to-action (CTA) last.
- In each section, include as much content from your interview as you can. Don’t worry about editing at this point
- Tell the story by discussing their trials and tribulations.
- Stay focused on the client and the results they achieved.
- Make their organization and employees shine.
- When including information about your company, frame your efforts in a supporting role.
Also, make sure to do the following:
Add Testimonials, Quotes, and Visuals
The more you can use your contact’s words to describe the engagement, the better. Weave direct quotes throughout your narrative.
Strive to be conversational when youâre writing case studies, as if you’re talking to a peer.
Include images in your case study that visually represent the content and break up the text. Photos of the company, your contact, and other employees are ideal.
If you need to incorporate stock photos, here are three resources:
- Deposit p hotos
And if you need more, check out Smart Blogger’s excellent resource: 17 Sites with High-Quality, Royalty-Free Stock Photos .
Proofread and Tighten Your Writing
Make sure there are no grammar, spelling, or punctuation errors. If you need help, consider using a grammar checker tool like Grammarly .
My high school English teacher’s mantra was “tighten your writing.” She taught that impactful writing is concise and free of weak, unnecessary words . This takes effort and discipline, but will make your writing stronger.
Also, keep in mind that we live in an attention-diverted society. Before your audience will dive in and read each paragraph, they’ll first scan your work. Use subheadings to summarize information, convey meaning quickly, and pull the reader in.
Be Sure to Use Best Practices
Consider applying the following best practices to your case study:
- Stay laser-focused on your client and the results they were able to achieve.
- Even if your audience is technical, minimize the use of industry jargon . If you use acronyms, explain them.
- Leave out the selling and advertising.
- Donât write like a Shakespearean wannabe. Write how people speak. Write to be understood.
- Clear and concise writing is not only more understandable, it inspires trust. Don’t ramble.
- Weave your paragraphs together so that each sentence is dependent on the one before and after it.
- Include a specific case study call-to-action (CTA).
- A recommended case study length is 2-4 pages.
- Commit to building a library of case studies.
Get Client Approval
After you have a final draft, send it to the client for review and approval. Incorporate any edits they suggest.
Use or modify the following âConsent to Publishâ form to get the client’s written sign-off:
Consent to Publish
Case Study  Title:
I hereby confirm that I have reviewed the case study listed above and on behalf of the [Company Name], I provide full permission for the work to be published, in whole or in part, for the life of the work, in all languages and all formats by [Company publishing the case study].
By signing this form, I affirm that I am authorized to grant full permission.
Company Name:
E-mail Address:
Common Case Study Questions (& Answers)
We’ll wrap things up with a quick Q&A. If you have a question I didn’t answer, be sure to leave it in a blog comment below.
Should I worry about print versions of my case studies?
Absolutely.
As we saw in the CurationSuite  and Brain Traffic  examples earlier, case studies get downloaded, printed, and shared. Prospects can and will judge your book by its cover.
So, make sure your printed case study is eye-catching and professionally designed. Hire a designer  if necessary.
Why are good case studies so effective?
Case studies work because people trust them.
They’re not ads, they’re not press releases, and they’re not about how stellar your company is.
Plus, everyone likes spellbinding stories with a hero [your client], a conflict [challenges], and a riveting resolution [best solution and results].
How do I promote my case study?
After you’ve written your case study and received the client’s approval to use it, youâll want to get it in front of as many eyes as possible.
Try the following:
- Make sure your case studies can be easily found on your company’s homepage.
- Tweet and share the case study on your various social media accounts.
- Have your sales team use the case study as a reason to call on potential customers. For example: “Hi [prospect], we just published a case study on Company A. They were facing some of the same challenges I believe your firm is dealing with. I’m going to e-mail you a copy. Let me know what you think.”
- Distribute printed copies at trade shows, seminars, or during sales presentations.
- If you’re bidding on a job and have to submit a quote or a Request for Proposal (RFP), include relevant case studies as supporting documents.
Ready to Write a Case Study That Converts?
If you want to stand out and you want to win business, case studies should be an integral part of your sales and marketing efforts.
Hopefully, this guide answered some of your questions and laid out a path that will make it faster and easier for your team to create professional, sales-generating content.
Now it’s time to take action and get started. Gather your staff, select a client, and ask a contact to participate. Plan your interview and lead an engaging conversation. Write up your client’s story, make them shine, and then share it.
Get better at the case study process by doing it more frequently. Challenge yourself to write at least one case study every two months.
As you do, you’ll be building a valuable repository of meaningful, powerful content. These success stories will serve your business in countless ways, and for years to come.
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How to Write a Case Study: Bookmarkable Guide & Template
Updated: July 18, 2024
Published: June 13, 2012
Earning the trust of prospective customers can be a major challenge. Before you can expect to earn their business, youâll need to demonstrate your ability to deliver on the promises of your product or service. The best way to win new business is with cold, hard proof.
A great way to prove your worth is through a compelling case study. HubSpotâs 2024 State of Marketing report found that case studies are so captivating that they were the fifth most commonly used type of content that marketers relied on.
That statistic still holds true in Forbes Advisorâs 2024 study, which adds that 78% of B2B businesses report using case studies and customer stories because they are â crucial for demonstrating real-world value. â
Having written these ever more frequently over the past ten years, I hope to serve as your guide through a process that can feel daunting, but I promise is worth the effort. Below, I'll walk you through what a case study is, how to prepare for writing one, what to include in it, and how it can be an effective tactic.
Table of Contents
Case Study Definition
- Why Write a Case Study?
- How Long Should a Case Study Be?
Case Study Templates
How to write a case study, case study format, business case study examples.
Free Case Study Templates
Showcase your company's success using these three free case study templates.
- Data-Driven Case Study Template
- Product-Specific Case Study Template
- General Case Study Template
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A case study is coverage of a specific challenge a business has faced, and the solution they've chosen to solve it. Case studies can vary greatly in length and focus on several details related to the initial challenge and applied solution, and can be presented in various forms like a video, white paper, blog post, etc.
In professional settings, itâs common for a case study to tell the story of a successful business partnership between a vendor and a client.
Perhaps the success youâre highlighting is in the number of leads your client generated, customers closed, or revenue gained. Any one of these key performance indicators (KPIs) are examples of your company's services in action.
When done correctly, these examples of your work can chronicle the positive impact your business has on existing or previous customers, helping you attract new clients.
Why write a case study?
I know, it sounds like a huge endeavor â is it really worth it?
The truth is that while case studies are a huge undertaking, they are powerful marketing tools that allow you to demonstrate the value of your product to potential customers using real-world examples.
Here are a few reasons why you should write case studies.
1. Explain complex topics or concepts.
Case studies give you the space to break down complex concepts, ideas, and strategies, showing how they can be applied in a practical way.
You can use real-world examples, like an existing client, and use their story to create a compelling narrative that demonstrates how your product solved their issue. Most importantly, it explains how those strategies can be repeated to help other customers get similar, successful results.
2. Show expertise.
Case studies are a great way to demonstrate your knowledge and expertise on a given topic or industry. This is where you get the opportunity to show off your problem-solving skills and how youâve generated successful outcomes for clients youâve worked with.
3. Build trust and credibility.
In addition to showing off the attributes above, case studies are an excellent way to build credibility. Theyâre often filled with data and thoroughly researched, which shows readers youâve done your homework.
A robust case study instills confidence in the solutions you present because the reader has now vicariously experienced the problem â and they followed, step-by-step, what it took to solve it. These elements work together, enabling you to build trust with potential customers.
4. Create social proof.
Using existing clients that have seen success working with your brand builds social proof .
People are more likely to choose your brand if they know that others have found success working with you. Case studies do just that â put your success on display for potential customers to see.
All of these attributes play together like an orchestra to help you gain more clients. Afterward, the case study acts as a reference. You can pull quotes from customers that were featured in these studies to repurpose them in other marketing content.
How long should a case study be?
Now that youâre more acquainted with the benefits of producing a case study, letâs explore how long these documents should be.
The length of a case study will vary depending on the complexity of the project or topic discussed. However, as a general guideline, case studies typically range from 500 to 1,500 words.
Whatever length you choose, it should provide a clear understanding of the challenge, the solution you implemented, and the results achieved.
This may be easier said than done, but itâs important to strike a balance between providing enough detail to make the case study informative and concise enough to keep the readerâs interest.
The primary goal here is to effectively communicate the key points and takeaways of the case study. Itâs worth noting that this shouldnât be a wall of text. Make it attractive to dive into by using headings, subheadings, bullet points, charts, and other graphics to break up the content and make it more scannable for readers.
Iâve also seen more and more brands incorporate video elements into case studies listed on their site for a more engaging experience, which is highly recommended given that video is currently the best performing marketing content format.
In terms of the interview structure, I recommend categorizing the questions in a way that the answers flow into six specific sections that will mirror a successful case study format. Combined, they'll allow you to gather enough information to put together a rich, comprehensive study.
Open with the customer's business.
The goal of this section is to generate a better understanding of the company's current challenges and goals, plus how they fit into the landscape of their industry. Sample questions might include:
- How long have you been in business?
- How many employees do you have?
- What are some of the objectives of your department at this time?
Cite a problem or pain point.
To tell a compelling story, you need context that helps match the customer's needs with your solution. Sample questions might include:
- What challenges and objectives led you to look for a solution?
- What might have happened if you did not identify a solution?
- Did you explore other solutions before this that did not work out? If so, what happened?
Discuss the decision process.
Exploring how the customer decided to work with you helps to guide potential customers through their own decision-making processes.
Sample questions might include:
- How did you hear about our product or service?
- Who was involved in the selection process?
- What was most important to you when evaluating your options?
Explain how a solution was implemented.
The focus here should be placed on the customer's experience during the onboarding process. Sample questions might include:
- How long did it take to get up and running?
- Did that meet your expectations?
- Who was involved in the process?
Explain how the solution works.
The goal of this section is to better understand how the customer is using your product or service. Sample questions might include:
- Is there a particular aspect of the product or service that you rely on most?
- Who is using the product or service?
End with the results.
In this section, you want to uncover impressive measurable outcomes â the more numbers, the better. Sample questions might include:
- How is the product or service helping you save time and increase productivity?
- In what ways does that enhance your competitive advantage?
- How much have you increased metrics X, Y, and Z?
Itâs a smart idea to send a copy of your interview questions to your subject ahead of time so they can prepare strong answers and collect the numerical data you need from them.
10. Lay out your case study format.
When it comes time to take all of the information youâve collected and actually turn it into something useful, itâs easy to feel overwhelmed. I always do, but I also know that it works out in the end, so I just jump on in and work it through.
So where should you start? What should you include? What's the best way to structure it?
Itâs important to first understand that there is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to the ways you can present a case study.
They can be very visual, which youâll see in some of the examples we've included below, and can sometimes be communicated through video or photos with a bit of accompanying text.
Here are the sections Iâd suggest, and I'll cover these in more detail after #11 below:
- Title. Keep it short. Develop a succinct but interesting project name you can give the work you did with your subject.
- Subtitle. Use this copy to briefly elaborate on the accomplishment. What was done? The case study itself will explain how you got there.
- Executive Summary . A 2-4 sentence summary of the entire story. You'll want to follow it with 2-3 bullet points that display metrics showcasing success.
- About the Subject. An introduction to the person or company you served, which can be pulled from a LinkedIn Business profile or client website.
- Challenges and Objectives. A 2-3 paragraph description of the customer's challenges, before using your product or service. This section should also include the goals or objectives the customer set out to achieve.
- How Product/Service Helped. A 2-3 paragraph section that describes how your product or service provided a solution to their problem.
- Results. A 2-3 paragraph testimonial that proves how your product or service specifically benefited the person or company and helped achieve its goals. Include numbers to quantify your contributions.
- Supporting Visuals or Quotes. Pick one or two powerful quotes that you would feature at the bottom of the sections above, as well as a visual that supports the story you are telling.
- Future Plans. Everyone likes an epilogue. Comment on what's ahead for your case study subject, whether or not those plans involve you.
- Call-to-Action (CTA). Not every case study needs a CTA, but putting a passive one at the end of your case study can encourage your readers to take an action on your website after learning about the work you've done.
When laying out your case study, focus on conveying the information you've gathered in the most clear and concise way possible.
Make it easy to scan and comprehend, and be sure to provide an attractive call-to-action at the bottom â that should provide readers an opportunity to learn more about your product or service.
11. Publish and promote your case study.
Once youâve completed your case study, itâs time to publish and promote it.
Some case study formats have pretty obvious promotional outlets â a video case study can go on YouTube, just as an infographic case study can go on Pinterest.
But there are still other ways to publish and promote your case study. Here are a couple of ideas.
Lead Gen in a Blog Post
As stated earlier, written case studies make terrific lead-generators if you convert them into a downloadable format, like a PDF.
To generate leads from your case study, consider writing a blog post that tells an abbreviated story of your clientâs success and asking readers to fill out a form with their name and email address if theyâd like to read the rest in your PDF.
Then, promote this blog post on social media, through a Facebook post or a tweet.
Published as a Page on Your Website
As a growing business, you might need to display your case study out in the open to gain the trust of your target audience.
Rather than gating it behind a landing page, publish your case study to its own page on your website, and direct people to it from your homepage with a âCase Studiesâ or âTestimonialsâ button along your homepage's top navigation bar.
The traditional case study format includes the following parts: a title and subtitle, a client profile, a summary of the customerâs challenges and objectives, an account of how your solution helped, and a description of the results. You might also want to include supporting visuals and quotes, future plans, and calls-to-action.
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What Is a Case Study? How to Write, Examples, and Template
In this post
How to write a case study
Case study template, case study examples, types of case studies, what are the benefits of case studies , what are the limitations of case studies , case study vs. testimonial.
In today's marketplace, conveying your product's value through a compelling narrative is crucial to genuinely connecting with your customers.
Your business can use marketing analytics tools to understand what customers want to know about your product. Once you have this information, the next step is to showcase your product and its benefits to your target audience. This strategy involves a mix of data, analysis, and storytelling. Combining these elements allows you to create a narrative that engages your audience. So, how can you do this effectively?
What is a case study?Â
A case study is a powerful tool for showcasing a business's success in helping clients achieve their goals. It's a form of storytelling that details real-world scenarios where a business implemented its solutions to deliver positive results for a client.
In this article, we explore the concept of a case study , including its writing process, benefits, various types, challenges, and more.
Understanding how to write a case study is an invaluable skill. You'll need to embrace decision-making â from deciding which customers to feature to designing the best format to make them as engaging as possible. This can feel overwhelming in a hurry, so let's break it down.
Step 1: Reach out to the target persona
If you've been in business for a while, you have no shortage of happy customers. But w ith limited time and resources, you can't choose everyone. So, take some time beforehand to flesh out your target buyer personas.Â
Once you know precisely who you're targeting, go through your stable of happy customers to find a buyer representative of the audience you're trying to reach. The closer their problems, goals, and industries align, the more your case study will resonate.
What if you have more than one buyer persona? No problem. This is a common situation for companies because buyers comprise an entire committee. You might be marketing to procurement experts, executives, engineers, etc. Try to develop a case study tailored to each key persona. This might be a long-term goal, and that's fine. The better you can personalize the experience for each stakeholder, the easier it is to keep their attention. Â
Here are a few considerations to think about before research:
- Products/services of yours the customer uses (and how familiar they are with them)
- The customer's brand recognition in the industry
- Whether the results they've achieved are specific and remarkable
- Whether they've switched from a competitor's product/service
- How closely aligned they are with your target audience
These items are just a jumping-off point as you develop your criteria. Once you have a list, run each customer through it to determine your top targets. Approach the ones on the top (your "dream" case study subjects) and work your way down as needed.
Who to interview
You should consider interviewing top-level managers or executives because those are high-profile positions. But consider how close they are to your product and its results.
Focusing on an office manager or engineer who uses your product daily would be better. Look for someone with a courtside view of the effects.
The ways to request customer participation in case studies can vary, but certain principles can improve your chances:
- Make it easy for customers to work with you, respecting their valuable time. Be well-prepared and minimize their involvement.
- Emphasize how customers will benefit through increased publicity, revenue opportunities, or recognition for their success.Â
- Acknowledge their contributions and showcase their achievements.
- Standardizing the request process with a script incorporating these principles can help your team consistently secure case study approvals and track performance.
Step 2: Prepare for the interview
Case study interviews are like school exams. The more prepared you are for them, the better they turn out. Preparing thoroughly also shows participants that you value their time. You don't waste precious minutes rehashing things you should have already known. You focus on getting the information you need as efficiently as possible.
You can conduct your case study interview in multiple formats, from exchanging emails to in-person interviews. This isn't a trivial decision. As you'll see in the chart below, each format has its unique advantages and disadvantages.Â
Seeing each other's facial expressions puts everyone at ease and encourages case study participants to open up. It's a good format if you're simultaneously conferencing with several people from the customer's team. | Always be on guard for connection issues; not every customer knows the technology. Audio quality will probably be less good than on the phone. When multiple people are talking, pieces of conversation can be lost. | |
It is a more personal than email because you can hear someone's tone. You can encourage them to continue if they get really excited about certain answers. Convenient and immediate. Dial a number and start interviewing without ever leaving the office. | It isn't as personal as a video chat or an in-person interview because you can't see the customer's face, and nonverbal cues might be missed. Don't get direct quotes like you would with email responses. The only way to preserve the interview is to remember to have it recorded. | |
The most personal interview style. It feels like an informal conversation, making it easier to tell stories and switch seamlessly between topics. Humanizes the customer's experience and allows you to put a face to the incredible results. | Puts a lot of pressure on customers who are shy or introverted â especially if they're being recorded. Requires the most commitment for the participant â travel, dressing up, dealing with audiovisual equipment, etc. | |
Gives customers the most flexibility with respect to scheduling. They can answer a few questions, see to their obligations, and return to them at their convenience. No coordination of schedules is needed. Each party can fulfill their obligations whenever they're able to. | There is less opportunity for customers to go âoff scriptâ and tell compelling anecdotes that your questions might have overlooked. Some of the study participant's personalities might be lost in their typed responses. It's harder to sense their enthusiasm or frustration. |
You'll also have to consider who will ask and answer the questions during your case study interview. It's wise to consider this while considering the case study format. The number of participants factors into which format will work best. Pulling off an in-person interview becomes much harder if you're trying to juggle four or five people's busy schedules. Try a video conference instead.
Before interviewing your case study participant, it is crucial to identify the specific questions that need to be asked. It's essential to thoroughly evaluate your collaboration with the client and understand how your product's contributions impact the company.Â
Remember that structuring your case study is akin to crafting a compelling narrative. To achieve this, follow a structured approach:
- Beginning of your story. Delve into the customer's challenge that ultimately led them to do business with you. What were their problems like? What drove them to make a decision finally? Why did they choose you?
- The middle of the case study. Â Your audience also wants to know about the experience of working with you. Your customer has taken action to address their problems. What happened once you got on board?
- An ending that makes you the hero. Describe the specific results your company produced for the customer. How has the customer's business (and life) changed once they implemented your solution?
Sample questions for the case study interview
If you're preparing for a case study interview, here are some sample case study research questions to help you get started:
- What challenges led you to seek a solution?
- When did you realize the need for immediate action? Was there a tipping point?
- How did you decide on the criteria for choosing a B2B solution, and who was involved?
- What set our product or service apart from others you considered?
- How was your experience working with us post-purchase?
- Were there any pleasant surprises or exceeded expectations during our collaboration?
- How smoothly did your team integrate our solution into their workflows?
- How long before you started seeing positive results?
- How have you benefited from our products or services?
- How do you measure the value our product or service provides?
Step 3: Conduct the interview
Preparing for case study interviews can be different from everyday conversations. Here are some tips to keep in mind:
- Create a comfortable atmosphere. Before diving into the discussion, talk about their business and personal interests. Ensure everyone is at ease, and address any questions or concerns.
- Prioritize key questions. Â Lead with your most crucial questions to respect your customer's time. Interview lengths can vary, so starting with the essentials ensures you get the vital information.
- Be flexible. Case study interviews don't have to be rigid. If your interviewee goes "off script," embrace it. Their spontaneous responses often provide valuable insights.
- Record the interview. If not conducted via email, ask for permission to record the interview. This lets you focus on the conversation and capture valuable quotes without distractions.
Step 4: Figure out who will create the case study
When creating written case studies for your business, deciding who should handle the writing depends on cost, perspective, and revisions.
Outsourcing might be pricier, but it ensures a professionally crafted outcome. On the other hand, in-house writing has its considerations, including understanding your customers and products.Â
Technical expertise and equipment are needed for video case studies, which often leads companies to consider outsourcing due to production and editing costs.Â
Tip: When outsourcing work, it's essential to clearly understand pricing details to avoid surprises and unexpected charges during payment.
Step 5: Utilize storytelling
Understanding and applying storytelling elements can make your case studies unforgettable, offering a competitive edge.Â
Source: The Framework Bank
Every great study follows a narrative arc (also called a "story arc"). This arc represents how a character faces challenges, struggles against raising stakes, and encounters a formidable obstacle before the tension resolves.
In a case study narrative, consider:
- Exposition. Provide background information about the company, revealing their "old life" before becoming your customer.
- Inciting incident. Highlight the problem that drove the customer to seek a solution, creating a sense of urgency.
- Obstacles (rising action). Describe the customer's journey in researching and evaluating solutions, building tension as they explore options.
- Midpoint. Explain what made the business choose your product or service and what set you apart.
- Climax. Showcase the success achieved with your product.
- Denouement. Describe the customer's transformed business and end with a call-to-action for the reader to take the next step.
Step 6: Design the case study
The adage "Don't judge a book by its cover" is familiar, but people tend to do just that quite often!
A poor layout can deter readers even if you have an outstanding case study. To create an engaging case study, follow these steps:
- Craft a compelling title. Just like you wouldn't read a newspaper article without an eye-catching headline, the same goes for case studies. Start with a title that grabs attention.
- Organize your content. Break down your content into different sections, such as challenges, results, etc. Each section can also include subsections. This case study approach divides the content into manageable portions, preventing readers from feeling overwhelmed by lengthy blocks of text.
- Conciseness is key. Keep your case study as concise as possible. The most compelling case studies are precisely long enough to introduce the customer's challenge, experience with your solution, and outstanding results. Prioritize clarity and omit any sections that may detract from the main storyline.
- Utilize visual elements. To break up text and maintain reader interest, incorporate visual elements like callout boxes, bulleted lists, and sidebars.
- Include charts and images. Summarize results and simplify complex topics by including pictures and charts. Visual aids enhance the overall appeal of your case study.
- Embrace white space. Avoid overwhelming walls of text to prevent reader fatigue. Opt for plenty of white space, use shorter paragraphs, and employ subsections to ensure easy readability and navigation.
- Enhance video case studies. In video case studies, elements like music, fonts, and color grading are pivotal in setting the right tone. Choose music that complements your message and use it strategically throughout your story. Carefully select fonts to convey the desired style, and consider how lighting and color grading can influence the mood. These elements collectively help create the desired tone for your video case study.
Step 7: Edits and revisions
Once you've finished the interview and created your case study, the hardest part is over. Now's the time for editing and revision. This might feel frustrating for impatient B2B marketers, but it can turn good stories into great ones.
Ideally, you'll want to submit your case study through two different rounds of editing and revisions:
- Internal review. Seek feedback from various team members to ensure your case study is captivating and error-free. Gather perspectives from marketing, sales, and those in close contact with customers for well-rounded insights. Use patterns from this feedback to guide revisions and apply lessons to future case studies.
- Customer feedback. Share the case study with customers to make them feel valued and ensure accuracy. Let them review quotes and data points, as they are the "heroes" of the story, and their logos will be prominently featured. This step maintains positive customer relationships.
Case study mistakes to avoid
- Ensure easy access to case studies on your website.
- Spotlight the customer, not just your business.
- Tailor each case study to a specific audience.
- Avoid excessive industry jargon in your content.
Step 8: Publishing
Take a moment to proofread your case study one more time carefully. Even if you're reasonably confident you've caught all the errors, it's always a good idea to check. Your case study will be a valuable marketing tool for years, so it's worth the investment to ensure it's flawless. Once done, your case study is all set to go!
Consider sharing a copy of the completed case study with your customer as a thoughtful gesture. They'll likely appreciate it; some may want to keep it for their records. After all, your case study wouldn't have been possible without their help, and they deserve to see the final product.
Where you publish your case study depends on its role in your overall marketing strategy. If you want to reach as many people as possible with your case study, consider publishing it on your website and social media platforms.Â
Tip: Some companies prefer to keep their case studies exclusive, making them available only to those who request them. This approach is often taken to control access to valuable information and to engage more deeply with potential customers who express specific interests. It can create a sense of exclusivity and encourage interested parties to engage directly with the company.
Step 9: Case study distribution
When sharing individual case studies, concentrate on reaching the audience with the most influence on purchasing decisions
Here are some common distribution channels to consider:
- Sales teams. Share case studies to enhance customer interactions, retention , and upselling among your sales and customer success teams. Keep them updated on new studies and offer easily accessible formats like PDFs or landing page links.
- Company website. Feature case studies on your website to establish authority and provide valuable information to potential buyers. Organize them by categories such as location, size, industry, challenges, and products or services used for effective presentation.
- Events. Use live events like conferences and webinars to distribute printed case study copies, showcase video case studies at trade show booths, and conclude webinars with links to your case study library. This creative approach blends personal interactions with compelling content.
- Industry journalists. Engage relevant industry journalists to gain media coverage by identifying suitable publications and journalists covering related topics. Building relationships is vital, and platforms like HARO (Help A Reporter Out) can facilitate connections, especially if your competitors have received coverage before.
Want to learn more about Marketing Analytics Software? Explore Marketing Analytics products.
It can seem daunting to transform the information you've gathered into a cohesive narrative. Weâve created a versatile case study template that can serve as a solid starting point for your case study.
With this template, your business can explore any solutions offered to satisfied customers, covering their background, the factors that led them to choose your services, and their outcomes.
The template boasts a straightforward design, featuring distinct sections that guide you in effectively narrating your and your customer's story. However, remember that limitless ways to showcase your business's accomplishments exist.
To assist you in this process, here's a breakdown of the recommended sections to include in a case study:
- Title. Â Keep it concise. Create a brief yet engaging project title summarizing your work with your subject. Consider your title like a newspaper headline; do it well, and readers will want to learn more.Â
- Subtitle . Use this section to elaborate on the achievement briefly. Make it creative and catchy to engage your audience.
- Executive summary. Â Use this as an overview of the story, followed by 2-3 bullet points highlighting key success metrics.
- Challenges and objectives. This section describes the customer's challenges before adopting your product or service, along with the goals or objectives they sought to achieve.
- How product/service helped. Â A paragraph explaining how your product or service addressed their problem.
- Testimonials. Â Incorporate short quotes or statements from the individuals involved in the case study, sharing their perspectives and experiences.
- Supporting visuals. Include one or two impactful visuals, such as graphs, infographics, or highlighted metrics, that reinforce the narrative.
- Call to action (CTA). If you do your job well, your audience will read (or watch) your case studies from beginning to end. They are interested in everything you've said. Now, what's the next step they should take to continue their relationship with you? Give people a simple action they can complete.Â
Case studies are proven marketing strategies in a wide variety of B2B industries. Here are just a few examples of a case study:
- Amazon Web Services, Inc. Â provides companies with cloud computing platforms and APIs on a metered, pay-as-you-go basis. This case study example illustrates the benefits Thomson Reuters experienced using AWS.
- LinkedIn Marketing Solutions combines captivating visuals with measurable results in the case study created for BlackRock. This case study illustrates how LinkedIn has contributed to the growth of BlackRock's brand awareness over the years.Â
- Salesforce , a sales and marketing automation SaaS solutions provider, seamlessly integrates written and visual elements to convey its success stories with Pepe Jeans. This case study effectively demonstrates how Pepe Jeans is captivating online shoppers with immersive and context-driven e-commerce experiences through Salesforce.
- HubSpot offers a combination of sales and marketing tools. Their case study demonstrates the effectiveness of its all-in-one solutions. These typically focus on a particular client's journey and how HubSpot helped them achieve significant results.
There are two different types of case studies that businesses might utilize:
Written case studiesÂ
Written case studies offer readers a clear visual representation of data, which helps them quickly identify and focus on the information that matters most.Â
Printed versions of case studies find their place at events like trade shows, where they serve as valuable sales collateral to engage prospective clients. Even in the digital age, many businesses provide case studies in PDF format or as web-based landing pages, improving accessibility for their audience.Â
Note: Landing pages , in particular, offer the flexibility to incorporate rich multimedia content, including images, charts, and videos. This flexibility in design makes landing pages an attractive choice for presenting detailed content to the audience.
Written case study advantages
Here are several significant advantages to leveraging case studies for your company:
- Hyperlink accessibility. Â Whether in PDF or landing page format, written case studies allow for embedded hyperlinks, offering prospects easy access to additional information and contact forms.
- Flexible engagement. Unlike video case studies, which may demand in-person arrangements, written case studies can be conducted via phone or video streaming, reducing customer commitment and simplifying scheduling.
- Efficient scanning . Well-structured written case studies with a scannable format cater to time-strapped professionals. Charts and callout boxes with key statistics enhance the ease of information retrieval.
- Printable for offline use. Written case studies can be effortlessly printed and distributed at trade shows, sales meetings, and live events. This tangible format accommodates those who prefer physical materials and provides versatility in outreach, unlike video content, which is less portable.
Written case study disadvantages
Here are some drawbacks associated with the use of case studies:
- Reduced emotional impact. Written content lacks the emotional punch of live video testimonials, which engage more senses and emotions, making a stronger connection.
- Consider time investment. Creating a compelling case study involves editing, proofreading, and design collaboration, with multiple revisions commonly required before publication.
- Challenges in maintaining attention. Â Attention spans are short in today's ad-saturated world. Using graphics, infographics, and videos more often is more powerful to incite the right emotions in customers.
Video case studies
Video case studies are the latest marketing trend. Unlike in the past, when video production was costly, today's tools make it more accessible for users to create and edit their videos. However, specific technical requirements still apply.
Like written case studies, video case studies delve into a specific customer's challenges and how your business provides solutions. Yet, the video offers a more profound connection by showcasing the person who faced and conquered the problem.
Video case studies can boost brand exposure when shared on platforms like YouTube. For example, Slack's engaging case study video with Sandwich Video illustrates how Slack transformed its workflow and adds humor, which can be challenging in written case studies focused on factual evidence.
Source : YouTube
This video case study has garnered nearly a million views on YouTube.
Video case study advantages
Here are some of the top advantages of video case studies. While video testimonials take more time, the payoff can be worth it.Â
- Humanization and authenticity. Video case studies connect viewers with real people, adding authenticity and fostering a stronger emotional connection.
- Engaging multiple senses. Â They engage both auditory and visual senses, enhancing credibility and emotional impact. Charts, statistics, and images can also be incorporated.
- Broad distribution. Â Videos can be shared on websites, YouTube, social media, and more, reaching diverse audiences and boosting engagement, especially on social platforms.
Video case study disadvantages
Before fully committing to video testimonials, consider the following:
- Technical expertise and equipment. Video production requires technical know-how and equipment, which can be costly. Skilled video editing is essential to maintain a professional image. While technology advances, producing amateurish videos may harm your brand's perception.
- Viewer convenience. Â Some prospects prefer written formats due to faster reading and ease of navigation. Video typically requires sound, which can be inconvenient for viewers in specific settings. Many people may not have headphones readily available to watch your content.
- Demand on case study participants. On-camera interviews can be time-consuming and location-dependent, making scheduling challenging for case study participants. Additionally, being on screen for a global audience may create insecurities and performance pressure.
- Comfort on camera. Â Not everyone feels at ease on camera. Nervousness or a different on-screen persona can impact the effectiveness of the testimonial, and discovering this late in the process can be problematic.
Written or video case studies: Which is right for you?
Now that you know the pros and cons of each, how do you choose which is right for you?
One of the most significant factors in doing video case studies can be the technical expertise and equipment required for a high level of production quality. Whether you have the budget to do this in-house or hire a production company can be one of the major deciding factors.
Still, written or video doesn't have to be an either-or decision. Some B2B companies are using both formats. They can complement each other nicely, minimizing the downsides mentioned above and reaching your potential customers where they prefer.
Let's say you're selling IT network security. What you offer is invaluable but complicated. You could create a short (three- or four-minute) video case study to get attention and touch on the significant benefits of your services. This whets the viewer's appetite for more information, which they could find in a written case study that supplements the video.
Should you decide to test the water in video case studies, test their effectiveness among your target audience. See how well they work for your company and sales team. And, just like a written case study, you can always find ways to improve your process as you continue exploring video case studies.
Case studies offer several distinctive advantages, making them an ideal tool for businesses to market their products to customers. However, their benefits extend beyond these qualities.Â
Here's an overview of all the advantages of case studies:
Valuable sales support
Case studies serve as a valuable resource for your sales endeavors. Buyers frequently require additional information before finalizing a purchase decision. These studies provide concrete evidence of your product or service's effectiveness, assisting your sales representatives in closing deals more efficiently, especially with customers with lingering uncertainties.
Validating your value
Case studies serve as evidence of your product or service's worth or value proposition , playing a role in building trust with potential customers. By showcasing successful partnerships, you make it easier for prospects to place trust in your offerings. This effect is particularly notable when the featured customer holds a reputable status.
Unique and engaging content
By working closely with your customer success teams, you can uncover various customer stories that resonate with different prospects. Case studies allow marketers to shape product features and benefits into compelling narratives.Â
Each case study's distinctiveness, mirroring the uniqueness of every customer's journey, makes them a valuable source of relatable and engaging content. Storytelling possesses the unique ability to connect with audiences on an emotional level, a dimension that statistics alone often cannot achieve.Â
Spotlighting valuable customers
Case studies provide a valuable platform for showcasing your esteemed customers. Featuring them in these studies offers a chance to give them visibility and express your gratitude for the partnership, which can enhance customer loyalty . Depending on the company you are writing about, it can also demonstrate the caliber of your business.
Now is the time to get SaaS-y news and entertainment with our 5-minute newsletter, Â G2 Tea , featuring inspiring leaders, hot takes, and bold predictions. Subscribe below!
It's important to consider limitations when designing and interpreting the results of case studies. Here's an overview of the limitations of case studies:
Challenges in replication
Case studies often focus on specific individuals, organizations, or situations, making generalizing their findings to broader populations or contexts challenging.Â
Time-intensive process
Case studies require a significant time investment. The extensive data collection process and the need for comprehensive analysis can be demanding, especially for researchers who are new to this method.
Potential for errors
Case studies can be influenced by memory and judgment, potentially leading to inaccuracies. Depending on human memory to reconstruct a case's history may result in variations and potential inconsistencies in how individuals recall past events. Additionally, bias may emerge, as individuals tend to prioritize what they consider most significant, which could limit their consideration of alternative perspectives.
Challenges in verification
Confirming results through additional research can present difficulties. This complexity arises from the need for detailed and extensive data in the initial creation of a case study. Consequently, this process requires significant effort and a substantial amount of time.
While looking at case studies, you may have noticed a quote. This type of quote is considered a testimonial, a key element of case studies.
If a customer's quote proves that your brand does what it says it will or performs as expected, you may wonder: 'Aren't customer testimonials and case studies the same thing?' Not exactly.
Testimonials are brief endorsements designed to establish trust on a broad scale. In contrast, case studies are detailed narratives that offer a comprehensive understanding of how a product or service addresses a specific problem, targeting a more focused audience.Â
Crafting case studies requires more resources and a structured approach than testimonials. Your selection between the two depends on your marketing objectives and the complexity of your product or service.
Case in point!
Case studies are among a company's most effective tools. You're  well on your way to mastering them.
Today's buyers are tackling much of the case study research methodology independently. Many are understandably skeptical before making a buying decision. By connecting them with multiple case studies, you can prove you've gotten the results you say you can. There's hardly a better way to boost your credibility and persuade them to consider your solution.
Case study formats and distribution methods might change as technology evolves. However, the fundamentals that make them effectiveâknowing how to choose subjects, conduct interviews, and structure everything to get attentionâwill serve you for as long as you're in business.Â
We covered a ton of concepts and resources, so go ahead and bookmark this page. You can refer to it whenever you have questions or need a refresher.
Dive into market research to uncover customer preferences and spending habits.
Kristen McCabe
Kristenâs is a former senior content marketing specialist at G2. Her global marketing experience extends from Australia to Chicago, with expertise in B2B and B2C industries. Specializing in content, conversions, and events, Kristen spends her time outside of work time acting, learning nature photography, and joining in the #instadog fun with her Pug/Jack Russell, Bella. (she/her/hers)
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How to Write a Case Study: A Complete Guide with Templates
Writing compelling and insightful case studies is a marketer’s biggest job, yet most get frustrated with this content. The challenge? Figuring out how to write a case study that not only highlights the companyâs strongest suit but engages new clients with strategic information. If you often struggle with making case studies as more than just dry facts and figures, youâre leading your efforts to missed opportunities.
How to Write a Case Study Step-by-Step
- Craft a Compelling Headline: Highlight the main success with a clear, direct title.
- Start with a Strong Introduction: Provide a broad overview and hook the reader.
- Discuss Unique Client Challenges: Highlight specific industry-related challenges.
- Highlight the Solution: Showcase your strategies and key results.
- Present Quantifiable Results: Use data and visuals to demonstrate impact.
- Be Clear and Concise: Stick to the point and support claims with data.
- Treat Your Case Study Like a Story: Focus on the customer’s journey and success.
- Use Direct Quotes from the Client: Add authenticity with client testimonials.
- Make the Key Takeaway Clear: Reinforce your expertise and the solution’s value.
- Include a Call to Action (CTA): Guide the reader on what to do next.
- Make It Readable: Use simple language, short paragraphs, and bullet points.
- Finalize and Proofread: Review for errors and ensure a smooth flow.
In this blog, you’ll discover a step-by-step guide that simplifies the process, making it easier to create interesting case studies. From planning to writing, I’ve got you covered. So, letâs start with some basics.
Table of Contents
What is the format of a case study.
- How to Plan a Case StudyÂ
How to Write a Case Study
How to summarize a case study, how to cite a case study.
A well-structured case study isnât just a collection of factsâit’s a powerful marketing tool that tells a compelling story. Using the right format for a case study ensures that your message is clear, engaging, and impactful.
The proper format guides readers through the narrative with hierarchy and scannability, helping them connect with your brand on a deeper level. Most importantly, it empowers you as a marketer to set clear goals for presenting your case studies and ensures you deliver the correct information effectively!
Case studies format helps you to plan and write the case study for your clients. With this outline in mind, you can create steps to complete the process of writing and publishing your case study research. There are eight components of a case study that are essential for building a layout of information in the correct order that makes sense to the viewers.
Start with a catchy âTitleâ that grabs attention and an âOverviewâ that sets the stage. Clearly define the âProblemâ your client faced, and then showcase your âSolutionâ in detail. Highlight the success with âResultsâ that are measurable and impactful. Add authenticity with âTestimonials and Quotesâ from satisfied clients. Wrap it up with a firm âConclusionâ and a compelling âCall to Actionâ in the âAbout Usâ section that guides the reader on what to do next.
By following this format, you create a case study design that resonates with your audience and effectively showcases your brand’s value.
Check out the marketing case study template I’ve included belowâit has a clear outline that makes it easy to see how sticking to a format can help you plan and write the entire thing.
How to Plan a Case Study
Now comes the big part! Understanding what to include in a case study outline is just the starting point for beginners. The real challenge lies in creating a step-by-step plan to craft that outline and filling it in with the right information!
1. Set Clear Goals for Your Case Study
Before diving into how to write a case study, defining your ultimate objective is essential. Think about itâwhat do you want your audience to take away from this case study? For example, your goal is to showcase how your SEO strategies boosted a client’s organic traffic by 150% in just six months. This clear goal will shape your entire narrative and ensure that your case study is laser-focused on demonstrating your expertise and the value you bring.
2. Select a Client that Highlights Your Strongest Suit
Choosing the right client or subject is vital while creating case studies. Imagine youâve worked with a small e-commerce brand struggling to rank for competitive keywords. Your strategies helped them rank on the first page and increase conversions. This is the perfect client for your case study because their success story directly showcases your SEO prowess.
By picking a client whose experience aligns with your goals, youâll create a case study that resonates with your target audience.
3. Reach Out to Your Client for Collaboration
Now that youâve identified the ideal client, itâs time to reach out. Letâs say you contact your client and explain how a case study can highlight their remarkable success story. Itâs a great way to spotlight a mutual collaboration based on credibility. Their buy-in is crucial; their insights and data will authenticate your case study.
4. Gather Comprehensive Data and Insights
Data is the lifeblood of any compelling case study. For instance, in your SEO case study, youâll need to gather data on key metrics like keyword rankings, organic traffic, and conversion rates before and after implementing your strategies. Letâs say your client saw a 50% increase in organic traffic within three months of optimizing their website. Collecting this data will help you build a robust, evidence-based narrative highlighting your impact.
It’s essential to monitor the before-and-after data to track the effectiveness of implementing your strategies.
5. Prepare Insightful Questions and Conduct Interviews
It would be best to ask the right questions to get the most out of your client interviews. Imagine asking your client, âWhat specific challenges were you facing with your organic search rankings before we started working together?â or âHow did our SEO strategies help you achieve your business goals?â These questions will lead to detailed responses that add depth to your case study, making it more than just numbers on a page.
Always ask questions that uncover the key challenges your clients face. This way, your prospects will know when to turn to you to navigate or overcome similar obstacles in their business.
Since Iâm giving an example of an SEO case study in marketing, you can try these questions to interview your existing client. Obviously, you can modify the sentences according to your industry basics, but these types of questions are fundamental for collecting structured data from your clients.
- What were your business’s main SEO challenges before we started working together?
- Can you describe your initial expectations for implementing our SEO strategies?
- What specific SEO tactics did we implement that you found most effective?
- How did you monitor and measure the impact of these strategies on your organic traffic?
- What were the key metrics or results that stood out to you after the first three months?
6. Ask Questions That Drive the Story Forward
Impactful questions are the backbone of a strong case study. They allow you to highlight the unique value you delivered to your clients. You can effortlessly showcase your USPs within the case study by asking the right questions.
Focus on inquiring about the effectiveness of your services and strategies, their impact, and which aspects of the solution were most beneficial. This insight will be your key to demonstrating the tangible benefits you offer your clients.
Consider asking questions like:
- Can you share a moment when you first noticed a significant improvement in your website’s organic traffic?
- How did the increase in organic traffic impact other business areas, such as lead generation or sales?
- What feedback did your team or customers receive regarding the changes in your siteâs performance?
- Looking back, what do you believe was the most critical factor in achieving these results?
- How has this success with SEO influenced your overall marketing strategy moving forward?
These types of questions encourage clients to share their experiences in a way that paints a vivid picture for your readers, making the case study more relatable and engaging.
7. Draft a Clear and Organized Outline
With all the data and insights gathered, itâs time to create a well-structured case study outline. Letâs say you start with a brief overview of your clientâs business and its challenges, followed by a detailed account of the SEO strategies you implemented. Then, you showcase the results with hard data and close with client testimonials and a solid call to action.
As mentioned above, organizing your content in a logical, easy-to-follow format will help you write a case study that not only informs but also captivates your audience.
These steps are the cornerstones of designing a case study. Once you complete this checklist, you can proceed to the next step, which is writing a case study. Since I discussed planning an SEO case study extensively, here is a case study template that perfectly illustrates the process.
You want to create an informative case study for your prospects. But how do you make sure itâs done right? Hereâs a step-by-step guide on how to write a case study that drives results.
1. Craft a Compelling Headline Â
Your headline is the first thing readers see, so make it count! It should grab attention and hint at the success story youâre about to share.
How to Write a Case Study Title:
1. Highlight the Result: Showcase the critical success, like “Increased Sales by 200%.”
2. Be Clear and Direct: Make sure the headline is straightforward to grasp.
3. Use Action Words: Start with strong verbs like “How We” or “Achieved.”
4. Mention Client or Industry: Include relevant details for specificity.
5. Keep It Short: Make it concise and attention-grabbing.
2. Start with a Strong Introduction Â
Kick off your case study with a broad overview that sets the stage. Provide the big picture and construct a clear narrative that draws readers in, making them eager to learn more about how you solved a significant challenge.
Look at the consulting case study template , which includes a stunning overview description and precise instructions for writing a short and compelling introduction. You can add every little detail to hook the reader.
Get This Template and More
3. Discuss Specific Challenges of Your Client
This is where your prospect can truly connect. By highlighting unique yet specific challenges to their industry, you give them insight into issues they might not have encountered yetâor ones theyâve already faced. This way, theyâll know exactly who to turn to when similar challenges arise.
The following financial case study template provides a brief flow of the company’s common challenges in the financial analysis process. The template is almost ready to use with this domain-specific content, requiring minimal adjustments to design your case study.
4. Highlight the Solution Â
Now, dive into the heart of the story. Highlight the solution you provided, and make sure to include a notable achievement or key result. This is your chance to shine!
Check out the format for presenting the implications of your service on your clientâs business. The benefits should be well-written and data-driven to convince your upcoming clients. This graphic design case study format helps you understand the specific impacts a company seeks from a reputable graphic design firm.
5. Present Quantifiable Results Â
When sharing the outcome, numbers speak louder than words. Present quantifiable results that clearly demonstrate the impact of your solution. Use graphs or charts to make the data easy to digest and visually appealing.
6. Be Clear and Concise Â
Less is more. Stick to the point and offer just the right amount of detail to keep your readers engaged. Include data that supports your claims, but avoid overwhelming them with too much information.
Hereâs a stunning sales consulting case study that uses a simple case study layout and details written in readable, plain language to gauge more utility.Â
7. Treat Your Case Study Like a Story Â
Focus on your customerâs journey. Think of your case study as a story in which your client is the hero, and your solution is the tool that helped them succeed. This approach will make your case study relatable and compelling.
8. Be as Specific as Possible Â
Donât be vagueâdetails matter. Mention the specific company and its industry to let your audience know that the challenge and solution are relevant to them. The more precise you are, the more credible and trustworthy your case study will be.
Check out the sample case study below for payroll accounting. The details are clearly organized and grouped to emphasize the type of case study.
Also, the next case study template displays very specific problems that a company faces when it lacks digital marketing expertise.Â
These templates make it a breeze to craft a case study that’s perfect for your niche.
9. Use Direct Quotes from the Client Â
Quotes from your client add authenticity and credibility. They give readers insight into the clientâs perspective and make your case study more relatable. Plus, a glowing testimonial is always a nice touch!
The following inbound marketing case study has a prominent client testimonial. With the brief instructions on this template, itâs easier for you to understand how to capture the golden words of your client and use them as a word-of-mouth strategy within the case study.Â
10. Pick an Interesting Angle Â
Find a unique angle that makes your case study stand out. Maybe itâs an unexpected challenge you overcame, or perhaps itâs a particularly innovative solution. Whatever it is, make it intriguing.
11. Make the Key Takeaway Crystal Clear Â
Your readers should walk away with a clear understanding of the main point of your case study. This takeaway should reinforce your expertise and the value of your solution.
12. Include a Call to Action (CTA)Â Â
Donât leave your readers hangingâtell them what to do next! Include a compelling summary about your company, showcase your happy client base, and conclude the journey with a strong CTA, whether to contact you for a consultation, download a related resource, or learn more about your services on social media, like the following case study template design.
12. Format Professionally Â
The design of the case study is just as important as the content. A well-formatted, visually appealing document makes a great impression and enhances readability. With ready-to-use niche-oriented templates, you can easily create a professional-looking case study that impresses and converts. Here is an eye-catching template for an AI assistant software case study that displays a sleek and well-navigated format.
13. Make It Readable Â
Easy readability is key. Use simple language, short paragraphs, and bullet points where appropriate. Your case study should be easy to scan and digest. Follow the thirteen design principles to create a standout piece that enhances your marketing efforts.
To understand this, take a look at the following consulting case study template.Â
14. Finalize and Proofread Your Case Study Â
In order to excel in how to write case studies, give your case study a final review before you hit publish. Proofread carefully to catch any typos or errors, and make sure everything flows smoothly. A polished case study reflects your attention to detail and professionalism.
To effectively summarize a case study, start by completing all sections, including the introduction, challenges, solutions, and results. This approach helps marketers identify key points to highlight, making it easier to craft a succinct and engaging summary.
One tricky thing is the length of the case study summary. So, how long should a case study summary be?
The length of a case study summary can vary depending on the details you’re covering. Generally, it should be kept concise, usually spanning a couple of lines or up to a single page with several paragraphs. If you’re crafting a customer case study and want to flex your storytelling muscles, it’s perfectly fine for the summary to stretch to a full page.
If summarizing a case study seems daunting, try DocHipoâs advanced AI Writer tool, which effortlessly creates a crisp and concise summary.
Watch this short video to use it.
This is the last step in writing a case study analysis. Citation in a case study is the practice of giving proper credit to the sources you reference or use in your research. It helps validate your work, shows the depth of your research, and avoids plagiarism. Follow the below steps to cite a case study:
- Identify the Source: Gather details like the author, title, publication year, and where the case study was published.
- Choose a Citation Style: Follow the specific formatting style (APA, MLA, Chicago, etc.) required for your work.
- Format the Citation: Arrange the details according to the chosen citation style.
- Include In-Text Citations: Place citations within the text or paragraphs for the case study.
- Create a References List: At the end of your case study, compile all your sources in a bibliography or reference list.
For case studies, citations in APA and MLA styles are very common. If you are just beginning, then you might be confused about these case study citation formats.
Hence, take a look at the picture below, which easily comprehends the APA vs MLA citation features.Â
Still feeling overwhelmed about case studies? Be stress-free with the most convenient case study maker, which saves time and allows you to present data in the most attention-grabbing way.Â
Watch the video to create case studies in minutes with DocHipoâs case study maker.
ConclusionÂ
To summarize, if you want to write a case study, start with a proper case study format, plan the case study, and finally write it with all the information in hand. Then, write a summary to provide an overview of your case study, and finally, add citations for reference.
Meanwhile, if you want to design a case study, Try DocHipo templates. Sign up to explore all the case study templates.Â
What is the structure of a case study?
A case study typically includes the following sections: Title, Introduction, Background, Problem Statement, Solutions, Results, and Conclusion. Each section serves to tell a comprehensive story of the business, from the issue at hand to the resolution and outcomes.
What are the 5 essential elements of a great case study?
The 5 essential elements are: 1) Clear Objective, 2) Detailed Background, 3) Specific Challenges, 4) Effective Solutions, and 5) Measurable Results. These components provide a compelling narrative that highlights the value delivered.
How to begin a case study?
Start a case study by defining the purpose and scope of the study. Introduce the subject, outline the problem, and provide background information to give readers context. This sets the stage for the detailed analysis that follows.
How to make an introduction in case study?
To craft a compelling introduction, briefly describe the subject, outline the problem they faced, and explain why the study is relevant. This section should grab the readerâs attention and make them interested in the rest of the study.
How to make a business case study?
A business case study should begin with a clear objective and background information. Identify the problem, explain the solutions implemented, and conclude with the results achieved. Use real data and quotes from stakeholders to enhance credibility.
How to write a case study step by step?
To write a case study step by step, start by identifying the case you want to explore and gathering relevant data on the subject. Outline the structure of your case study, then craft an engaging Introduction to set the context. Next, detail the Background and Challenges faced, followed by the Solutions applied. Share the Results and Conclusion to highlight the impact. Finally, edit and proofread your case study to ensure clarity and accuracy.
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Methodology
- What Is a Case Study? | Definition, Examples & Methods
What Is a Case Study? | Definition, Examples & Methods
Published on May 8, 2019 by Shona McCombes . Revised on November 20, 2023.
A case study is a detailed study of a specific subject, such as a person, group, place, event, organization, or phenomenon. Case studies are commonly used in social, educational, clinical, and business research.
A case study research design usually involves qualitative methods , but quantitative methods are sometimes also used. Case studies are good for describing , comparing, evaluating and understanding different aspects of a research problem .
Table of contents
When to do a case study, step 1: select a case, step 2: build a theoretical framework, step 3: collect your data, step 4: describe and analyze the case, other interesting articles.
A case study is an appropriate research design when you want to gain concrete, contextual, in-depth knowledge about a specific real-world subject. It allows you to explore the key characteristics, meanings, and implications of the case.
Case studies are often a good choice in a thesis or dissertation . They keep your project focused and manageable when you donât have the time or resources to do large-scale research.
You might use just one complex case study where you explore a single subject in depth, or conduct multiple case studies to compare and illuminate different aspects of your research problem.
Research question | Case study |
---|---|
What are the ecological effects of wolf reintroduction? | Case study of wolf reintroduction in Yellowstone National Park |
How do populist politicians use narratives about history to gain support? | Case studies of Hungarian prime minister Viktor OrbĂĄn and US president Donald Trump |
How can teachers implement active learning strategies in mixed-level classrooms? | Case study of a local school that promotes active learning |
What are the main advantages and disadvantages of wind farms for rural communities? | Case studies of three rural wind farm development projects in different parts of the country |
How are viral marketing strategies changing the relationship between companies and consumers? | Case study of the iPhone X marketing campaign |
How do experiences of work in the gig economy differ by gender, race and age? | Case studies of Deliveroo and Uber drivers in London |
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Once you have developed your problem statement and research questions , you should be ready to choose the specific case that you want to focus on. A good case study should have the potential to:
- Provide new or unexpected insights into the subject
- Challenge or complicate existing assumptions and theories
- Propose practical courses of action to resolve a problem
- Open up new directions for future research
TipIf your research is more practical in nature and aims to simultaneously investigate an issue as you solve it, consider conducting action research instead.
Unlike quantitative or experimental research , a strong case study does not require a random or representative sample. In fact, case studies often deliberately focus on unusual, neglected, or outlying cases which may shed new light on the research problem.
Example of an outlying case studyIn the 1960s the town of Roseto, Pennsylvania was discovered to have extremely low rates of heart disease compared to the US average. It became an important case study for understanding previously neglected causes of heart disease.
However, you can also choose a more common or representative case to exemplify a particular category, experience or phenomenon.
Example of a representative case studyIn the 1920s, two sociologists used Muncie, Indiana as a case study of a typical American city that supposedly exemplified the changing culture of the US at the time.
While case studies focus more on concrete details than general theories, they should usually have some connection with theory in the field. This way the case study is not just an isolated description, but is integrated into existing knowledge about the topic. It might aim to:
- Exemplify a theory by showing how it explains the case under investigation
- Expand on a theory by uncovering new concepts and ideas that need to be incorporated
- Challenge a theory by exploring an outlier case that doesnât fit with established assumptions
To ensure that your analysis of the case has a solid academic grounding, you should conduct a literature review of sources related to the topic and develop a theoretical framework . This means identifying key concepts and theories to guide your analysis and interpretation.
There are many different research methods you can use to collect data on your subject. Case studies tend to focus on qualitative data using methods such as interviews , observations , and analysis of primary and secondary sources (e.g., newspaper articles, photographs, official records). Sometimes a case study will also collect quantitative data.
Example of a mixed methods case studyFor a case study of a wind farm development in a rural area, you could collect quantitative data on employment rates and business revenue, collect qualitative data on local peopleâs perceptions and experiences, and analyze local and national media coverage of the development.
The aim is to gain as thorough an understanding as possible of the case and its context.
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In writing up the case study, you need to bring together all the relevant aspects to give as complete a picture as possible of the subject.
How you report your findings depends on the type of research you are doing. Some case studies are structured like a standard scientific paper or thesis , with separate sections or chapters for the methods , results and discussion .
Others are written in a more narrative style, aiming to explore the case from various angles and analyze its meanings and implications (for example, by using textual analysis or discourse analysis ).
In all cases, though, make sure to give contextual details about the case, connect it back to the literature and theory, and discuss how it fits into wider patterns or debates.
If you want to know more about statistics , methodology , or research bias , make sure to check out some of our other articles with explanations and examples.
- Normal distribution
- Degrees of freedom
- Null hypothesis
- Discourse analysis
- Control groups
- Mixed methods research
- Non-probability sampling
- Quantitative research
- Ecological validity
Research bias
- Rosenthal effect
- Implicit bias
- Cognitive bias
- Selection bias
- Negativity bias
- Status quo bias
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How to Write a Case Study - All You Wanted to Know
What do you study in your college? If you are a psychology, sociology, or anthropology student, we bet you might be familiar with what a case study is. This research method is used to study a certain person, group, or situation. In this guide from our dissertation writing service , you will learn how to write a case study professionally, from researching to citing sources properly. Also, we will explore different types of case studies and show you examples â so that you wonât have any other questions left.
What Is a Case Study?
A case study is a subcategory of research design which investigates problems and offers solutions. Case studies can range from academic research studies to corporate promotional tools trying to sell an ideaâtheir scope is quite vast.
What Is the Difference Between a Research Paper and a Case Study?
While research papers turn the readerâs attention to a certain problem, case studies go even further. Case study guidelines require students to pay attention to details, examining issues closely and in-depth using different research methods. For example, case studies may be used to examine court cases if you study Law, or a patient's health history if you study Medicine. Case studies are also used in Marketing, which are thorough, empirically supported analysis of a good or service's performance. Well-designed case studies can be valuable for prospective customers as they can identify and solve the potential customers pain point.
Case studies involve a lot of storytelling â they usually examine particular cases for a person or a group of people. This method of research is very helpful, as it is very practical and can give a lot of hands-on information. Most commonly, the length of the case study is about 500-900 words, which is much less than the length of an average research paper.
The structure of a case study is very similar to storytelling. It has a protagonist or main character, which in your case is actually a problem you are trying to solve. You can use the system of 3 Acts to make it a compelling story. It should have an introduction, rising action, a climax where transformation occurs, falling action, and a solution.
Here is a rough formula for you to use in your case study:
Problem (Act I): > Solution (Act II) > Result (Act III) > Conclusion.
Types of Case Studies
The purpose of a case study is to provide detailed reports on an event, an institution, a place, future customers, or pretty much anything. There are a few common types of case study, but the type depends on the topic. The following are the most common domains where case studies are needed:
- Historical case studies are great to learn from. Historical events have a multitude of source info offering different perspectives. There are always modern parallels where these perspectives can be applied, compared, and thoroughly analyzed.
- Problem-oriented case studies are usually used for solving problems. These are often assigned as theoretical situations where you need to immerse yourself in the situation to examine it. Imagine youâre working for a startup and youâve just noticed a significant flaw in your productâs design. Before taking it to the senior manager, you want to do a comprehensive study on the issue and provide solutions. On a greater scale, problem-oriented case studies are a vital part of relevant socio-economic discussions.
- Cumulative case studies collect information and offer comparisons. In business, case studies are often used to tell people about the value of a product.
- Critical case studies explore the causes and effects of a certain case.
- Illustrative case studies describe certain events, investigating outcomes and lessons learned.
Need a compelling case study? EssayPro has got you covered. Our experts are ready to provide you with detailed, insightful case studies that capture the essence of real-world scenarios. Elevate your academic work with our professional assistance.
Case Study Format
The case study format is typically made up of eight parts:
- Executive Summary. Explain what you will examine in the case study. Write an overview of the field youâre researching. Make a thesis statement and sum up the results of your observation in a maximum of 2 sentences.
- Background. Provide background information and the most relevant facts. Isolate the issues.
- Case Evaluation. Isolate the sections of the study you want to focus on. In it, explain why something is working or is not working.
- Proposed Solutions. Offer realistic ways to solve what isnât working or how to improve its current condition. Explain why these solutions work by offering testable evidence.
- Conclusion. Summarize the main points from the case evaluations and proposed solutions. 6. Recommendations. Talk about the strategy that you should choose. Explain why this choice is the most appropriate.
- Implementation. Explain how to put the specific strategies into action.
- References. Provide all the citations.
How to Write a Case Study
Let's discover how to write a case study.
Setting Up the Research
When writing a case study, remember that research should always come first. Reading many different sources and analyzing other points of view will help you come up with more creative solutions. You can also conduct an actual interview to thoroughly investigate the customer story that you'll need for your case study. Including all of the necessary research, writing a case study may take some time. The research process involves doing the following:
- Define your objective. Explain the reason why youâre presenting your subject. Figure out where you will feature your case study; whether it is written, on video, shown as an infographic, streamed as a podcast, etc.
- Determine who will be the right candidate for your case study. Get permission, quotes, and other features that will make your case study effective. Get in touch with your candidate to see if they approve of being part of your work. Study that candidateâs situation and note down what caused it.
- Identify which various consequences could result from the situation. Follow these guidelines on how to start a case study: surf the net to find some general information you might find useful.
- Make a list of credible sources and examine them. Seek out important facts and highlight problems. Always write down your ideas and make sure to brainstorm.
- Focus on several key issues â why they exist, and how they impact your research subject. Think of several unique solutions. Draw from class discussions, readings, and personal experience. When writing a case study, focus on the best solution and explore it in depth. After having all your research in place, writing a case study will be easy. You may first want to check the rubric and criteria of your assignment for the correct case study structure.
Read Also: ' WHATÂ ISÂ AÂ CREDIBLE SOURCES ?'
Although your instructor might be looking at slightly different criteria, every case study rubric essentially has the same standards. Your professor will want you to exhibit 8 different outcomes:
- Correctly identify the concepts, theories, and practices in the discipline.
- Identify the relevant theories and principles associated with the particular study.
- Evaluate legal and ethical principles and apply them to your decision-making.
- Recognize the global importance and contribution of your case.
- Construct a coherent summary and explanation of the study.
- Demonstrate analytical and critical-thinking skills.
- Explain the interrelationships between the environment and nature.
- Integrate theory and practice of the discipline within the analysis.
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Case Study Outline
Let's look at the structure of an outline based on the issue of the alcoholic addiction of 30 people.
Introduction
- Statement of the issue: Alcoholism is a disease rather than a weakness of character.
- Presentation of the problem: Alcoholism is affecting more than 14 million people in the USA, which makes it the third most common mental illness there.
- Explanation of the terms: In the past, alcoholism was commonly referred to as alcohol dependence or alcohol addiction. Alcoholism is now the more severe stage of this addiction in the disorder spectrum.
- Hypotheses: Drinking in excess can lead to the use of other drugs.
- Importance of your story: How the information you present can help people with their addictions.
- Background of the story: Include an explanation of why you chose this topic.
- Presentation of analysis and data: Describe the criteria for choosing 30 candidates, the structure of the interview, and the outcomes.
- Strong argument 1: ex. X% of candidates dealing with anxiety and depression...
- Strong argument 2: ex. X amount of people started drinking by their mid-teens.
- Strong argument 3: ex. X% of respondentsâ parents had issues with alcohol.
- Concluding statement: I have researched if alcoholism is a disease and found out thatâŚ
- Recommendations: Ways and actions for preventing alcohol use.
Writing a Case Study Draft
After youâve done your case study research and written the outline, itâs time to focus on the draft. In a draft, you have to develop and write your case study by using: the data which you collected throughout the research, interviews, and the analysis processes that were undertaken. Follow these rules for the draft:
đ Step | đ Description |
---|---|
1. Draft Structure | đď¸ Your draft should contain at least 4 sections: an introduction; a body where you should include background information, an explanation of why you decided to do this case study, and a presentation of your main findings; a conclusion where you present data; and references. |
2. Introduction | đ In the introduction, you should set the pace very clearly. You can even raise a question or quote someone you interviewed in the research phase. It must provide adequate background information on the topic. The background may include analyses of previous studies on your topic. Include the aim of your case here as well. Think of it as a thesis statement. The aim must describe the purpose of your workâpresenting the issues that you want to tackle. Include background information, such as photos or videos you used when doing the research. |
3. Research Process | đ Describe your unique research process, whether it was through interviews, observations, academic journals, etc. The next point includes providing the results of your research. Tell the audience what you found out. Why is this important, and what could be learned from it? Discuss the real implications of the problem and its significance in the world. |
4. Quotes and Data | đŹ Include quotes and data (such as findings, percentages, and awards). This will add a personal touch and better credibility to the case you present. Explain what results you find during your interviews in regards to the problem and how it developed. Also, write about solutions which have already been proposed by other people who have already written about this case. |
5. Offer Solutions | đĄ At the end of your case study, you should offer possible solutions, but donât worry about solving them yourself. |
Use Data to Illustrate Key Points in Your Case Study
Even though your case study is a story, it should be based on evidence. Use as much data as possible to illustrate your point. Without the right data, your case study may appear weak and the readers may not be able to relate to your issue as much as they should. Let's see the examples from essay writing service :
â With data: Alcoholism is affecting more than 14 million people in the USA, which makes it the third most common mental illness there. Without data: A lot of people suffer from alcoholism in the United States.
Try to include as many credible sources as possible. You may have terms or sources that could be hard for other cultures to understand. If this is the case, you should include them in the appendix or Notes for the Instructor or Professor.
Finalizing the Draft: Checklist
After you finish drafting your case study, polish it up by answering these âask yourselfâ questions and think about how to end your case study:
- Check that you follow the correct case study format, also in regards to text formatting.
- Check that your work is consistent with its referencing and citation style.
- Micro-editing â check for grammar and spelling issues.
- Macro-editing â does âthe big pictureâ come across to the reader? Is there enough raw data, such as real-life examples or personal experiences? Have you made your data collection process completely transparent? Does your analysis provide a clear conclusion, allowing for further research and practice?
Problems to avoid:
- Overgeneralization â Do not go into further research that deviates from the main problem.
- Failure to Document Limitations â Just as you have to clearly state the limitations of a general research study, you must describe the specific limitations inherent in the subject of analysis.
- Failure to Extrapolate All Possible Implications â Just as you don't want to over-generalize from your case study findings, you also have to be thorough in the consideration of all possible outcomes or recommendations derived from your findings.
How to Create a Title Page and Cite a Case Study
Let's see how to create an awesome title page.
Your title page depends on the prescribed citation format. The title page should include:
- A title that attracts some attention and describes your study
- The title should have the words âcase studyâ in it
- The title should range between 5-9 words in length
- Your name and contact information
- Your finished paper should be only 500 to 1,500 words in length.With this type of assignment, write effectively and avoid fluff
Here is a template for the APA and MLA format title page:
There are some cases when you need to cite someone else's study in your own one â therefore, you need to master how to cite a case study. A case study is like a research paper when it comes to citations. You can cite it like you cite a book, depending on what style you need.
Citation Example in MLA â Hill, Linda, Tarun Khanna, and Emily A. Stecker. HCL Technologies. Boston: Harvard Business Publishing, 2008. Print.
Citation Example in APA â Hill, L., Khanna, T., & Stecker, E. A. (2008). HCL Technologies. Boston: Harvard Business Publishing.
Citation Example in Chicago Hill, Linda, Tarun Khanna, and Emily A. Stecker. HCL Technologies.
Case Study Examples
To give you an idea of a professional case study example, we gathered and linked some below.
Eastman Kodak Case Study
Case Study Example: Audi Trains Mexican Autoworkers in Germany
To conclude, a case study is one of the best methods of getting an overview of what happened to a person, a group, or a situation in practice. It allows you to have an in-depth glance at the real-life problems that businesses, healthcare industry, criminal justice, etc. may face. This insight helps us look at such situations in a different light. This is because we see scenarios that we otherwise would not, without necessarily being there. If you need custom essays , try our research paper writing services .
Get Help Form Qualified Writers
Crafting a case study is not easy. You might want to write one of high quality, but you donât have the time or expertise. If youâre having trouble with your case study, help with essay request - we'll help. EssayPro writers have read and written countless case studies and are experts in endless disciplines. Request essay writing, editing, or proofreading assistance from our custom case study writing service , and all of your worries will be gone.
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What Is A Case Study?
How to cite a case study in apa, how to write a case study.
Daniel Parker
is a seasoned educational writer focusing on scholarship guidance, research papers, and various forms of academic essays including reflective and narrative essays. His expertise also extends to detailed case studies. A scholar with a background in English Literature and Education, Danielâs work on EssayPro blog aims to support students in achieving academic excellence and securing scholarships. His hobbies include reading classic literature and participating in academic forums.
is an expert in nursing and healthcare, with a strong background in history, law, and literature. Holding advanced degrees in nursing and public health, his analytical approach and comprehensive knowledge help students navigate complex topics. On EssayPro blog, Adam provides insightful articles on everything from historical analysis to the intricacies of healthcare policies. In his downtime, he enjoys historical documentaries and volunteering at local clinics.
Home Blog Business How to Present a Case Study: Examples and Best Practices
How to Present a Case Study: Examples and Best Practices
Marketers, consultants, salespeople, and all other types of business managers often use case study analysis to highlight a success story, showing how an exciting problem can be or was addressed. But how do you create a compelling case study and then turn it into a memorable presentation? Get a lowdown from this post!
Table of Content s
Why Case Studies are a Popular Marketing Technique
Popular case study format types, how to write a case study: a 4-step framework, how to do a case study presentation: 3 proven tips, how long should a case study be, final tip: use compelling presentation visuals, business case study examples, what is a case study .
Letâs start with this great case study definition by the University of South Caroline:
In the social sciences, the term case study refers to both a method of analysis and a specific research design for examining a problem, both of which can generalize findings across populations.
In simpler terms â a case study is investigative research into a problem aimed at presenting or highlighting solution(s) to the analyzed issues.
A standard business case study provides insights into:
- General business/market conditions
- The main problem faced
- Methods applied
- The outcomes gained using a specific tool or approach
Case studies (also called case reports) are also used in clinical settings to analyze patient outcomes outside of the business realm.
But this is a topic for another time. In this post, weâll focus on teaching you how to write and present a case study, plus share several case study PowerPoint templates and design tips!Â
Besides presenting a solution to an internal issue, case studies are often used as a content marketing technique . According to a 2020 Content Marketing Institute report, 69% of B2B marketers use case studies as part of their marketing mix.
A case study informs the reader about a possible solution and soft-sells the results, which can be achieved with your help (e.g., by using your software or by partnering with your specialist).
For the above purpose, case studies work like a charm. Per the same report:
- For 9% of marketers, case studies are also the best method for nurturing leads.
- 23% admit that case studies are beneficial for improving conversions.
Moreover, case studies also help improve your brandâs credibility, especially in the current fake news landscape and dubious claims made without proper credit.
Ultimately, case studies naturally help build up more compelling, relatable stories and showcase your product benefits through the prism of extra social proof, courtesy of the case study subject.
Most case studies come either as a slide deck or as a downloadable PDF document.
Typically, you have several options to distribute your case study for maximum reach:
- Case study presentations â in-person, virtual, or pre-recorded, there are many times when a case study presentation comes in handy. For example, during client workshops, sales pitches, networking events, conferences, trade shows, etc.
- Dedicated website page â highlighting case study examples on your website is a great way to convert middle-on-the-funnel prospects. Googleâs Think With Google case study section is a great example of a web case study design done right.
- Blog case studies â data-driven storytelling is a staunch way to stand apart from your competition by providing unique insights, no other brand can tell.
- Video case studies â video is a great medium for showcasing more complex business cases and celebrating customer success stories.
Once you decide on your case study format, the next step is collecting data and then translating it into a storyline. There are different case study methods and research approaches you can use to procure data.
But letâs say you already have all your facts straight and need to organize them in a clean copy for your presentation deck. Hereâs how you should do it.
1. Identify the Problem
Every compelling case study research starts with a problem statement definition. While in business settings, thereâs no need to explain your methodology in-depth; you should still open your presentation with a quick problem recap slide.
Be sure to mention:
- Whatâs the purpose of the case study? What will the audience learn?
- Set the scene. Explain the before, aka the problems someone was facing.
- Advertise the main issues and findings without highlighting specific details.
The above information should nicely fit in several paragraphs or 2-3 case study template slides
2. Explain the Solution
The bulk of your case study copy and presentation slides should focus on the provided solution(s). This is the time to speak at length about how the subject went from before to the glorious after.
Here are some writing prompts to help you articulate this better:
- State the subjectâs main objective and goals. What outcomes were they after?
- Explain the main solution(s) provided. What was done? Why this, but not that?
- Mention if they tried any alternatives. Why did those work? Why were you better?
This part may take the longest to write. Donât rush it and reiterate several times. Sprinkle in some powerful words and catchphrases to make your copy more compelling.
3. Collect Testimonials
Persuasive case studies feature the voice of customer (VoC) data â first-party testimonials and assessments of how well the solution works. These provide extra social proof and credibility to all the claims you are making.
So plan and schedule interviews with your subjects to collect their input and testimonials. Also, design your case study interview questions in a way that lets you obtain quantifiable results.
4. Package The Information in a Slide Deck
Once you have a rough first draft, try different business case templates and designs to see how these help structure all the available information.
As a rule of thumb, try to keep one big idea per slide. If you are talking about a solution, first present the general bullet points. Then give each solution a separate slide where youâll provide more context and perhaps share some quantifiable results.
For example, if you look at case study presentation examples from AWS like this one about Stripe , youâll notice that the slide deck has few texts and really focuses on the big picture, while the speaker provides extra context.
Need some extra case study presentation design help? Download our Business Case Study PowerPoint template with 100% editable slides.
Your spoken presentation (and public speaking skills ) are equally if not more important than the case study copy and slide deck. To make a strong case study, follow these quick techniques. Alternatively, you can learn how to present a business case here.
Focus on Telling a Great Story
A case study is a story of overcoming a challenge, and achieving something grand. Your delivery should reflect that. Step away from the standard âfeatures => benefitsâ sales formula. Instead, make your customer the hero of the study. Describe the road they went through and how youâve helped them succeed.
The premises of your story can be as simple as:
- Help with overcoming a hurdle
- Gaining major impact
- Reaching a new milestone
- Solving a persisting issue no one else code
Based on the above, create a clear story arc. Show where your hero started. Then explain what type of journey they went through. Inject some emotions into the mix to make your narrative more relatable and memorable.
Experiment with Copywriting Formulas
Copywriting is the art and science of organizing words into compelling and persuasive combinations that help readers retain the right ideas.
To ensure that the audience retains the right takeaways from your case study presentation, you can try using some of the classic copywriting formulas to structure your delivery. These include:
- AIDCA â short for A ttention, I nterest, D esire, C onviction, and A ction. First, grab the audienceâs attention by addressing the major problem. Next, pique their interest with some teaser facts. Spark their desire by showing that you know the right way out. Then, show a conviction that you know how to solve the issueâfinally, prompt follow-up action such as contacting you to learn more.
- PADS â is short for Problem, Agitation, Discredit, or Solution. This is more of a sales approach to case study narration. Again, you start with a problem, agitate about its importance, discredit why other solutions wonât cut it, and then present your option.
- 4Ps â short for P roblem, P romise, P roof, P roposal. This is a middle-ground option that prioritizes storytelling over hard pitches. Set the scene first with a problem. Then make a promise of how you can solve it. Show proof in the form of numbers, testimonials, and different scenarios. Round it up with a proposal for getting the same outcomes.
Take an Emotion-Inducing Perspective
The key to building a strong rapport with an audience is showing that you are one of them and fully understand what they are going through.
One of the ways to build this connection is by speaking from an emotion-inducing perspective. This is best illustrated with an example:
- A business owner went to the bank
- A business owner came into a bank branch
In the second case, the wording prompts listeners to paint a mental picture from the perspective of the bank employees â a role youâd like them to relate to. By placing your audience in the right visual perspective, you can make them more receptive to your pitches.
One common question that arises when creating a case study is determining its length. The length of a case study can vary depending on the complexity of the problem and the level of detail you want to provide. Here are some general guidelines to help you decide how long your case study should be:
- Concise and Informative: A good case study should be concise and to the point. Avoid unnecessary fluff and filler content. Focus on providing valuable information and insights.
- Tailor to Your Audience: Consider your target audience when deciding the length. If you’re presenting to a technical audience, you might include more in-depth technical details. For a non-technical audience, keep it more high-level and accessible.
- Cover Key Points: Ensure that your case study covers the key points effectively. These include the problem statement, the solution, and the outcomes. Provide enough information for the reader to understand the context and the significance of your case.
- Visuals: Visual elements such as charts, graphs, images, and diagrams can help convey information more effectively. Use visuals to supplement your written content and make complex information easier to understand.
- Engagement: Keep your audience engaged. A case study that is too long may lose the reader’s interest. Make sure the content is engaging and holds the reader’s attention throughout.
- Consider the Format: Depending on the format you choose (e.g., written document, presentation, video), the ideal length may vary. For written case studies, aim for a length that can be easily read in one sitting.
In general, a written case study for business purposes often falls in the range of 1,000 to 2,000 words. However, this is not a strict rule, and the length can be shorter or longer based on the factors mentioned above.
Our brain is wired to process images much faster than text. So when you are presenting a case study, always look for an opportunity to tie in some illustrations such as:
- A product demo/preview
- Processes chart
- Call-out quotes or numbers
- Custom illustrations or graphics
- Customer or team headshots
Use icons to minimize the volume of text. Also, opt for readable fonts that can look good in a smaller size too.
To better understand how to create an effective business case study, let’s explore some examples of successful case studies:
Apple Inc.: Apple’s case study on the launch of the iPhone is a classic example. It covers the problem of a changing mobile phone market, the innovative solution (the iPhone), and the outstanding outcomes, such as market dominance and increased revenue.
Tesla, Inc.: Tesla’s case study on electric vehicles and sustainable transportation is another compelling example. It addresses the problem of environmental concerns and the need for sustainable transportation solutions. The case study highlights Tesla’s electric cars as the solution and showcases the positive impact on reducing carbon emissions.
Amazon.com: Amazon’s case study on customer-centricity is a great illustration of how the company transformed the e-commerce industry. It discusses the problem of customer dissatisfaction with traditional retail, Amazon’s customer-focused approach as the solution, and the remarkable outcomes in terms of customer loyalty and market growth.
Coca-Cola: Coca-Cola’s case study on brand evolution is a valuable example. It outlines the challenge of adapting to changing consumer preferences and demographics. The case study demonstrates how Coca-Cola continually reinvented its brand to stay relevant and succeed in the global market.
Airbnb: Airbnb’s case study on the sharing economy is an intriguing example. It addresses the problem of travelers seeking unique and affordable accommodations. The case study presents Airbnb’s platform as the solution and highlights its impact on the hospitality industry and the sharing economy.
These examples showcase the diversity of case studies in the business world and how they effectively communicate problems, solutions, and outcomes. When creating your own business case study, use these examples as inspiration and tailor your approach to your specific industry and target audience.
Finally, practice your case study presentation several times â solo and together with your team â to collect feedback and make last-minute refinements!
1. Business Case Study PowerPoint Template
To efficiently create a Business Case Study it’s important to ask all the right questions and document everything necessary, therefore this PowerPoint Template will provide all the sections you need.
Use This Template
2. Medical Case Study PowerPoint Template
3. Medical Infographics PowerPoint Templates
4. Success Story PowerPoint Template
5. Detective Research PowerPoint Template
6. Animated Clinical Study PowerPoint Templates
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9 Creative Case Study Presentation Examples & Templates
Learn from proven case study presentation examples and best practices how to get creative, stand out, engage your audience, excite action, and drive results.
9 minute read
helped business professionals at:
Short answer
What makes a good case study presentation?
A good case study presentation has an engaging story, a clear structure, real data, visual aids, client testimonials, and a strong call to action. It informs and inspires, making the audience believe they can achieve similar results.
Dull case studies can cost you clients.
A boring case study presentation doesn't just risk putting your audience to sleep—it can actuallyl ead to lost sales and missed opportunities.
When your case study fails to inspire, it's your bottom line that suffers.
Interactive elements are the secret sauce for successful case study presentations.
They not only increase reader engagement by 22% but also lead to a whopping 41% more decks being read fully , proving that the winning deck is not a monologue but a conversation that involves the reader.
Let me show you shape your case studies into compelling narratives that hook your audience and drive revenue.
Let’s go!
How to create a case study presentation that drives results?
Crafting a case study presentation that truly drives results is about more than just data—it's about storytelling, engagement, and leading your audience down the sales funnel.
Here's how you can do it:
Tell a story: Each case study should follow a narrative arc. Start with the problem, introduce your solution, and showcase the results. Make it compelling and relatable.
Leverage data: Hard numbers build credibility. Use them to highlight your successes and reinforce your points.
Use visuals: Images, infographics, and videos can enhance engagement, making complex information more digestible and memorable.
Add interactive elements: Make your presentation a two-way journey. Tools like tabs and live data calculators can increase time spent on your deck by 22% and the number of full reads by 41% .
Finish with a strong call-to-action: Every good story needs a conclusion. Encourage your audience to take the next step in their buyer journey with a clear, persuasive call-to-action.
Visual representation of what a case study presentation should do:
How to write an engaging case study presentation?
Creating an engaging case study presentation involves strategic storytelling, understanding your audience, and sparking action.
In this guide, I'll cover the essentials to help you write a compelling narrative that drives results.
What is the best format for a business case study presentation?
4 best format types for a business case study presentation:
- Problem-solution case study
- Before-and-after case study
- Success story case study
- Interview style case study
Each style has unique strengths, so pick one that aligns best with your story and audience. For a deeper dive into these formats, check out our detailed blog post on case study format types .
What to include in a case study presentation?
An effective case study presentation contains 7 key elements:
- Introduction
- Company overview
- The problem/challenge
- Your solution
- Customer quotes/testimonials
To learn more about what should go in each of these sections, check out our post on what is a case study .
How to motivate readers to take action?
Based on BJ Fogg's behavior model , successful motivation involves 3 components:
This is all about highlighting the benefits. Paint a vivid picture of the transformative results achieved using your solution.
Use compelling data and emotive testimonials to amplify the desire for similar outcomes, therefore boosting your audience's motivation.
This refers to making the desired action easy to perform. Show how straightforward it is to implement your solution.
Use clear language, break down complex ideas, and reinforce the message that success is not just possible, but also readily achievable with your offering.
This is your powerful call-to-action (CTA), the spark that nudges your audience to take the next step. Ensure your CTA is clear, direct, and tied into the compelling narrative you've built.
It should leave your audience with no doubt about what to do next and why they should do it.
Here’s how you can do it with Storydoc:
How to adapt your presentation for your specific audience?
Every audience is different, and a successful case study presentation speaks directly to its audience's needs, concerns, and desires.
Understanding your audience is crucial. This involves researching their pain points, their industry jargon, their ambitions, and their fears.
Then, tailor your presentation accordingly. Highlight how your solution addresses their specific problems. Use language and examples they're familiar with. Show them how your product or service can help them reach their goals.
A case study presentation that's tailor-made for its audience is not just a presentation—it's a conversation that resonates, engages, and convinces.
How to design a great case study presentation?
A powerful case study presentation is not only about the story you weave—it's about the visual journey you create.
Let's navigate through the design strategies that can transform your case study presentation into a gripping narrative.
Add interactive elements
Static design has long been the traditional route for case study presentations—linear, unchanging, a one-size-fits-all solution.
However, this has been a losing approach for a while now. Static content is killing engagement, but interactive design will bring it back to life.
It invites your audience into an evolving, immersive experience, transforming them from passive onlookers into active participants.
Which of these presentations would you prefer to read?
Use narrated content design (scrollytelling)
Scrollytelling combines the best of scrolling and storytelling. This innovative approach offers an interactive narrated journey controlled with a simple scroll.
It lets you break down complex content into manageable chunks and empowers your audience to control their reading pace.
To make this content experience available to everyone, our founder, Itai Amoza, collaborated with visualization scientist Prof. Steven Franconeri to incorporate scrollytelling into Storydoc.
This collaboration led to specialized storytelling slides that simplify content and enhance engagement (which you can find and use in Storydoc).
Here’s an example of Storydoc scrollytelling:
Bring your case study to life with multimedia
Multimedia brings a dynamic dimension to your presentation. Video testimonials lend authenticity and human connection. Podcast interviews add depth and diversity, while live graphs offer a visually captivating way to represent data.
Each media type contributes to a richer, more immersive narrative that keeps your audience engaged from beginning to end. You can upload your own interactive elements or check stock image sites like Shutterstock, Adobe Stock, iStock, and many more. For example, Icons8, one of the largest hubs for icons, illustrations, and photos, offers both static and animated options for almost all its graphics, whether you need profile icons to represent different user personas or data report illustrations to show your findings.
Prioritize mobile-friendly design
In an increasingly mobile world, design must adapt. Avoid traditional, non-responsive formats like PPT, PDF, and Word.
Opt for a mobile-optimized design that guarantees your presentation is always at its best, regardless of the device.
As a significant chunk of case studies are opened on mobile, this ensures wider accessibility and improved user experience , demonstrating respect for your audience's viewing preferences.
Here’s what a traditional static presentation looks like as opposed to a responsive deck:
Streamline the design process
Creating a case study presentation usually involves wrestling with an AI website builder .
It's a dance that often needs several partners - designers to make it look good, developers to make it work smoothly, and plenty of time to bring it all together.
Building, changing, and personalizing your case study can feel like you're climbing a mountain when all you need is to cross a hill.
By switching to Storydoc’s interactive case study creator , you won’t need a tech guru or a design whizz, just your own creativity.
You’ll be able to create a customized, interactive presentation for tailored use in sales prospecting or wherever you need it without the headache of mobilizing your entire team.
Storydoc will automatically adjust any change to your presentation layout, so you can’t break the design even if you tried.
Case study presentation examples that engage readers
Let’s take a deep dive into some standout case studies.
These examples go beyond just sharing information – they're all about captivating and inspiring readers. So, let’s jump in and uncover the secret behind what makes them so effective.
What makes this deck great:
- A video on the cover slide will cause 32% more people to interact with your case study .
- The running numbers slide allows you to present the key results your solution delivered in an easily digestible way.
- The ability to include 2 smart CTAs gives readers the choice between learning more about your solution and booking a meeting with you directly.
Light mode case study
- The ‘read more’ button is perfect if you want to present a longer case without overloading readers with walls of text.
- The timeline slide lets you present your solution in the form of a compelling narrative.
- A combination of text-based and visual slides allows you to add context to the main insights.
Marketing case study
- Tiered slides are perfect for presenting multiple features of your solution, particularly if they’re relevant to several use cases.
- Easily customizable slides allow you to personalize your case study to specific prospects’ needs and pain points.
- The ability to embed videos makes it possible to show your solution in action instead of trying to describe it purely with words.
UX case study
- Various data visualization components let you present hard data in a way that’s easier to understand and follow.
- The option to hide text under a 'Read more' button is great if you want to include research findings or present a longer case study.
- Content segmented using tabs , which is perfect if you want to describe different user research methodologies without overwhelming your audience.
Business case study
- Library of data visualization elements to choose from comes in handy for more data-heavy case studies.
- Ready-to-use graphics and images which can easily be replaced using our AI assistant or your own files.
- Information on the average reading time in the cover reduces bounce rate by 24% .
Modern case study
- Dynamic variables let you personalize your deck at scale in just a few clicks.
- Logo placeholder that can easily be replaced with your prospect's logo for an added personal touch.
- Several text placeholders that can be tweaked to perfection with the help of our AI assistant to truly drive your message home.
Real estate case study
- Plenty of image placeholders that can be easily edited in a couple of clicks to let you show photos of your most important listings.
- Data visualization components can be used to present real estate comps or the value of your listings for a specific time period, making it ideal for any real estate platform .
- Interactive slides guide your readers through a captivating storyline, which is key in a highly-visual industry like real estate .
Medical case study
- Image and video placeholders are perfect for presenting your solution without relying on complex medical terminology.
- The ability to hide text under an accordion allows you to include research or clinical trial findings without overwhelming prospects with too much information.
- Clean interactive design stands out in a sea of old-school medical case studies, making your deck more memorable for prospective clients.
Dark mode case study
- The timeline slide is ideal for guiding readers through an attention-grabbing storyline or explaining complex processes.
- Dynamic layout with multiple image and video placeholders that can be replaced in a few clicks to best reflect the nature of your business.
- Testimonial slides that can easily be customized with quotes by your past customers to legitimize your solution in the eyes of prospects.
Grab a case study presentation template
Creating an effective case study presentation is not just about gathering data and organizing it in a document. You need to weave a narrative, create an impact, and most importantly, engage your reader.
So, why start from zero when interactive case study templates can take you halfway up?
Instead of wrestling with words and designs, pick a template that best suits your needs, and watch your data transform into an engaging and inspiring story.
Hi, I'm Dominika, Content Specialist at Storydoc. As a creative professional with experience in fashion, I'm here to show you how to amplify your brand message through the power of storytelling and eye-catching visuals.
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Organizing Your Social Sciences Research Assignments
- Annotated Bibliography
- Analyzing a Scholarly Journal Article
- Group Presentations
- Dealing with Nervousness
- Using Visual Aids
- Grading Someone Else's Paper
- Types of Structured Group Activities
- Group Project Survival Skills
- Leading a Class Discussion
- Multiple Book Review Essay
- Reviewing Collected Works
- Writing a Case Analysis Paper
- Writing a Case Study
- About Informed Consent
- Writing Field Notes
- Writing a Policy Memo
- Writing a Reflective Paper
- Writing a Research Proposal
- Generative AI and Writing
- Acknowledgments
A case study research paper examines a person, place, event, condition, phenomenon, or other type of subject of analysis in order to extrapolate key themes and results that help predict future trends, illuminate previously hidden issues that can be applied to practice, and/or provide a means for understanding an important research problem with greater clarity. A case study research paper usually examines a single subject of analysis, but case study papers can also be designed as a comparative investigation that shows relationships between two or more subjects. The methods used to study a case can rest within a quantitative, qualitative, or mixed-method investigative paradigm.
Case Studies. Writing@CSU. Colorado State University; Mills, Albert J. , Gabrielle Durepos, and Eiden Wiebe, editors. Encyclopedia of Case Study Research . Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2010 ; “What is a Case Study?” In Swanborn, Peter G. Case Study Research: What, Why and How? London: SAGE, 2010.
How to Approach Writing a Case Study Research Paper
General information about how to choose a topic to investigate can be found under the " Choosing a Research Problem " tab in the Organizing Your Social Sciences Research Paper writing guide. Review this page because it may help you identify a subject of analysis that can be investigated using a case study design.
However, identifying a case to investigate involves more than choosing the research problem . A case study encompasses a problem contextualized around the application of in-depth analysis, interpretation, and discussion, often resulting in specific recommendations for action or for improving existing conditions. As Seawright and Gerring note, practical considerations such as time and access to information can influence case selection, but these issues should not be the sole factors used in describing the methodological justification for identifying a particular case to study. Given this, selecting a case includes considering the following:
- The case represents an unusual or atypical example of a research problem that requires more in-depth analysis? Cases often represent a topic that rests on the fringes of prior investigations because the case may provide new ways of understanding the research problem. For example, if the research problem is to identify strategies to improve policies that support girl's access to secondary education in predominantly Muslim nations, you could consider using Azerbaijan as a case study rather than selecting a more obvious nation in the Middle East. Doing so may reveal important new insights into recommending how governments in other predominantly Muslim nations can formulate policies that support improved access to education for girls.
- The case provides important insight or illuminate a previously hidden problem? In-depth analysis of a case can be based on the hypothesis that the case study will reveal trends or issues that have not been exposed in prior research or will reveal new and important implications for practice. For example, anecdotal evidence may suggest drug use among homeless veterans is related to their patterns of travel throughout the day. Assuming prior studies have not looked at individual travel choices as a way to study access to illicit drug use, a case study that observes a homeless veteran could reveal how issues of personal mobility choices facilitate regular access to illicit drugs. Note that it is important to conduct a thorough literature review to ensure that your assumption about the need to reveal new insights or previously hidden problems is valid and evidence-based.
- The case challenges and offers a counter-point to prevailing assumptions? Over time, research on any given topic can fall into a trap of developing assumptions based on outdated studies that are still applied to new or changing conditions or the idea that something should simply be accepted as "common sense," even though the issue has not been thoroughly tested in current practice. A case study analysis may offer an opportunity to gather evidence that challenges prevailing assumptions about a research problem and provide a new set of recommendations applied to practice that have not been tested previously. For example, perhaps there has been a long practice among scholars to apply a particular theory in explaining the relationship between two subjects of analysis. Your case could challenge this assumption by applying an innovative theoretical framework [perhaps borrowed from another discipline] to explore whether this approach offers new ways of understanding the research problem. Taking a contrarian stance is one of the most important ways that new knowledge and understanding develops from existing literature.
- The case provides an opportunity to pursue action leading to the resolution of a problem? Another way to think about choosing a case to study is to consider how the results from investigating a particular case may result in findings that reveal ways in which to resolve an existing or emerging problem. For example, studying the case of an unforeseen incident, such as a fatal accident at a railroad crossing, can reveal hidden issues that could be applied to preventative measures that contribute to reducing the chance of accidents in the future. In this example, a case study investigating the accident could lead to a better understanding of where to strategically locate additional signals at other railroad crossings so as to better warn drivers of an approaching train, particularly when visibility is hindered by heavy rain, fog, or at night.
- The case offers a new direction in future research? A case study can be used as a tool for an exploratory investigation that highlights the need for further research about the problem. A case can be used when there are few studies that help predict an outcome or that establish a clear understanding about how best to proceed in addressing a problem. For example, after conducting a thorough literature review [very important!], you discover that little research exists showing the ways in which women contribute to promoting water conservation in rural communities of east central Africa. A case study of how women contribute to saving water in a rural village of Uganda can lay the foundation for understanding the need for more thorough research that documents how women in their roles as cooks and family caregivers think about water as a valuable resource within their community. This example of a case study could also point to the need for scholars to build new theoretical frameworks around the topic [e.g., applying feminist theories of work and family to the issue of water conservation].
Eisenhardt, Kathleen M. “Building Theories from Case Study Research.” Academy of Management Review 14 (October 1989): 532-550; Emmel, Nick. Sampling and Choosing Cases in Qualitative Research: A Realist Approach . Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2013; Gerring, John. “What Is a Case Study and What Is It Good for?” American Political Science Review 98 (May 2004): 341-354; Mills, Albert J. , Gabrielle Durepos, and Eiden Wiebe, editors. Encyclopedia of Case Study Research . Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2010; Seawright, Jason and John Gerring. "Case Selection Techniques in Case Study Research." Political Research Quarterly 61 (June 2008): 294-308.
Structure and Writing Style
The purpose of a paper in the social sciences designed around a case study is to thoroughly investigate a subject of analysis in order to reveal a new understanding about the research problem and, in so doing, contributing new knowledge to what is already known from previous studies. In applied social sciences disciplines [e.g., education, social work, public administration, etc.], case studies may also be used to reveal best practices, highlight key programs, or investigate interesting aspects of professional work.
In general, the structure of a case study research paper is not all that different from a standard college-level research paper. However, there are subtle differences you should be aware of. Here are the key elements to organizing and writing a case study research paper.
I. Introduction
As with any research paper, your introduction should serve as a roadmap for your readers to ascertain the scope and purpose of your study . The introduction to a case study research paper, however, should not only describe the research problem and its significance, but you should also succinctly describe why the case is being used and how it relates to addressing the problem. The two elements should be linked. With this in mind, a good introduction answers these four questions:
- What is being studied? Describe the research problem and describe the subject of analysis [the case] you have chosen to address the problem. Explain how they are linked and what elements of the case will help to expand knowledge and understanding about the problem.
- Why is this topic important to investigate? Describe the significance of the research problem and state why a case study design and the subject of analysis that the paper is designed around is appropriate in addressing the problem.
- What did we know about this topic before I did this study? Provide background that helps lead the reader into the more in-depth literature review to follow. If applicable, summarize prior case study research applied to the research problem and why it fails to adequately address the problem. Describe why your case will be useful. If no prior case studies have been used to address the research problem, explain why you have selected this subject of analysis.
- How will this study advance new knowledge or new ways of understanding? Explain why your case study will be suitable in helping to expand knowledge and understanding about the research problem.
Each of these questions should be addressed in no more than a few paragraphs. Exceptions to this can be when you are addressing a complex research problem or subject of analysis that requires more in-depth background information.
II. Literature Review
The literature review for a case study research paper is generally structured the same as it is for any college-level research paper. The difference, however, is that the literature review is focused on providing background information and enabling historical interpretation of the subject of analysis in relation to the research problem the case is intended to address . This includes synthesizing studies that help to:
- Place relevant works in the context of their contribution to understanding the case study being investigated . This would involve summarizing studies that have used a similar subject of analysis to investigate the research problem. If there is literature using the same or a very similar case to study, you need to explain why duplicating past research is important [e.g., conditions have changed; prior studies were conducted long ago, etc.].
- Describe the relationship each work has to the others under consideration that informs the reader why this case is applicable . Your literature review should include a description of any works that support using the case to investigate the research problem and the underlying research questions.
- Identify new ways to interpret prior research using the case study . If applicable, review any research that has examined the research problem using a different research design. Explain how your use of a case study design may reveal new knowledge or a new perspective or that can redirect research in an important new direction.
- Resolve conflicts amongst seemingly contradictory previous studies . This refers to synthesizing any literature that points to unresolved issues of concern about the research problem and describing how the subject of analysis that forms the case study can help resolve these existing contradictions.
- Point the way in fulfilling a need for additional research . Your review should examine any literature that lays a foundation for understanding why your case study design and the subject of analysis around which you have designed your study may reveal a new way of approaching the research problem or offer a perspective that points to the need for additional research.
- Expose any gaps that exist in the literature that the case study could help to fill . Summarize any literature that not only shows how your subject of analysis contributes to understanding the research problem, but how your case contributes to a new way of understanding the problem that prior research has failed to do.
- Locate your own research within the context of existing literature [very important!] . Collectively, your literature review should always place your case study within the larger domain of prior research about the problem. The overarching purpose of reviewing pertinent literature in a case study paper is to demonstrate that you have thoroughly identified and synthesized prior studies in relation to explaining the relevance of the case in addressing the research problem.
III. Method
In this section, you explain why you selected a particular case [i.e., subject of analysis] and the strategy you used to identify and ultimately decide that your case was appropriate in addressing the research problem. The way you describe the methods used varies depending on the type of subject of analysis that constitutes your case study.
If your subject of analysis is an incident or event . In the social and behavioral sciences, the event or incident that represents the case to be studied is usually bounded by time and place, with a clear beginning and end and with an identifiable location or position relative to its surroundings. The subject of analysis can be a rare or critical event or it can focus on a typical or regular event. The purpose of studying a rare event is to illuminate new ways of thinking about the broader research problem or to test a hypothesis. Critical incident case studies must describe the method by which you identified the event and explain the process by which you determined the validity of this case to inform broader perspectives about the research problem or to reveal new findings. However, the event does not have to be a rare or uniquely significant to support new thinking about the research problem or to challenge an existing hypothesis. For example, Walo, Bull, and Breen conducted a case study to identify and evaluate the direct and indirect economic benefits and costs of a local sports event in the City of Lismore, New South Wales, Australia. The purpose of their study was to provide new insights from measuring the impact of a typical local sports event that prior studies could not measure well because they focused on large "mega-events." Whether the event is rare or not, the methods section should include an explanation of the following characteristics of the event: a) when did it take place; b) what were the underlying circumstances leading to the event; and, c) what were the consequences of the event in relation to the research problem.
If your subject of analysis is a person. Explain why you selected this particular individual to be studied and describe what experiences they have had that provide an opportunity to advance new understandings about the research problem. Mention any background about this person which might help the reader understand the significance of their experiences that make them worthy of study. This includes describing the relationships this person has had with other people, institutions, and/or events that support using them as the subject for a case study research paper. It is particularly important to differentiate the person as the subject of analysis from others and to succinctly explain how the person relates to examining the research problem [e.g., why is one politician in a particular local election used to show an increase in voter turnout from any other candidate running in the election]. Note that these issues apply to a specific group of people used as a case study unit of analysis [e.g., a classroom of students].
If your subject of analysis is a place. In general, a case study that investigates a place suggests a subject of analysis that is unique or special in some way and that this uniqueness can be used to build new understanding or knowledge about the research problem. A case study of a place must not only describe its various attributes relevant to the research problem [e.g., physical, social, historical, cultural, economic, political], but you must state the method by which you determined that this place will illuminate new understandings about the research problem. It is also important to articulate why a particular place as the case for study is being used if similar places also exist [i.e., if you are studying patterns of homeless encampments of veterans in open spaces, explain why you are studying Echo Park in Los Angeles rather than Griffith Park?]. If applicable, describe what type of human activity involving this place makes it a good choice to study [e.g., prior research suggests Echo Park has more homeless veterans].
If your subject of analysis is a phenomenon. A phenomenon refers to a fact, occurrence, or circumstance that can be studied or observed but with the cause or explanation to be in question. In this sense, a phenomenon that forms your subject of analysis can encompass anything that can be observed or presumed to exist but is not fully understood. In the social and behavioral sciences, the case usually focuses on human interaction within a complex physical, social, economic, cultural, or political system. For example, the phenomenon could be the observation that many vehicles used by ISIS fighters are small trucks with English language advertisements on them. The research problem could be that ISIS fighters are difficult to combat because they are highly mobile. The research questions could be how and by what means are these vehicles used by ISIS being supplied to the militants and how might supply lines to these vehicles be cut off? How might knowing the suppliers of these trucks reveal larger networks of collaborators and financial support? A case study of a phenomenon most often encompasses an in-depth analysis of a cause and effect that is grounded in an interactive relationship between people and their environment in some way.
NOTE: The choice of the case or set of cases to study cannot appear random. Evidence that supports the method by which you identified and chose your subject of analysis should clearly support investigation of the research problem and linked to key findings from your literature review. Be sure to cite any studies that helped you determine that the case you chose was appropriate for examining the problem.
IV. Discussion
The main elements of your discussion section are generally the same as any research paper, but centered around interpreting and drawing conclusions about the key findings from your analysis of the case study. Note that a general social sciences research paper may contain a separate section to report findings. However, in a paper designed around a case study, it is common to combine a description of the results with the discussion about their implications. The objectives of your discussion section should include the following:
Reiterate the Research Problem/State the Major Findings Briefly reiterate the research problem you are investigating and explain why the subject of analysis around which you designed the case study were used. You should then describe the findings revealed from your study of the case using direct, declarative, and succinct proclamation of the study results. Highlight any findings that were unexpected or especially profound.
Explain the Meaning of the Findings and Why They are Important Systematically explain the meaning of your case study findings and why you believe they are important. Begin this part of the section by repeating what you consider to be your most important or surprising finding first, then systematically review each finding. Be sure to thoroughly extrapolate what your analysis of the case can tell the reader about situations or conditions beyond the actual case that was studied while, at the same time, being careful not to misconstrue or conflate a finding that undermines the external validity of your conclusions.
Relate the Findings to Similar Studies No study in the social sciences is so novel or possesses such a restricted focus that it has absolutely no relation to previously published research. The discussion section should relate your case study results to those found in other studies, particularly if questions raised from prior studies served as the motivation for choosing your subject of analysis. This is important because comparing and contrasting the findings of other studies helps support the overall importance of your results and it highlights how and in what ways your case study design and the subject of analysis differs from prior research about the topic.
Consider Alternative Explanations of the Findings Remember that the purpose of social science research is to discover and not to prove. When writing the discussion section, you should carefully consider all possible explanations revealed by the case study results, rather than just those that fit your hypothesis or prior assumptions and biases. Be alert to what the in-depth analysis of the case may reveal about the research problem, including offering a contrarian perspective to what scholars have stated in prior research if that is how the findings can be interpreted from your case.
Acknowledge the Study's Limitations You can state the study's limitations in the conclusion section of your paper but describing the limitations of your subject of analysis in the discussion section provides an opportunity to identify the limitations and explain why they are not significant. This part of the discussion section should also note any unanswered questions or issues your case study could not address. More detailed information about how to document any limitations to your research can be found here .
Suggest Areas for Further Research Although your case study may offer important insights about the research problem, there are likely additional questions related to the problem that remain unanswered or findings that unexpectedly revealed themselves as a result of your in-depth analysis of the case. Be sure that the recommendations for further research are linked to the research problem and that you explain why your recommendations are valid in other contexts and based on the original assumptions of your study.
V. Conclusion
As with any research paper, you should summarize your conclusion in clear, simple language; emphasize how the findings from your case study differs from or supports prior research and why. Do not simply reiterate the discussion section. Provide a synthesis of key findings presented in the paper to show how these converge to address the research problem. If you haven't already done so in the discussion section, be sure to document the limitations of your case study and any need for further research.
The function of your paper's conclusion is to: 1) reiterate the main argument supported by the findings from your case study; 2) state clearly the context, background, and necessity of pursuing the research problem using a case study design in relation to an issue, controversy, or a gap found from reviewing the literature; and, 3) provide a place to persuasively and succinctly restate the significance of your research problem, given that the reader has now been presented with in-depth information about the topic.
Consider the following points to help ensure your conclusion is appropriate:
- If the argument or purpose of your paper is complex, you may need to summarize these points for your reader.
- If prior to your conclusion, you have not yet explained the significance of your findings or if you are proceeding inductively, use the conclusion of your paper to describe your main points and explain their significance.
- Move from a detailed to a general level of consideration of the case study's findings that returns the topic to the context provided by the introduction or within a new context that emerges from your case study findings.
Note that, depending on the discipline you are writing in or the preferences of your professor, the concluding paragraph may contain your final reflections on the evidence presented as it applies to practice or on the essay's central research problem. However, the nature of being introspective about the subject of analysis you have investigated will depend on whether you are explicitly asked to express your observations in this way.
Problems to Avoid
Overgeneralization One of the goals of a case study is to lay a foundation for understanding broader trends and issues applied to similar circumstances. However, be careful when drawing conclusions from your case study. They must be evidence-based and grounded in the results of the study; otherwise, it is merely speculation. Looking at a prior example, it would be incorrect to state that a factor in improving girls access to education in Azerbaijan and the policy implications this may have for improving access in other Muslim nations is due to girls access to social media if there is no documentary evidence from your case study to indicate this. There may be anecdotal evidence that retention rates were better for girls who were engaged with social media, but this observation would only point to the need for further research and would not be a definitive finding if this was not a part of your original research agenda.
Failure to Document Limitations No case is going to reveal all that needs to be understood about a research problem. Therefore, just as you have to clearly state the limitations of a general research study , you must describe the specific limitations inherent in the subject of analysis. For example, the case of studying how women conceptualize the need for water conservation in a village in Uganda could have limited application in other cultural contexts or in areas where fresh water from rivers or lakes is plentiful and, therefore, conservation is understood more in terms of managing access rather than preserving access to a scarce resource.
Failure to Extrapolate All Possible Implications Just as you don't want to over-generalize from your case study findings, you also have to be thorough in the consideration of all possible outcomes or recommendations derived from your findings. If you do not, your reader may question the validity of your analysis, particularly if you failed to document an obvious outcome from your case study research. For example, in the case of studying the accident at the railroad crossing to evaluate where and what types of warning signals should be located, you failed to take into consideration speed limit signage as well as warning signals. When designing your case study, be sure you have thoroughly addressed all aspects of the problem and do not leave gaps in your analysis that leave the reader questioning the results.
Case Studies. Writing@CSU. Colorado State University; Gerring, John. Case Study Research: Principles and Practices . New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007; Merriam, Sharan B. Qualitative Research and Case Study Applications in Education . Rev. ed. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 1998; Miller, Lisa L. “The Use of Case Studies in Law and Social Science Research.” Annual Review of Law and Social Science 14 (2018): TBD; Mills, Albert J., Gabrielle Durepos, and Eiden Wiebe, editors. Encyclopedia of Case Study Research . Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2010; Putney, LeAnn Grogan. "Case Study." In Encyclopedia of Research Design , Neil J. Salkind, editor. (Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2010), pp. 116-120; Simons, Helen. Case Study Research in Practice . London: SAGE Publications, 2009; Kratochwill, Thomas R. and Joel R. Levin, editors. Single-Case Research Design and Analysis: New Development for Psychology and Education . Hilldsale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1992; Swanborn, Peter G. Case Study Research: What, Why and How? London : SAGE, 2010; Yin, Robert K. Case Study Research: Design and Methods . 6th edition. Los Angeles, CA, SAGE Publications, 2014; Walo, Maree, Adrian Bull, and Helen Breen. “Achieving Economic Benefits at Local Events: A Case Study of a Local Sports Event.” Festival Management and Event Tourism 4 (1996): 95-106.
Writing Tip
At Least Five Misconceptions about Case Study Research
Social science case studies are often perceived as limited in their ability to create new knowledge because they are not randomly selected and findings cannot be generalized to larger populations. Flyvbjerg examines five misunderstandings about case study research and systematically "corrects" each one. To quote, these are:
Misunderstanding 1 : General, theoretical [context-independent] knowledge is more valuable than concrete, practical [context-dependent] knowledge. Misunderstanding 2 : One cannot generalize on the basis of an individual case; therefore, the case study cannot contribute to scientific development. Misunderstanding 3 : The case study is most useful for generating hypotheses; that is, in the first stage of a total research process, whereas other methods are more suitable for hypotheses testing and theory building. Misunderstanding 4 : The case study contains a bias toward verification, that is, a tendency to confirm the researcher’s preconceived notions. Misunderstanding 5 : It is often difficult to summarize and develop general propositions and theories on the basis of specific case studies [p. 221].
While writing your paper, think introspectively about how you addressed these misconceptions because to do so can help you strengthen the validity and reliability of your research by clarifying issues of case selection, the testing and challenging of existing assumptions, the interpretation of key findings, and the summation of case outcomes. Think of a case study research paper as a complete, in-depth narrative about the specific properties and key characteristics of your subject of analysis applied to the research problem.
Flyvbjerg, Bent. “Five Misunderstandings About Case-Study Research.” Qualitative Inquiry 12 (April 2006): 219-245.
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Writing A Case Study
Case Study Format
Simple Case Study Format for Students to Follow
People also read
A Complete Case Study Writing Guide With Examples
Understand the Types of Case Study Here
Brilliant Case Study Examples and Templates For Your Help
Having trouble making your case studies stand out? Finding it hard to organise your story? You're not alone!
Many students struggle with case study writing !
Imagine spending a lot of time on your case studies, but they don't grab your reader's interest. But don't worry!
In this guide, we will go step by step through case study formatting, along with practical tips to make your research stand out from the rest! By following our step-by-step approach, you can understand how to write a case study assignment well.
So, letâs get started!
Paper Due? Why Suffer? That's our Job!
- 1. How to Format a Case Study
- 2. Case Study Format Template
- 3. Case Study Format Examples
How to Format a Case Study
When it comes to crafting a compelling case study, understanding how to write case study format is key to presenting your research effectively.
If you are wondering how to make case study format, here are the elements to include in your case study paper format.
Create an interesting title for your work. Keep it simple and short.
Here you need to briefly elaborate on the accomplishment. What you have done and how you got there.
Write about the entire story in one paragraph followed by 2-3 bullet points to display the case study contents.
An introduction about what the case study is all about.
Describe the challenges of the customer prior to using your product or service. Explain the long-term goals or objectives that the customer set out to achieve.
In this 2-3 paragraph section describe how your product or service specifically benefited and helped achieve the goals. You can also use percentages to show your contributions.
In the relevant section of your case study, add 1-2 quotes and visuals to support the story you are telling. You can also use icons to summarise information and highlight areas of your research.
Figure out what a study means and look at where else we can learn more are really important for making academic work have a bigger impact.
Call to action is optional but adding one can encourage your readers to take some action after learning your work.
Case Study Formatting Guidelines
Effective case study formatting is essential to convey your insights clearly and engage your audience. Follow these guidelines to ensure your case study is well-organised and impactful:
- Opt for easily readable fonts like Arial, Calibri, or Times New Roman.
- Maintain a consistent font size, typically 12 points for the body text.
- Set line spacing to double-spaced for the entire document.
- Use bullet points for concise and scannable information presentation.
- Employ numbered lists for sequences of steps or chronological order of events.
- Bold or italicize key phrases to draw attention to critical points; use underline sparingly.
- Choose left, center, or justified alignment based on your overall design.
- Make your headings clear and organized so readers know what's important.
If you need further assistance, check our case study format for students pdf here:
How To Write A Case Study Pdf
Case Study Format Template
Case studies can be used for different purposes. In social sciences, it can help you understand the problems of other people.
In businesses, it can help you earn the trust of potential customers. But do you even know what are the different types of case study and how to write one?
Refer to this case study format pdf before you start writing your own document. This student case study format sample contains all the information you might need when gathering information for your case study.
Case Study Format Examples
Case study examples are the best way to learn the basic techniques for writing a great case study on your own.
Explore these short case study sample pdfs to gain insights into presenting your research cohesively:
For your help, we have also compiled real-life case study examples along with a format that you can refer to while writing your own.
APA Case Study Format
If you are asked to write a case study in APA format, keep in mind there are some specific requirements that you need to adhere to.
Here is a case study APA format example for you to learn how to format a case study.
Business Case Study Format
Business case studies can help businesses sell products or services to prospects. Here is a perfect example for you to learn how to write an impressive business case study.
Case Study Format For MBA Students
Case Study Format Nursing
Writing a great nursing case study can be tough. Thatâs why we have provided a case study format for nursing students to use as a guide in creating their work.
Refer to this family case study format example if you are writing a nursing case study for the first time.
Nursing Case Study Format
Harvard Business School Case Study Format
Looking for HBS style business case study? Here is one for you to read and take hints and ideas to prepare this type of case study like a professional.
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Medical Case Study Format
Writing medical case studies is helpful in medical practices as it gives a lot of information about different diseases. Look at this example and learn how to write a detailed medical case study.
Case Study Format Psychology
To study how the human mind works, you need a clear and organised method. Follow this easy psychology case study format to explore the details of psychological research:
Case Study Format Psychology
To sum it up, getting good at writing case studies means combining a clear structure, good storytelling, and smart presentation. If you follow the tips I've shared in this blog, you're on your way to crafting engaging stories that grab people's attention.
If your case study is causing problems, consider getting professional help. Our essay service is designed to help you secure top grades by meeting the criteria set by professors.
Our skilled writers are here to assist with any type of assignment you may have. Explore our case study writing service to relieve your stress and excel academically.
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Dr. Barbara is a highly experienced writer and author who holds a Ph.D. degree in public health from an Ivy League school. She has worked in the medical field for many years, conducting extensive research on various health topics. Her writing has been featured in several top-tier publications.
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Keep reading
How to Write a Case Study: Step-by-Step Guide with Examples
- October 7, 2022
Content Manager at SocialBee
Why is learning how to write a case study so important?
Well, because it provides your customers with social proof and supporting evidence of how effective your products and services are. Moreover, it eliminates the doubt that usually makes clients give up on their next purchase.
That is why today we are going to talk about the step-by-step process of writing a case study . We prepared five business case study examples guaranteed to inspire you throughout the process.
Let’s get started!
What Is a Case Study?
A case study is a piece of content that focuses on a case from your business history. It describes the problems your client faced and the solutions you used to help them succeed.
The goal of a writing case study is to promote your business , so your aim should be to put together a compelling story with evidence that backs up all your claims.
Case studies use real-life examples to show your clients the quality and effectiveness of your products and services. It’s a marketing tool that provides credibility and it helps your potential clients gain confidence in your brand.
Case studies can be structured in different formats:
- A written document
- An infographic
- A blog post
- A landing page
Case Study Benefits
A great case study makes your potential customers want to benefit from the products and services that helped your client overcome their challenges.Â
Here are the benefits of writing a case study:
- It is an affordable marketing practice
- It decreases the perceived risk of your potential clients
- It provides transparency
- It builds trust and credibility among prospective customers
- It makes your potential clients relate to the problem
- It provides your potential clients with a solution for their problems
How to Write a Case Study
Now that you know what a case study is, letâs get into the real reason why you are here â learning how to write an in-depth study.
Here is the step-by-step process of writing a case study:
- Identify the topic of your case study
- Start collaborating with a client
- Prepare questions for the interview
- Conduct the case study interview
- Structure your case studyÂ
- Make it visual
Step 1: Identify the Topic of Your Case Study
A case study starts with a strategy. Choosing what you want to write about should be closely related to your business needs. More specifically, what service or product do you want to promote through your case study?
Because case studies focus on client challenges, business solutions, and results, you have to carefully pick the case that your potential clients will relate to the most.Â
To communicate the benefits of your business, you should focus on a customer story that appeals to a specific segment of your audience . Consequently, you will target clients that relate to your customer example while providing a solution for their needs and pain points â your products and services.
Start by focusing all your research methods on identifying your customers’ main pain points. Then find examples of how your products or services have helped them overcome their challenges and achieve their goals .
Furthermore, to make sure you choose the best case study topic for your buyer persona , you should have a meeting with your sales/customer service team. Because they are in close contact with your customers, they will be able to tell you:
- The main challenges your clients faceÂ
- The services/products that bring them the best resultsÂ
These are the main two pieces of information you want your case study to focus on.
Step 2: Start Collaborating with a Client
With a clear topic in mind, you have to find the best fit for your case study.Â
However, that is not all. First, you must obtain the client’s permission. After all, your business story is theirs too.
So, craft an email to provide your client with an overview of the case study. This will help them make a decision.Â
Your message should include:
- The case study format (video, written, etc.) and where it will be published (blog, landing page , etc.)
- The topic of the document
- The timeline of the process
- The information that will be included
- The benefits they get as a result of this collaboration (brand exposure, backlinks)
Additionally, you can offer to schedule a call or a meeting to answer all their questions and curiosities and provide a means for clear and open communication.
Once you receive a positive response from your client, you can continue with the next step of the process: the actual interview.
PRO TIP: A great way to ensure a smooth and safe collaboration between you and your client is to sign a legal release form before writing the case study. This will allow you to use their information and protect you from issues that may occur in the future. Moreover, if the client is not comfortable with revealing their identity, you can always offer them anonymity.
Step 3: Prepare Questions for the Interview
Now that you have the subject for your case study, it’s time to write and organize your interview in several sets of questions.
Don’t forget that the whole structure of your case study is based on the information you get from your customer interview.
So pay attention to the way you phrase the questions. After all, your goal is to gather all the data you need to avoid creating a back-and-forth process that will consume your client’s time and energy.
To help you create the best questionnaire, we created a set of case study questions and organized them into different categories.Â
Here are the five main sections your case study interview should contain:
- The client’s background information
- The problem
- The start of the collaboration
- The solution
- The results
A. The Client’s Background Information
This part of the case study interview must give a comprehensive look into your customer’s business and allow your readers to get to know them better.
Here are some question ideas:
B. The Problem
Now it’s time to get into the reason your client came to you for assistance, the initial challenge that triggered your collaboration.
In this part of the interview process, you want to find out what made them ask for help and what was their situation before working with you.
You can ask your client the following case study questions:
C. The Start of the Collaboration
This part of the case study interview will focus on the process that made your collaboration possible. More specifically, how did your client research possible collaboration opportunities, and why they chose your business?Â
This information will not only be informative for your future customers but will also give you a behind-the-scenes look into their decision-making process.
D. The Solution
It’s time to get into one of the most significant parts of the case study interview â the solution. Here you should discuss how your services have helped their business recover from the problems mentioned before.
Make sure you ask the right questions so you can really paint the picture of a satisfied customer.
Have a look at these question examples:
E. The Results
The best proof you can give to your customers is through your results. And this is the perfect opportunity to let your actions speak for themselves.
Unlike the other marketing strategies you use to promote your business, the content is provided by your customer, not by your team. As a result, you end up with a project that is on another level of reliability.
Here is how you can ask your client about their results:
Step 4: Conduct the Case Study Interview
Now that you have a great set of case study questions, it’s time to put them to good use.
Decide on the type of interview you want to conduct: face-to-face, video call , or phone call. Then, consult with your client and set up a date and a time when you are both available.Â
It should be noted that during the interview it’s best to use a recording device for accuracy. Maybe you don’t have time to write down all the information, and you forget important details. Or maybe you want to be focused more on the conversational aspect of the interview, and you don’t want to write anything down while it’s happening.
Step 5: Structure Your Case StudyÂ
The hard part is over. Now itâs time to organize all the information you gathered in an appealing format. Letâs have a look at what your case study should contain.
Here are the components of a case study:
- Engaging title
- Executive summary
- Client descriptionÂ
- Introduction to the problem
- The problem-solving process
- Progress and results
A. Engaging Title
Putting that much work into a project, it would be a shame not to do your best to attract more readers. So, take into consideration that you only have a few seconds to catch your audience’s attention.Â
You can also use a headline analyzer to evaluate the performance of your title.
The best case study titles contain:
- Relevant keywords
- Customer pain points
- Clear result
Case study example :
B. Executive Summary
Your executive summary should include a thesis statement that sums up the main points of your case study. Therefore, it must be clear and concise. Moreover, to make your audience curious, you can add a statistic or a relevant piece of data that they might be interested in.
Here is what you should include in your executive summary:
- The business you are writing about (only if the clients wants to make themselves known)
- Relevant statistics
C. Client DescriptionÂ
Here is where you start to include the information you gained from your interview. Provide your readers with a clear picture of your client and create a context for your case study.
Take your clientâs answers from the âClient Backgroundâ section of the interview and present them in a more appealing format.
D. Introduction to the Problem
In this section, use your client’s interview answers to write about the problem they were experiencing before working with you.
Remember to be specific because you want your audience to fully understand the situation and relate to it. At the end of the day, the goal of the case study is to show your potential customers why they should buy your services/products.
E. The Problem-Solving Process
Next, explain how your service/product helped your client overcome their problems. Moreover, let your readers know how and why your service/product worked in their case.
In this part of the case study, you should summarize:Â
- The strategy used to solve the problem of your customerÂ
- The process of implementing the solutionÂ
F. Progress and Results
Tell your readers about what you and your client have achieved during your collaboration. Here you can include:
- Graphics about your progress
- Business objectives they have achieved
- Relevant metricsÂ
Step 6: Make It Visual
To elevate the information you have written for your audience, you must make sure it’s appealing and easy to read. And a great way to achieve that is to use visuals that add value to your case study.
Here are some design elements that will make emphasize your text:
- Graphic symbols that guide the eye (arrows, bullet points, checkmarks, etc.)
- Charts, graphics, tablesÂ
- Relevant screenshots from business reports
- The colors and fonts of your brand
- Your client’s logo
Platforms like Canva can really come in handy while designing your case study. Itâs easy to use and it has multiple free slide templates and graphics that save you time and money.
PRO TIP: Share Your Case Study Across All Marketing Channels
A case study is a perfect example of evergreen content that can be reshared endlessly on your social media channels .
Aside from helping you maintain a consistent posting schedule with ease, case study-related posts will increase your credibility and push leads toward the bottom of your marketing funnel . Other examples of social proof evergreen content are reviews, testimonials, and positive social media mentions.
To keep track of all your evergreen posts and have them scheduled on a continuous loop, use a social media tool like SocialBee.
Create evergreen content categories where all your posts get reposted regularly on your social media channels.Â
Start your 14-day trial today and start using SocialBee for free!
Aside from promoting your case study on social media, you can also feature it in your newsletter that you can create using email newsletter software , include it as a pop-up on your website, and even create a separate landing page dedicated to your customer study.
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Get to writing your own case study.
What do you think? Is writing a case study easier than you thought? We sure hope so.
Learning how to write a case study is a simple process once you understand the logical steps that go into it. So make sure you go over the guide a couple of times before you start documenting your customer success stories.
And remember that the goal of your case study is to attract more leads . Therefore you need to include tangible results and valuable details that will compel your audience to invest in your products and services.
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How to Write a Case Study | Examples & Methods
What is a case study?
A case study is a research approach that provides an in-depth examination of a particular phenomenon, event, organization, or individual. It involves analyzing and interpreting data to provide a comprehensive understanding of the subject under investigation.
Case studies can be used in various disciplines, including business, social sciences, medicine ( clinical case report ), engineering, and education. The aim of a case study is to provide an in-depth exploration of a specific subject, often with the goal of generating new insights into the phenomena being studied.
When to write a case study
Case studies are often written to present the findings of an empirical investigation or to illustrate a particular point or theory. They are useful when researchers want to gain an in-depth understanding of a specific phenomenon or when they are interested in exploring new areas of inquiry.
Case studies are also useful when the subject of the research is rare or when the research question is complex and requires an in-depth examination. A case study can be a good fit for a thesis or dissertation as well.
Case study examples
Below are some examples of case studies with their research questions:
How do small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in developing countries manage risks? | Risk management practices in SMEs in Ghana |
What factors contribute to successful organizational change? | A case study of a successful organizational change at Company X |
How do teachers use technology to enhance student learning in the classroom? | The impact of technology integration on student learning in a primary school in the United States |
How do companies adapt to changing consumer preferences? | Coca-Cola’s strategy to address the declining demand for sugary drinks |
What are the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the hospitality industry? | The impact of COVID-19 on the hotel industry in Europe |
How do organizations use social media for branding and marketing? | The role of Instagram in fashion brand promotion |
How do businesses address ethical issues in their operations? | A case study of Nike’s supply chain labor practices |
These examples demonstrate the diversity of research questions and case studies that can be explored. From studying small businesses in Ghana to the ethical issues in supply chains, case studies can be used to explore a wide range of phenomena.
Outlying cases vs. representative cases
An outlying case stud y refers to a case that is unusual or deviates significantly from the norm. An example of an outlying case study could be a small, family-run bed and breakfast that was able to survive and even thrive during the COVID-19 pandemic, while other larger hotels struggled to stay afloat.
On the other hand, a representative case study refers to a case that is typical of the phenomenon being studied. An example of a representative case study could be a hotel chain that operates in multiple locations that faced significant challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic, such as reduced demand for hotel rooms, increased safety and health protocols, and supply chain disruptions. The hotel chain case could be representative of the broader hospitality industry during the pandemic, and thus provides an insight into the typical challenges that businesses in the industry faced.
Steps for Writing a Case Study
As with any academic paper, writing a case study requires careful preparation and research before a single word of the document is ever written. Follow these basic steps to ensure that you donât miss any crucial details when composing your case study.
Step 1: Select a case to analyze
After you have developed your statement of the problem and research question , the first step in writing a case study is to select a case that is representative of the phenomenon being investigated or that provides an outlier. For example, if a researcher wants to explore the impact of COVID-19 on the hospitality industry, they could select a representative case, such as a hotel chain that operates in multiple locations, or an outlying case, such as a small bed and breakfast that was able to pivot their business model to survive during the pandemic. Selecting the appropriate case is critical in ensuring the research question is adequately explored.
Step 2: Create a theoretical framework
Theoretical frameworks are used to guide the analysis and interpretation of data in a case study. The framework should provide a clear explanation of the key concepts, variables, and relationships that are relevant to the research question. The theoretical framework can be drawn from existing literature, or the researcher can develop their own framework based on the data collected. The theoretical framework should be developed early in the research process to guide the data collection and analysis.
To give your case analysis a strong theoretical grounding, be sure to include a literature review of references and sources relating to your topic and develop a clear theoretical framework. Your case study does not simply stand on its own but interacts with other studies related to your topic. Your case study can do one of the following:
- Demonstrate a theory by showing how it explains the case being investigated
- Broaden a theory by identifying additional concepts and ideas that can be incorporated to strengthen it
- Confront a theory via an outlier case that does not conform to established conclusions or assumptions
Step 3: Collect data for your case study
Data collection can involve a variety of research methods , including interviews, surveys, observations, and document analyses, and it can include both primary and secondary sources . It is essential to ensure that the data collected is relevant to the research question and that it is collected in a systematic and ethical manner. Data collection methods should be chosen based on the research question and the availability of data. It is essential to plan data collection carefully to ensure that the data collected is of high quality
Step 4: Describe the case and analyze the details
The final step is to describe the case in detail and analyze the data collected. This involves identifying patterns and themes that emerge from the data and drawing conclusions that are relevant to the research question. It is essential to ensure that the analysis is supported by the data and that any limitations or alternative explanations are acknowledged.
The manner in which you report your findings depends on the type of research you are doing. Some case studies are structured like a standard academic paper, with separate sections or chapters for the methods section , results section , and discussion section , while others are structured more like a standalone literature review.
Regardless of the topic you choose to pursue, writing a case study requires a systematic and rigorous approach to data collection and analysis. By following the steps outlined above and using examples from existing literature, researchers can create a comprehensive and insightful case study that contributes to the understanding of a particular phenomenon.
Preparing Your Case Study for Publication
After completing the draft of your case study, be sure to revise and edit your work for any mistakes, including grammatical errors , punctuation errors , spelling mistakes, and awkward sentence structure . Ensure that your case study is well-structured and that your arguments are well-supported with language that follows the conventions of academic writing . To ensure your work is polished for style and free of errors, get English editing services from Wordvice, including our paper editing services and manuscript editing services . Let our academic subject experts enhance the style and flow of your academic work so you can submit your case study with confidence.
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How to write a case study: The ultimate guide + examples and templates
It would be great if we could wave a magic wand to convince prospects to buy your product or service⌠But we canât. So, a case study is your next best option.Â
Theyâre a powerful sales and marketing tool for those prospects that are sitting on the fence. The problem is, theyâre often dry, bland, and anything but magical. Never fear, though, as weâve done some in-depth case study analysis.
Weâre here to show you how to write a case study that will convince customers to choose you over your competitors. To create something so compelling theyâll have no doubt about your ability to deliver results.
Whether this is your first or 100th stab at it, weâve got you covered with tips and best practices, real-world examples, and ideas for how to format a case study. Â
In this post, weâll look at:
- What a case study is and why you need one
- What makes a good case study
What should a case study include?
Essential prep for creating a case study.
- How to write a good case study in 5 steps
- 8 further case study best practices
- 7 real-life case study examples
- 8 case study templates to get you started
đ Are you looking for some case study examples? This compilation of case study data and leadership input from just a few RingCentral SMB customers will show you exactly how they have modernized their business communication processes. Â
What is a case study and why should you create one?
A case study is basically a documentâ or it can be a videoâthat outlines how a customer used your product to overcome a problem. Itâs real-world proof that your product works and gets results.
If your product or service has helped customers get great results, a case study will help you showcase those results to your future customers. Theyâre an excellent way to attract more business, and can mean the difference between a lost opportunity and a really good end-of-quarter.
Why are case studies important?
Case studies present a living, breathing witness to how effective your product or service is. In other words, they represent the ultimate in social proof. While customer reviews can also be valuable in influencing a potential clientâs decision to buy from your company, they donât pack the punch that case studies do.
Thatâs because with case studies, you can curate a story that highlights how well your product or service solved a real-life problem, and back it up with solid data. It demonstrates the value of your offering, while showing off your hard work in achieving success for a customer.
Case studies are relatable
Because youâre using real-world examples, rather than abstract concepts of what your product or service represents, case studies are fully relatable to potential new customers.Â
They can put themselves in the shoes of the subject and empathize with their pain pointsâand realize that thereâs a way to get similar results for themselves.
Theyâre unbiased
Whereas a landing page or product page can be purely self-promotional, a case study comes across as more authentic and unbiased. Instead of you saying how awesome your product is, the subject is saying it, and that counts for a lot.Â
If theyâve switched to you from a competitor, thatâs even better as it positions your product as superior without you having to spell it out.
They increase your authority
Case studies also demonstrate your ability to solve problems for your customers, positioning you as experts in your industry and building trust. The more case studies you have, the more established youâll look. As in: âWow, they have so many happy clientsâthey must be doing something right!â
They inspire readers
A narrative thatâs engaging to read will get people interested in your company and inspire them to take a look around your website. And case studies give readers variety alongside other content formats such as product pages and blogs. Theyâre also an extra opportunity to add a CTA and nudge readers toward taking an action.
They have many uses
Case studies are versatile. You can publish and promote them in various places alongside your websiteâgive a taster in social media posts with a link to the full article, add the video to your YouTube channel, share the stories in sales presentations. You can also extract elements like quotes from featured customers and repurpose them in other content, such as infographics.
In most cases itâs best to have case studies easily available on your website, not as downloadable gated content, but you do have this option for lead generation. You could write a blog post with a short version of the story, and offer the full version to readers in return for giving you their contact details.
They encourage loyalty
When you ask an existing customer to be the subject of a case study, it not only makes them feel special but it also reminds them of the benefits of your solutionâwhich helps to reaffirm their loyalty. Plus, theyâre getting extra brand exposure and a backlink to their own website, which boosts both their traffic and their authority online. Â
In fact, thereâs nothing to stop you reaching out to former customers who achieved good results with you before moving on (it happens). You never know, a reminder of you might even bring them back!
What makes a good case study?Â
First, itâs helpful to highlight what makes a lot of case studies bad: most are painfully boring. What they have is research and detail, but what they lack is a cohesive, consumable story.Â
They list numbers and contain data, but the reader isnât sure what it all means or why itâs relevant to their problem. They end up existing as technical documents that do little to persuade or excite anyone. Thatâs unfortunate because they have the potential to be a powerful sales tool that can help you close big deals in the decision-making phase.Â
So how do you write a case study thatâs actually effective, then? Here are three characteristics every good case study should have:
Itâs digestible
Thereâs no hard and fast rule on how long a case study should be. But itâs always a good idea to ask âhow short can we make it?âÂ
A good case study avoids the unnecessary minutiae, knows what itâs trying to say, and communicates it quickly and without ambiguity. With a few exceptions, effective case studies are concise and clear.Â
Itâs thorough
On the other side of the length equation, being thorough is also important. Case study writing is all about making impressive claims about how a product helped someone achieve a certain result. However, it also needs to explain how it happened.Â
Good case studies include key details that show how the customer got from A to B using the productâsomething you donât get with customer reviews . Donât make your reader work too hard to visualize the story. If you can use images and videos, use them.
Itâs a story
Yes, case studies are sales tools. But the ones really worth reading tell a compelling story with a beginning, middle, and end. They beg to be read all the way through. Often, they present a problem that creates tension and demands a solution. And remember, in this story, the customer is the heroânot you.
Caveat: There is no one-size-fits-all approach for what to include in a case study. But, in general, there is a recognized case study format with certain sections you should feature to make it clearer and more impactful. This format typically includes:
- Title: This should be concise and engaging. Naming your document âA Case Study of RingCentralâ sounds dry. A headline like âNavigating Communications in a Remote World: A RingCentral Case Studyâ has more impact and explains what theme youâre exploring.
- Executive summary: Consider this like an abstract. Provide a brief overview of the case study, including the key purpose, approaches, findings, and solutions, without giving too much away.
- Introduction: Provide essential details about the customer in context.
- Challenges: Hereâs where you highlight where your customer was before using your product or service and where they wanted to be. Present raw data where applicable and discuss any other background information that shows their struggles.
- Solution: Hereâs where you get to show off. Explain how and why the customer chose your company, and how a specific product or service helped them achieve their objectives.
- Results: Time to get tangible. Dive into how the customer used your product, the results they saw, and long-lasting benefits. Incorporate any testimonials and statistics that showcase these results.
- Conclusion: Case studies are just as much about the future as the present. Use this closing section to highlight where your case study customer is going next thanks to your solution. Consider including a call-to-action here to encourage your prospect to take the next step.
How long should a case study be?
There isnât a definitive answer to this question, as the length of a case study can vary depending on factors such as the size of the project youâre talking about. It also depends on the type of case studyâfor example, if itâs in the form of a video then a couple of minutes is enough. (Weâll explore the different types a little later on in this post.)
Balance is the key here. Youâll need to to include enough information to convey the story properly and hook the reader in, but not so much that they get overwhelmed or the message of the story gets lost amid the detail. The last thing you want them to think is âTL;DRâ.
Itâs about being concise, and not allowing yourself to get carried away with the story. Only include what needs to be included, so that readers can clearly understand the subjectâs pain point, the reason your solution was a good fit, and the success it achieved.
Remember that not every part of the case study has to be in narrative form. You can pull out stats and display them as graphics, highlight direct quotes or other key information, or add a photo of the subject. If your case study is on the longer side, break up the text with subheadings, bullet points, and white space.
Before you start actually writing, thereâs a bit of prep work youâll need to do to make sure your case study is amazing.
1. Choose your customer
You may have many customers whoâve seen great results using your product (letâs hope!). But you canât just pick a name out of a hat and showcase their results. So, whatâs the best way of selecting a client for a case study?
Steer clear of customers who may not be the right fit for your audience or whose results may not be typical.
For example, donât feature an enterprise company when most of your customers are small businesses. Or a business achieving a 90% customer retention rate when most of them see 70% on average (still impressive, though).
When considering which customer to use, start by creating a list of customers that meet these criteria:
Theyâve seen good results with your product or service
The numbers are what really matter. So choose customers that have seen strong results using your product (like Conair did with RingCentral). But be careful about showcasing exceptionally good results if theyâre not likely to be repeated by most.
They have a respected and recognizable brand
Strong brands give your product instant social proof. They prove that youâre established and trustworthy. That alone can make you a front-runner in the decision-making process. After all, if Big Brand X trusts you, so can a prospect.
Theyâre a typical customer
Good results donât carry as much weight when theyâre achieved by companies in other industries or verticals. Identify current customers that are similar to your target audience. A client who has faced similar challenges and pain points will evoke empathy and stir up interest in the mind of your prospective clients.
So, if you sell enterprise software, choose enterprise customers. If youâre a consultant in the healthcare industry, choose a customer that works in healthcare.
With your list in hand, you can start reaching out. Picking up the phone can be a lot more effective than sending an email. Itâs more personal, lets you build rapport, and is harder to ignore.Â
Try to get in touch with customers who use or are very familiar with your product or serviceâsomeone who can speak to results. Tell them youâre interested in writing a case study and youâd love to hear more about the results theyâve achieved. Be clear about what the process involves on their partâwhether itâs a list of questions in an email, a phone call, or if it involves a camera and crew. Â
If youâve provided value, your customer is more likely to see you as a partner rather than a vendor and, hopefully, will be happy to participate. Remember, youâre also shining a spotlight on their own success. So itâs a win-win. Â
That said, you may hear ânoâ a few times, too. Donât get discouraged. Some customers will decline for different reasons, regardless of the results theyâve achieved with your product.
RingCentral: W2O
2. Begin your research
Start collecting information about your customer. This is easier if you work as a team. From sales to content marketing to customer service, everyone whoâs been in touch with customers will have insight about their experience.
They can help you understand what your customers do and sell, and what challenges theyâre facing. Identify the stakeholders you need to speak withâanyone in the company who uses your productâfrom the CEO to the marketing intern. Collect stats, even ones you donât think are relevantâthey may be later.
3. Ask the right questions
Smart questions get insightful answers. Here are some examples of great questions to start with:Â
- âWhat were some of the bigger challenges you faced before using our product?â
- âHow does our product help you reach your individual goals?â
- âWhich key metrics have improved most since using our product/service?â
- âWhich parts of your business have been impacted most, and how?â
- âHow long did it take to roll out our product?â
But donât stop there. Use these questions to segue into deeper, more targeted questions that underscore the real-world benefits of your product. Let the conversation flow naturallyâthis is the magic of interviews. You canât always plan for what interesting topics come up next.
4. Identify your target audience
Beyond your customerâs industry, consider who the target audience of the case study is. Who will see it? What group of people does it need to influence?
While itâs often high-level executives who make large purchase decisions, employees at all levels can act as a champion for your product or brand. Your case study may have to persuade an IT worker that your product or service is going to make their job easier. Meanwhile, it may also need to convince the CFO that theyâll see a real return on investment.
5. Identify the top three things you want to highlight
During the initial research phase, youâve likely uncovered a lot of interesting information about your customer and their experiences with your product.Â
While it might be tempting to use it all, when you write a case study, you should quickly and clearly communicate the value of your product. Go through this information and identify the three most important business results you want to feature, like we did in the Barx Parx example shown below.
Stats and key performance indicators (KPIs) to consider using in your case study:
- Ramp up time : How long did it take to get started with your product? Did it improve any other facet of their workflow?Â
- Sales results : How did the product impact your customerâs bottom line?
- Total return on investment (ROI) : How long did it take to earn more than they spent on your product?
- Productivity increases : Which teams saw improvements in process and workflow? And by how much?
6. Choose your format
So, what does a case study look like visually? It doesnât have to exist only as a PDF attachment in a late-stage deal email (although thereâs nothing wrong with that). Consider the format. Think about whoâs going to read it (or watch it).Â
Do you want to turn this into fancy interactive content? Does your prospect have the time and interest to dig into the details? Or do they just want the facts? Choose the format that you think best engages the audience that youâre selling to.Â
Here are some options:
Report format
This long-form document has been the gold standard for B2B case studies for many years. Itâs effective when the subject matter is complex and demands detail.
Hereâs how Zendesk presented their case study with IDC as a report .
Remember, a CTO whoâs evaluating large-scale business communications platforms for a multi-year deal is going to want more information than a marketing manager whoâs evaluating a new social media ad platform.
Keeping things short and sweet is often the best way to get your message heard. By focusing on the key points, you can highlight the biggest wins at just a glance.Â
Most report format case studies can be easily condensed into a one-page document. This is ideal for prospects (and salespeople) who are short on time and prefer something they can quickly scan.
Few things can tell a story the way that video can, and case studies are no exception. They give you an unmatched level of creative freedom and storytelling using music, lighting, pacing, and voice that can evoke emotions and persuade someone using more than just numbers and facts.Â
And at just a couple of minutes long, they can do a lot of heavy lifting in not a lot of time.
Dropbox: Expedia
Infographic
If youâre wondering how to make a case study more memorable, itâs worth noting that people love infographics. Theyâre an excellent way to convey important data in a simple, eye-pleasing way.
If your case study requires you to use a lot of data to prove a pointâor if visualizing data can make the results more clearâbuilding an infographic case study can be a great investment.
How to write a case study in 5 steps
Congrats. Youâve done the research. Youâve made the calls. Youâve pored over all the details. Now, all you have to do is write.Â
Here are five simple steps thatâll help you better understand how to create a case study that champions your customer and clearly showcases the real-world value of your products or services.Â
1. Introduce the customer
Set the stage for your case study with an introduction. Briefly explain who your customer is with a bit of background information that can include their industry, product, company size, and location.Â
You donât have to dig into the nuts and bolts of their business, but you do want the reader to understand who they are and what they do. The more color you can provide here, the more impactful itâll be when you show the awesome results this customer saw because they chose you.
2. State the problem
Every product or service is a possible solution to a problem. Explain the problem (or problems) that you helped your customer overcome. Describe the larger impact of the issue. Maybe it was customers leaving. Perhaps it was bad leadsâor good leads that were never followed up on.
Use this as an opportunity to clearly show what was at stake, and make sure you leave the jargon out of it. Frame the problem in simple terms that any reader can understand.Â
3. Introduce your product
This is where you begin solving the problem. Briefly introduce your proposed solution and what it does.
Start on a general level, then apply it to the challenge the customer was experiencing. Talk about which teams or individuals used your product and how they used it. Be sure to make the connection between the customerâs problem and your solution crystal clear.
4. Show results
The big reveal. What kind of results was your customer able to achieve using your product or service? Speak to how they solved the problem descriptively, but also with cold, hard numbers.Â
Not everything can be measured in numbers (sometimes, peace of mind is a powerful benefit all on its own), but whenever you can, back up your story with the stats. At the very least, this will make it easy for a CFOâor a prospective customer who wants to buyâto justify buying your product.
For example:Â
The customer saw a 33% increase in web traffic, a large influx of social media activity, and a 10% boost in revenue over the duration of the campaign.
5. Prove it
Donât forget to show your math. How you get the results is just as important as the results themselves. What specific steps were taken to get those results? Not only will this help validate your claims, it makes it easier to envision how the reader may be able to achieve them, too.
8 Further case study best practices
Thatâs how to write a case study in broad strokes, but you might be wondering how to write a business case study that stands out from the crowd? Here are some top tips:
1. Avoid jargonÂ
As a subject matter expert in your line of work, it can be tempting to go into as much jargony detail as possible. This is normal as itâs often the language we use at work every day.Â
Remember, though, that your customer probably doesnât speak that language. When in doubt, try to put yourself in the shoes of someone who doesnât live and breathe your product or industry..Â
2. Spend time on your title
Itâs tempting to use the case studyâs most interesting or impressive KPI as your title. But that also gives away the ending before the story begins, and skips details that are important for context in the process. Try writing a title that piques interest without being a spoiler.
3. Edit. Then edit again.Â
Once youâve got your first draft completed (and the jargon removed), edit the case study. When writing case studies, one proofread is never enough. A few best practices here:
- Look for and eliminate unnecessary adjectivesâsimple English is better.
- Speak in an active voice.Â
- Look for details that get in the way of the story.Â
And then do it all over again until you canât edit it down anymore without losing the essence of the story.
4. Pay attention to the imagery
Well-designed charts, graphs, images, or infographics can do the heavy lifting of several pages of text in just seconds.Â
They can also help break up large pieces of text, making the case study easier to readâand nicer to look at. After all, the end goal is to have these read all the way through.
Hereâs an example of a graphic from a longer CPA Canada infographic (that includes a short case study embedded inside it):Â
5. Pull quotes
Hard data and results are good. But a customer quote is a great piece of social proof and adds a human element to your case study. And that makes your results more believable.Â
Hereâs an example of what that looks like, from a RingCentral case study :
6. Make it scannable
Some people will take the time to read your case study front to back and absorb every detail. Some wonât give it more than a single glance. And sometimes, that person is the decision-maker.Â
Make the most important results easy to spot, read, and retain at a glance. Write headings that are descriptiveâif someone just scanned them, would they be able to get the gist of the story? Consider putting a summary at the very beginning of the study, or call out impressive results in a larger font size.
7. Record your interviews
Ditch the pen and paper. If youâre conducting one-on-one interviews over the phone, you can save yourself a lot of time and energy by recording the conversation (with your customerâs consent, of course).Â
There are tools that can make this easier tooâyou might find one or two in your marketing stack. For example, you could use RingSense AI for automatic note taking, summarizing, and transcribing.
8. Donât forget the call to action (CTA)
Your prospect is excited because your case study has done an excellent job of showing how your product or service can help drive results for customers. Now, how do they get in touch with you to learn more?Â
Whether itâs a button that links to your website, an email address, or a phone number, make sure thereâs an easy way of getting in touch with you in the case study.
7 Examples of great case studies from real-life companies
So, thatâs the theory covered, but what do great case studies look like in practice? Weâve included a few elements from RingCentral customer stories as examples above, but letâs dig a little deeper into two more of our case studies:
RingCentral: How Ryder made significant savings with cloud communications
This case study is about Ryder Systems, a Fortune 500 transportation company who modernized their IT communications infrastructure with RingCentral.
We start off with a subheading that sums up the story, plus the key stats at a glance. Thereâs another stats panel farther down the page to help break up the wall of text. Pull quotes also achieve this, but thatâs not the only reason why we like to use quotes.
When the quote comes directly from a senior manager at the company weâve helped, theyâre telling an important part of the story in their own words. In this case, thereâs a reference to the amount of money Ryder has saved with RingCentral, and a mention of the platformâs all-in-one cloud capabilities.
The content introduces Ryder and makes it clear that they are a big name in transportation (the single largest truck supplier in the US) and a noteworthy firm in general, as evidenced by membership of the Fortune 500 and Forbesâ Most Admired Companies.Â
If a big player like this is happy to trust RingCentral with their business, that says a lot about our credentials too.
We mentioned earlier that customers are attracted to testimonials from companies similar to themselves. But RingCentral caters to businesses of all sizesâso if SMBs are reading this case study, we think theyâll see our association with a large company as âsocial proofâ and a sign of our trustworthiness across the board.
The story goes on to explore Ryderâs pain points and how RingCentral solved them, inspiring other companies with similar problems to take action (i.e. to replace legacy systems that are slow and expensive). For further encouragement, it details how Ryder were so happy with the initial success that they also went on to implement RingCentralâs contact center solution.
RingCentral: Helping Dispute Nation to change lives
Just to illustrate our point about RingCentral serving all sizes of business, hereâs a case study for a much smaller companyâconsumer advocacy organization Dispute Nation, which has 10 employees.
Again, the story begins with stats and a pull quote from a company representative. In keeping with Dispute Nationâs values, it focuses less on the financial savings or efficiency brought by RingCentral tools but on how our solution helps this company to help others.
Drawing empathy from other startups and fast-growing small businesses, we mention how demand for the companyâs services grew very quickly. This makes it obvious why they needed a unified communications system to reach all their clients by phone, SMS, and fax.
The case study highlights how digital fax in particular helps Dispute Nation to get client cases resolved sooner. Another pull quote mentions some of the other benefits of RingCentral, like automation and integrations with other tools.Â
There are nods to mobility and flexibility, plus security and data privacy which will resonate with other highly-regulated industries.
The tale finishes strongly with the company founderâs assertion that âRingCentral is helping Dispute Nation improve more livesâ. Readers whoâve been inspired to learn more can easily navigate from this page to explore products, resources, and get in touch.
RingCentral is far from the only company to have recognized the importance of this kind of content.
Here are some more real-life case studies from other businesses you might just recognize:
RingCentral isweâre far from the only company to have recognized the importance of this kind of content.
Mailchimp: Make a connection in real life with postcards
What we like about it: The title doesnât give everything away all at once, and the case study tells a story with a beginning, middle, and end. The sections are clearly titled and organized, and the results are easy to find. As a bonus: the video adds a believable human element.
LinkedIn: How Adobe achieves alignment and ABM success with LinkedIn
What we like about it: Itâs detailed without being a novella. It understands and speaks to the enterprise customer. The key points are in bullet format and easy to read. The important wins are highlighted. And the video makes the content easy to engage with.
Hootsuite: How MeliĂĄ became one of the most influential hotel chains on social media
What we like about it: The title makes you want to read the whole customer story. Theyâve embedded a well-produced video high on the page, so you can choose to watch it before you read on. The design and layout of the page makes the content and images easy to consume, and the results canât be missed. Also, they werenât shy about adding CTAs.
Slack: So yeah, we tried Slack
What we like about it: This case study follows the tried and true format of customer, problem, solution, and results. It uses humor and relatable characters throughout to support the story and keep your attention. And itâs only two minutes long so it gets the point across quickly.
Assetworks: South Carolina School Board Insurance Trust
What we like about it: This case study tackles the otherwise complex and technical topic, and simplifies it as an infographic using images to make the results clear. Itâs concise and easy to follow because you can see the math without actually doing any math.
8 Case study templates to get you started
Starting from scratch can be time-consuming. To help you, weâve drawn together a few templates:
The generic one
Generic doesnât mean boring! Canvaâs templates are great if you need something concise and simple that still looks professional . A free account will give you access to several well-designed templates, including this one :
The layout is provided for you, so itâs quick and easy to customize with your branding and content. Donât be afraid to use this as a foundation, then add in visual elements like infographics and videos.
The data-driven one
If your key messages revolve around numbers, start with a template structure that lets you highlight these. HubSpot has a data-focused template where you can pack in graphs, charts, and other visuals to drive your message home:
The industry-specific one
Not every template suits every company. Visme offers different templates created for different industries, including real estate, financial services, and healthcare.
The problem-solution-impact one
This format takes a graphical rather than narrative approach, which helps readers to visualize the events and looks colorful and appealing on the page. The template is available as a free download from Smartsheet:
The idea of this is to present the story in a logical and sequential way. It starts with the challenge faced by the subject of the case study, looks at the solution your company provided, and shows what the outcome was.
Of course, you could choose to combine this with other elements like text content, stats, and quotesâmaking the âproblem-solution-impactâ graphic the main focus of the case study.
The product-specific one
You can choose to focus your case study on a particular product, highlighting key features and the practical applications in the real world.Â
It leans into the experience that the customer has had with the productâi.e., what it feels like to use itâand the specific benefits. This one is a good choice if the customer hasnât been using the product for very long, and you havenât yet gathered a lot of metrics.
HubSpot has a template for this purpose :
The in-depth report one
Using the style of an in-depth report can be useful when youâve worked with the customer on a complex project and you need to include a lot of detail. Â
This template âanother free one from Smartsheetâincludes elements like decision criteria, data analysis, and the implementation plan:
Just be careful with this one as you donât want readers to be put off by a lot of text. Make sure the style is conversational and engaging, not dry and formal.
The employee story one
Okay, stick with us hereâthis oneâs a little different. As well as asking customers to tell their stories, how about getting employees to share what itâs like to work for your company, or their experience of working on a particular project?
Employee stories or testimonials are often used for recruitment purposes, but theyâre also a valuable form of marketing for potential customers. Thatâs because happy, engaged employees represent a company that cares about its people, which all helps you to build trust.
This example from Vanguard isnât a template as such, but you can use it to inspire your own version. (It doesnât have to be a videoâyou could still use a written narrative with direct quotes, photos, and stats on employee satisfaction.)
BONUS TEMPLATE: Form for customers participating in case studies
Earlier in this post, we briefly covered some of the questions youâll need to ask your customers when putting together case studies. But itâs always helpful to have a visual guide, so weâre including this template from Vitally , which provides a framework for collaborating with customers and collecting the relevant data.Â
You can adapt this to your own needs by adding further questions.
The final word on how to write a case studyâŚ
Sure, an ad or boosted social media post can make someone aware of your brand or that your product exists, and a landing page can tell them how your product can solve their problem.Â
But thereâs nothing quite as powerful as someone else singing your praises.Â
And thatâs exactly what a case study does. Spend the time to do it right and it has the potential to deliver huge ROI no matter how big or small your company is. And not just onceâbut over and over again.
Originally published Jun 15, 2024, updated Sep 26, 2024
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Updated June 2024 Even for small businesses, free messaging apps like WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger can quickly become inadequate. Tasks and responsibilities can spiral out of control, security features can be lacking, and if you need to integrate it with your other business apps, good luck. Free consumer-facing apps aren’t designed for the level of ...
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More From Forbes
Creating an effective case study: 12 important tips to remember.
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The practical application of a theory or idea is the most effective way of demonstrating its usefulness. Case studies allow for the dissection of practical applications to uncover the thinking that led to them.
The best thing about case studies is that they can be used as a learning tool for both successful concepts as well as failed ones, while also serving as a valuable business card when approaching new customers. Developing a case study, however, requires delving into the background of a project and uncovering what made it good or bad. In addition, the information has to be packed in such a way to emphasize your skills and creativity without being overly promotional.
To help, 12 members of Forbes Agency Council examine the key elements to keep in mind when creating an effective case study.
Members explain how to create an effective and powerful case study for your business.
1. Don't Make It About Yourself
The wrong way to approach a case study is to make it about you and your process. The reader cares less about your motivation and more about the results your efforts created. Start off by describing the results that you created and then go into the general detail of your strategic and tactical approach to delivering those results. - John Gumas , Gumas Advertising
2. Tell A Story
The best case studies tell a story, rather than recite a chronology of facts or data points. To create a story arc, start with a few sentences describing the situation, followed by a few sentences highlighting the "dramatic tension" (e.g. X almost happened, Y threatened to derail the effort), and conclude with a few sentences tying the resolution to the value or point of the product or service. - Beth Noymer Levine , SmartMouth Communications
3. Lead With A Solution
Case studies are, by their very nature, boring. It is important to break past that by creating case studies that strike at the very problem a lead needs help with. Leading with a problem and demonstrating how you fixed it is the best way to get attention -- especially if it can be produced in an engaging way, such as through video or audio media. - Stefan Pollack , The Pollack PR Marketing Group
4. Include Relevant Data
It's great that you worked with a certain company, but what did you really do for them? That should be defined in the case study. If you can't define it in numbers and results, then think about using the brand in a testimonial instead. A case study is just that -- a study of what happened in a particular case. Make sure you tell the whole story. - Christine Wetzler , Pietryla PR
5. Always Use Specific Numbers
If you're going to show an increase in a certain metric, use the actual number. When you say something like "we increased conversions by 500%," it sets off a red flag for people. They'll think you just made it up. But if you show real numbers and even have the screenshots to back it up, it'll become more relevant and believable. - Greg Trimble , Lemonade Stand
6. Keep It Succinct And Pass On The Fluff
The vast majority of people skim content, including case studies. You have to put yourself in your prospect's shoes and understand what they want. They're primarily looking for the success you've provided the client. So focus on that and skip on any fluff content that doesn't align around that. - Nishank Khanna , Demand Roll
7. Tailor Them To Your Audience
Sure, you're going to have generic case studies, but when seeing a client, ensure that you really understand the problem the client faces. Then make your case show how you've solved the problem before. You can highlight different capabilities based on different needs of the client. - Emilie Tabor , IMA - Influencer Marketing Agency
8. Make It Multi-Format
If you can get case studies, quotes and testimonials, always include hard data and tie it to revenue or cost stories. Beyond this, make it multi-format by leveraging graphics, video and text so that it can be consumed and promoted on various platforms. This will maximize the exposure and utility for your successful client case studies. - Zamir Javer , Jumpfactor
9. Let The Images Do The Work
Aside from ensuring a case study is focused on the problem your brand has solved for a customer, nothing brings it to life more than imagery. In lieu of a long-form case study, consider a photo essay with solid captions narrating the case study as a better option for illustrating the value of your product or service and keeping audiences truly engaged. - Emily Porter , Havas Formula
10. Paint A Picture For Your Prospect
Highlighting your wins is great, but remember that a case study should showcase how you solved a client's most pressing problem so that a new prospect can see how you got from point A to Z. This is how we like to tell our clients' success stories: client profile, the challenge, results, strategy and looking toward the future. Remember, the results are just one piece of the puzzle. - Bernard May , National Positions
11. Abstract It First
We think if we write it, someone will accept it. If you remove the outlet from the process, more often, you'll need to rewrite it. Develop the abstract or a couple of abstracts with four elements: company's expertise and solution; customer's industry and challenges; what solution you delivered; why that solution is so innovative. Offer the outlet a chance to contribute, then write with insight. - Dean Trevelino , Trevelino/Keller
12. Know When To Insert Them Into The Campaign
We've analyzed user footprint data on the inbound journey and see a clear trend. Most people are only interested in case studies once they are convinced that a service provider could be a good fit for them. Case studies usually come after reviewing staff profiles and thought leadership content. Insert them too soon and they lose their value in the sales campaign. - Randy Shattuck , The Shattuck Group
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Maximizing Case Studies for Insights Success: A Step-by-Step Guide to Creating Effective Case Studies
Case studies and client stories are crucial components of any insight companyâs marketing. They demonstrate your value and expertise, satisfy client curiosity, and build trust. However, creating good client storiesâŚ
by Lucy Davison
Founder and Managing Director at Keen as Mustard Marketing
Case studies and client stories are crucial components of any insight companyâs marketing. They demonstrate your value and expertise, satisfy client curiosity, and build trust. However, creating good client stories is often a challenge. Itâs not only client confidentiality that causes a problem, sometimes it is hard to get permission even to use a logo on your website.
With many years experience of in creating successful cases, here is our Mustard-y advice for cracking the case study nut.
Step 1: Client Attribution
There are three levels of client attribution to consider. The first is simply displaying a client’s logo on your website or credentials. In these cases, unless you have specifically been instructed otherwise, our advice is to “ask for forgiveness, not permission.” Place the logo on your site and then apologize and take it down if requested. In 16 years of experience, none of our agency clients have been asked to remove a logo from their site. Not one.
Step 2: Testimonials
Testimonials, from named clients, are the second level of attribution. Short, attributed verbatim quotes carry significantly more weight than anonymous or non-attributed testimonials which are pretty much worthless. To create good testimonials, draft a version for the client to edit, donât expect them to come up with something themselves, and make sure to keep it brief (up to 30 words or so).
Once cleared and confirmed, (check you can use the clientâs name and job title and get it correct), use these testimonials on multiple platforms, such as your website, social media, proposals, and throughout credentials presentations.
Step 3: Full Case Studies
A more detailed client story, which we like to tell in the clientâs words, is the final level. Full client stories are best created through a recorded client interview, video interview, podcast, or written questionnaire which can be turned into an article or blog post. These should set the scene with the business context and challenge, mention a brief description of your solution, and then focus on the results achieved for the client. Focus on the client’s learnings, actions taken, and the positive impact on their organization.
Five Billion Data Points Synthesized to One Implication: Storytelling is Better than Fact Delivery, Dah!!
Getting results.
The key to creating effective full case studies is following up with the client after the project’s completion to assess and discuss its success. This also provides an opportunity to strengthen relationships. Many insight companies struggle with a follow-up due to ongoing negotiations, fear of failure, or simply because they have transactional relationships with clients and do not feel able to discuss the impact of their work. However, if you are going to create client cases it is vital to have those conversations and do those interviews.
How to Create the Case Study
It is important to glean an understanding of the results before you start the case study process. Itâs no good doing an in-depth interview and then finding out that the client did not act on the results of the research or that they are not prepared to tell you what happened. So, talk to the client, find out if they are open to sharing, and go from there. If you do not have good results, then the client is not the right one for a case study. Revert to a testimonial or just use their logo.
If you do have the right relationship, know you have some results to write about and have secured permission to do the case study in principle, then the best way to craft the content is via a set of pre-approved questions. We usually craft a discussion guide and supply it to the client before doing a recorded interview, but you could also send over a set of questions via email and ask the client to respond in writing. The first approach is usually better as itâs quicker and easier for the client to just chat for 30 minutes. You then know exactly what they said and can write up the case study using their verbatim as quotes. You can also lift relevant verbatim and use them as testimonials. If you do a video interview then you will need to edit it down to a tight enough format, ditto a podcast. Once the case study is packaged, then share it for clearance.
Clients often ask what will be done with the case study before they give permission to use it. Our suggestion is to say at the outset that you will use it on your website and no more. Most clients do not see this as a problem. If the content is really interesting, then you can go back after you have the case published on your site and ask if it would be possible to do more with it. The main point is to avoid your client having to go to their legal team to get permission to publish more widely. Legal teams will give a flat no to any request like this as life is too short for them. However, once a case is published on your site, there is nothing to stop you from asking the client if it is OK to share it with more people as it is already in the public realm.
If all this feels like too big a thing to deal with, remember you only need one good story which you will revisit and re-use in your marketing for years . There will always be people who had no idea you worked with Pepsi, and who would still be interested to hear about it even five years later. Do one full case study well, and you can just rely on logos and testimonials for the rest.
To wrap up, we always recommend partnerships. Network, meet people, and then approach a company you want to work with, and suggest an innovative new service or idea you would like to trial. Do an âexperimentâ with this client on the basis that you will publish and share the results. You may need to pay for the sample or do the research at a cost, but the content will be gold.
Comments are moderated to ensure respect towards the author and to prevent spam or self-promotion. Your comment may be edited, rejected, or approved based on these criteria. By commenting, you accept these terms and take responsibility for your contributions.
Lucy Davison
19 articles
The views, opinions, data, and methodologies expressed above are those of the contributor(s) and do not necessarily reflect or represent the official policies, positions, or beliefs of Greenbook.
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Navigating warehouse automation strategy for the distributor market
Advises clients in consumer, retail, pharma, and private equity in setting and implementing the digital supply chain strategy to transform operational performance and capabilities
September 27, 2024 The technology is mature, the promised benefits are significant, yet only about 20 percent of warehouses in North America have adopted any form of automation. This raises several questions: Why aren't more warehouses automated? Why is implementation so challenging? Does anyone achieve success with it, and if so, how? These questions underscore the confusion surrounding warehouse automation, despite its apparent advantages.
Automation has become a key topic for companies and leaders. A recent survey of 65 top logistics and supply chain executives revealed that 70 percent plan to invest approximately $100 million in automation over the next five years, prioritizing speed, process stability, and reduced labor dependency. 1 âHiring more people is always an option, but eventually, we were going to hit a point where that wouldnât solve the issue,â says one executive, vice president of distribution strategy for a large pharmaceutical company. âAutomation in the DCs [distribution centers] allows orders to ship complete with next-day delivery and also replenish branches that provide same-day availability to customers,â added the president of global supply chain for a large industrial distributor. The vice president of supply chain practice at a large IT company predicts that âBy 2027, over 75 percent of companies will have adopted some form of cyber-physical automation within their warehouse operations.â
These bold aspirations have yet to translate into actions, however. The number of automated warehouses in North America is projected to grow at a compounded annual growth rate of 8.3 percent over the next few years. At that pace, only a quarter of warehouses will employ some level of automation by 2027. 2
Why arenât distributors automating their warehouses?
In the distribution sector, several factors contribute to the low rate of automation adoption:
- Perceived adequacy of current processes. Some distributors believe their current processes are sufficient and can scale to accommodate growth.
- Lack of clarity regarding business needs. Misalignment among stakeholders regarding business needs can lead to incorrect investments. Without a clear understanding of objectives and requirements based on the evolution of product portfolio, expected growth, et cetera, the wrong expectations may be set, and incorrect technology can be selected, resulting in a poor return on investment and/or an inadequate solution.
- Poor understanding of automation technology. A lack of comprehensive understanding of available automation technologies and their nuances can result in poor decision making and the selection of technologies that don't meet operational needs.
- High initial costs creating an untenable ROI. For many companies, the expected return on investment from automation projects is too low. Payback periods for projects are often longer than the lease on the building being automated.
- Too many options. The plethora of available solutions makes it daunting for companies to choose the right one. At MODEX 2024, a premier supply chain trade show in the United States, for example, more than 50 autonomous mobile robot (AMR) vendors were present.
Why is implementation so challenging?
If an organization determines that warehouse automation can help the business and meets the investment threshold, the next set of challenges lie in implementation. Even with the best of intentions, implementations can go off track for a multitude of reasons, but two major challenges stand out:
- Lack of in-house expertise. Many distributors lack the internal IT and operational expertise to manage the implementation of complex automation solutions successfully. Evaluating the potential engagement of a systems integrator (SI) can help streamline the operations, but usually adds an additional layer of complexity.
- Focus limited to the technology and not process. If processes are not redesigned around the solution, and if frontline workers and other stakeholders do not fully embrace the technology, efficiencies may never materialize or scale.
What makes automation work?
Despite the challenges, many companies have successfully implemented warehouse automation solutions by adhering to a set of key actions:
- They determine where automation best suits the organization and focus on the capabilities that will drive value.
- They assess current business operations, systems, and needs prior to selecting and implementing a solution.
- They explore various automation options and plan a scaled deployment, starting with pilot programs to minimize disruptions.
- They secure employee buy-in and provide training prior to go-live to ensure staff are fully prepared to leverage automation.
- They collaborate with upstream and downstream stakeholders and redesign processes as required to maximize benefits of the selected solution.
A notable example of successful automation is a regional grocery chain. Faced with outdated warehouse operations, the company implemented an automation retrofit design and strategy. Its comprehensive approach included an analysis of network optimization scenarios alongside DC automation options. It assessed DC performance, layout, and capacity, and modeled future growth projections to ensure fit with material handling equipment (MHE) and target automation solutions. Finally, it developed a full business case for its automation investments, looking at several potential implementation scenarios. The results were impressive: 20 percent run-rate savings, a fourfold increase in productivity, 15 to 20 percent faster response times, and a 20 percent decrease in space usage.
Elsewhere, a global logistics company integrated AMRs into its pick process. Initially piloting 1,000 units in North American warehouses, the company later expanded the deployment to other regions. The phased approach allowed for performance monitoring, adjustments as required, and a smooth transition. The AMRs were integrated into existing warehouse management systems without major overhauls and limited to key warehouses that offered the greatest impact from automation. The benefits included a 200 percent increase in picking productivity, a 50 percent reduction in cycle time, and faster, more accurate picking, contributing to a âzero-defect environment.â
Where should we start?
To plan and execute a successful warehouse automation project, companies should focus on five key areas:
- Assess process maturity, performance management, and governance within the organization . Ensure sufficient process maturity through robust training programs and current, clearly defined standard operating procedures (SOPs).This should be accompanied by a rigorous governance mechanism with metrics to support coaching and engagement of frontline workers. Additionally, base technologies and master data management are required to streamline integration with automation solutions.
- Understand current handling profiles and areas that can most benefit from automation. Not all SKUs benefit equally from automation. Medium- and low-volume SKUs can benefit significantly by reducing operator travel and improving storage density, while high-volume and long-tail SKUs may not benefit as much. Functions involving the most labor hours, task repetitions, and risk of injury are ideal candidates for automation. A clear understanding of where and how automation can benefit the operations is critical to selecting the right solution and ensuring a sound business case is in place.
- Involve IT early in the conversation. Many implementations fail due to lack of early engagement of the IT and digital departments when defining the functional and business requirements. Engaging the right experts who can translate requests from the business into clear technical requirements accounting for all end-to-end interdependencies, is paramount.
- Narrow the list of solutions to those that can meet the needs of the organization. With many solutions entering or already in the market, selection can be complex (exhibit). Evaluate automation technologies based on a predefined criteria including product profile (small, medium versus bulky), order profile (volume, type of ordersâbig or small unit orders), maturity of the organization, and future strategic vision (growth, diversification beyond current profiles). This requires in-depth market knowledge about the latest technologies, and understanding the return on investment, setup timeline, integration and implementation requirements, and the providerâs support and maintenance track record.
- Evaluate the technical capabilities within the organization in preparation for the future. Assess the organizationâs technical capability and maturity to support implementation and ongoing maintenance. Evaluate the current systemâs maturity and ability to integrate with automation technologies, as well as maintenance and technical system support within the organization. Based on these inputs, determine whether it is better for the organization to engage with an SI or directly purchase from an OEM. Ultimately, the success of implementation depends on user buy-in, effective change management, and scalability within and across sites.
1 McKinsey Global Industrial Robotics Survey, 65 senior leaders and executives in automotive; food and beverage; life sciences, healthcare, and pharmaceuticals; logistics and fulfillment; and retail and consumer goods sectors, August 2022. 2 Automated Material Handling Equipment Market, Global Forecast to 2028, MarketsandMarkets, 2023.
Identifying mental illness among new and expectant mums
- 20 August 2024
As a recipient of an NIHR Research Professorship award, Professor Louise Howardâs research influenced national policies and increased government funding for perinatal mental health services.
1 in 4 new and expectant mums experience mental illness
1 in 4 new and expectant UK mums can be affected by mental illness. Only around one third of women seek medical help for perinatal mental health issues, which include anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
Left untreated, these conditions have long-lasting effects on women and their children. These can take the form of developmental delays and behavioural problems. Lack of treatment comes at a high price to society too, costing the UK around ÂŁ6.6 billion a year.
In light of this, national policy highlighted how perinatal mental illness must be found and treated early. But the question remained: how should the women in need of help be identified?
With support from a ÂŁ1.5 million NIHR Research Professorship award , consultant perinatal psychiatrist Professor Louise Howard OBE led research that investigated how common perinatal mental health conditions are in early pregnancy.
As part of the research, which was also funded by a ÂŁ2 million NIHR Programme Grant for Applied Research , her team at Kingâs College London studied the use of a widely used depression screening tool (the Whooley tool) to identify mental disorders.
Impact on national policy
Professor Howardâs team worked with the NIHR South London Clinical Research Network to recruit and interview nearly 550 pregnant women in South East London.
The research showed that asking pregnant women 2 questions about low mood (the Whooley tool) did help to identify depression. It also helped to detect other perinatal mental health problems. The results are published in the British Journal of Psychiatry .
They also found that it was as effective as a frequently used and longer tool, the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, which women complete themselves. Using either tool was cost-effective, costing the NHS less in the long term than not screening for depression (published in BMC Health Services Research ).
The research influenced national policies by confirming the NICE guidelineâs advice to use the Whooley tool in all routine antenatal and postnatal appointments. This amounts to 800,000 women being screened every year, and more women benefiting from proper treatment.
“This study supports the NICE recommendation that women should be asked, by a non-judgemental and supportive health professional, at all contacts in pregnancy and after birth about their emotional wellbeing and are given the opportunity to respond to these structured questions (the Whooley or the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale).”
Professor Howardâs work also informed the governmentâs investment of over ÂŁ290 million in perinatal mental health services. The funding supported their vision for the Five Year Forward View for Mental Health , with the new services helping over 75,000 women so far.
Her research has supported specialist training for thousands of clinicians. It has also informed pregnancy planning tools for the pregnancy charity, Tommyâs, which reach more than 8,000 women each month.
NIHR award impacts on wider perinatal issues
Professor Howardâs NIHR-funded research has changed the course of perinatal mental health care. Her research has influenced international WHO recommendations on domestic violence as well as UK NICE guidelines , changing both policy and practice.
“My Research Professorship was a fantastic step change for me, my team and my research area. In addition to supporting me, the funding supported capacity building in my research area. Many of my team are now in academic posts including a professor, readership, 2 senior lecturers, 4 NIHR post-doctoral fellows and 3 clinical lecturers.”
More recently, NIHR funding supported her work on other research projects. These include the role of mother and baby psychiatric units , as well as the relationship between mental health problems and poor obstetric outcomes and the role of specialist community perinatal mental health teams in preventing psychiatric relapse after birth .
Professor Howard has since been appointed an NIHR Senior Investigator and co-developed the NIHR Mental Health Incubator. This project supports mental health researchers to develop their careers, leading to positive changes to peopleâs health nationally. She was awarded an OBE for services to women's mental health in 2023.
The studies were funded by the NIHR Academy , Programme Grants for Applied Research and Health and Social Care Delivery Research .
More information about the study is available on the NIHRâs Funding & Awards website .
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How to Make Online Learning More Engaging with Intereactive Courses: 5 Proven Strategies
The emergence of online courses has given learning a new meaning and transformed the elearning space as we know it. However, making your online course more interactive transforms it from feeling like a one-way street to something that lights up a student’s experience.
When your students are actively involved, they’re not just consuming information but connecting with it, challenging it, and making it their own. Contrary to what some may think, interactivity isn’t just a bonus to an online course; it’s the spark that ignites deeper learning and keeps students returning for more.
However, creating an interactive and engaging online course requires more than just adding a few quizzes or discussion boards. It’s about crafting an immersive environment where students feel seen, heard, and involved.
Thatâs why weâll discuss the effective strategies you must know to make your courses interactive. Keep reading to give your students the experience they deserve.
Why are Intereactive Courses Important for Student Engagement?
When we talk about student engagement , you first need to ensure that your online courses are interactive enough for them to be engaged. Interactive courses and an engaging environment help students love your courses instead of being afraid or procrastinating.
Here are the main reasons behind why interactive courses are essential for better student engagement:
Offers Increased Engagement
Interactive courses make learning more enjoyable and hands-on, leading to higher engagement. By incorporating interactive elements such as quizzes, simulations, and discussions, students are motivated to participate and complete tasks actively. This involvement keeps them focused and driven to progress through the course without losing interest.
Enhances Critical Thinking
Interactive courses challenge students to think deeply and analytically. Features like problem-solving tasks, scenario-based activities, and discussions encourage students to apply critical thinking. They are not merely absorbing information but actively engaging with the material to find solutions, enhancing their analytical abilities.
Rewards Interaction and Achievement
Many interactive courses include rewards, such as points, badges, or certificates, to acknowledge studentsâ efforts. These incentives motivate students to interact with the course content and achieve milestones. When students know theyâll be recognized for their achievements, they are more likely to stay committed and complete the course with enthusiasm.
Offers Improved Retention
Interactive elements within a course improve retention by allowing students to engage with the material in a dynamic way. Activities like role-playing, case studies, or simulations help students apply concepts in real-world contexts, making it easier to remember and recall information when needed.
Benefits Course Creators
Interactive courses benefit not only students but also course creators. By monitoring how students engage with the interactive components, instructors can adjust their teaching strategies to better suit learnersâ needs. This feedback loop helps course creators tailor their content, making it more effective and personalized for the students.
5 Key Strategies to Make Your Online Course More Interactive and Engaging
When it comes to making online courses interactive, there are more strategies youâll find online than you can count. And itâs not obviously the best option to try all of them out.
Thatâs why we have done the research and compiled a list of the 5 best strategies for making your online courses more interactive. Let’s take a look at the key strategies you can implement to save your online course from feeling like a dull lecture in a vast, empty room.
Incorporate Gamification
From the word “gamification,” you might wonder if it has something to do with incorporating something related to gaming into your online course. You’re not far from the truth if this was your thought process.
Gamification is simply the integration of game-like elements into an online course to encourage engagement and participation for a positive learning experience.
Consider the features you see in most video games, such as leaderboards, badges, challenges, side quests, and levels, and imagine them being integrated into your online course.
They can be seamlessly woven into your content to motivate your students to interact and engage with your course, all while doing their best to progress through the levels and earn rewards.
Moreover, the essence of gamification is to leverage games’ engaging elements to make online learning more interactive, motivating, and enjoyable.
This approach not only helps students see that learning can be as rewarding as the video games they play but also keeps them consistently engaged and motivated to complete their courses.
Use Video Courses to Enhance Learning
Video courses are one of the most effective ways to make online courses more interactive and engaging. Videos engage the auditory and visual senses simultaneously, making it easier for students to process and retain what they’ve learned.
Videos also convey emotion and context more effectively than learning texts, making it easier for your students to relate to the information you’re passing along as they pick up on non-verbal cues such as facial expressions, gestures, and vocal intonations.
Not to forget, incorporating video lessons in your course makes it more appealing to a more diversified audience, especially those who prefer watching video lessons rather than reading text materials.
Fun fact: Several studies have proven that the use of video content is an invaluable contribution to student learning, in case you were wondering.
For example, a study conducted by MIT researchers found that shorter videos (under 6 minutes) are more engaging and that students who watched video lectures with interspersed quizzes retained information better.
The researchers concluded that video is an effective medium for engaging students and enhancing learning when designed appropriately.
Simply put, video courses combined with text materials are necessary if you want a solid online course .
Implement Interactive Quizzes
Quizzes are highly effective when it comes to online learning. They’re essentially the best tool your students can maximize to ascertain whether they truly understand your course or need to learn more.
Interestingly, studies have shown that students who were tested more often through quizzes had a better understanding and retention of the course they were taught and demonstrated better performance in the final examination than students who were tested less often.
As a course creator, implementing interactive quizzes can help you determine whether additional resources are needed to simplify your course, especially if most of your students struggle to answer the quiz questions correctly.
Interactive quizzes can boost your students’ confidence, pushing them to learn further when the correct answers are provided. The instant feedback they get with the right explanation can provide insights on areas they need to improve.
Design With a Flexible Course Builder
Interactive courses are not just about the courses themselves; rather, they are the whole environment you offer through your Learning Management System (LMS). And this is where a feature-packed course builder comes in.
A flexible course builder is a feature within an LMS that allows you to design and organize your online courses with high customization and adaptability. As a result, navigating your LMS becomes easier for the students.
Some of the advantages of a flexible course builder include:
- Ease of Use and Efficiency
- Support for Multiple Content Types
- Enhanced Student Engagement
- Customization and Personalization
Increased student engagement is an automatic byproduct when you can ensure ease of use, necessary support, and personalization.
Track Student Progress
You can only ensure an interactive environment for your students if you know what they want. And thereâs no option but to track students’ progress or activities to find out what they want.
Tracking your students’ progress is an excellent way to assess their performance and detect possible areas for improvement. The goal is to enhance motivation and provide adequate support where necessary to help your students complete your online course.
Introducing AccessAlly: One-Stop Solution for Building an Interactive Online Course
If you search for LMS solutions, youâll be flooded with recommendations, and every LMS will claim to be the best. But now that weâve been this far, eyes closed, you can figure out the perfect fit for creating interactive courses.
To save you from this trouble, we are introducing AcessAlly.
A WordPress plugin specially designed for building interactive courses and communities. This plugin can help you not only create interactive courses but also keep the students engaged with almost all the features you can ask for.
Letâs check out what AccessAlly has to offer:
Interactive Course Builder
The first thing you need to create interactive courses is an interactive course builder. And remember the earlier list of the advantages of interactive course builders?
Fortunately, AccessAlly’s flexible course builder offers that listed benefits and allows you to design your courses with any number of modules, lessons, quizzes, and more.
Even more fascinating is that the AccessAlly course builder feature focuses on functionality.
It allows you to create clean and simple designs and intuitive dashboards, optimize your courses for mobile devices, and create an organized menu for each module, ultimately giving your students the best learning experience.
Gamification Elements
AccessAlly offers all the common gamification elements, such as quizzes, leaderboards, points, badges, certificates, and more. You can implement these elements based on what resonates most with your users.
Here are some of the gamification elements AccessAlly offers: Leaderboards: A leaderboard is a ranked list that showcases usersâ achievements, progress, or points earned within a particular level or activity.
Quizzes: Itâs hard to find someone who doesnât love quizzes. In online courses, quizzes serve several purposes that make learning more effective and engaging.
Points and Badges: Points or badge systems are a great way to incentivize and reward students for their engagement and progress. Participants can earn points by logging in, completing learning objectives, finishing courses, or passing quizzes.
Studentsâ Progress Tracker
AccessAlly has a built-in progress tracking feature that lets you use progress bars and checklists to monitor your students’ progress through your course and obtain necessary progress information.
The LMS plugin also offers auto-generated certificates and badges, which you can issue to your students once they reach a milestone or upon course completion.
Once you purchase a plan and integrate AccessAlly into your WordPress course site, these features will be readily accessible.
Live/Dripped Courses
A drip course is an online course in which content is released to students incrementally over a set period rather than all at once. Meanwhile, a live course takes place in real-time.
If you want to release access to your course content based on a scheduled date or after your students have completed a section, AccessAlly can get this done seamlessly.
Likewise, if you want your course to be live and your students to have access to all your content at once, AccessAlly is all you need.
Private Notes
With the AccessAlly Pro private notes feature , you can create spaces for taking course notes, journaling, sharing PDF homework assignments, or with your 1:1 coaching clients to send replay links and coaching call notes.
Case Studies of Individuals Who Created Interactive Courses Using AccessAlly
Over the years, individuals who have chosen AccessAlly as the go-to plugin for designing and structuring their online courses have been impressed with the quality they achieve.
A notable case study is Rachel Fine, who embarked on a mission to provide certified nutrition education that breaks free from the constraints of ‘dancer diet culture.’
By using AccessAlly, she was able to implement various access models, ranging from subscription-based memberships to one-time payments for her live courses and digital ebooks, thereby ensuring that her program is accessible to a wide audience.
Additionally, she leveraged other features, such as ProgressAlly, to maintain private conversations with her students. Moreover, she utilized the gamification feature to allow her members to accumulate points through various activities, which they could exchange for ebooks.
Similarly, another case study is Lola L’amour, who successfully set up an intuitive dashboard for her students. She also created well-organized menus and layouts and optimized her courses for both desktop and mobile devices, all while maintaining simple and clean designs.
These case studies demonstrate that you can provide your students with a solid learning experience by adequately structuring your courses using the course builder tool and other features, such as objective checklists.
Enhancing the interactivity of your online courses can significantly improve learner engagement and success. We hope this blog has helped you learn the most effective ways of making online courses interactive.
By utilizing the AccessAlly LMS plugin features , you can easily implement these strategies, streamline course management, and ultimately deliver a more effective and enjoyable learning experience for your students.
We encourage you to try these strategies in your online courses and share your experiences in the comments section below. Your insights could inspire others in the community to enhance their teaching methods.
Explore our related blog posts for more tips and in-depth guides and don’t forget to subscribe to our blog to stay updated with the latest educational content and course-creation strategies.
If you found this post helpful, please share it on your social media channels to spread the word and help others make their courses more interactive and effective.
Henry is a talented wordsmith at Caseproof and AccessAlly, dedicated to offering unique insights on diverse topics ranging from WordPress plugins to digital products and technical services with the might of his pen.
He brings words to life and finds pleasure in providing helpful guides that cater to the needs of the target audience, pushing them closer to their goals.
Aside from his craft, Henry loves to watch movies, play video games, and play chess. He is also a people person who loves building and maintaining relationships.
Stay tuned for his posts â your one-stop resource to WordPress, AccessAlly, and content marketing success.
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Coaching Centre Deaths: Interim Bail Granted To RAU's IAS Study Circle CEO
Principal District and Sessions Judge Anju Bajaj Chandna granted relief to the accused persons on a personal bond of Rs 1 lakh each with two sureties of the like amount.
The judge also directed Abhishek Gupta to deposit Rs 2.5 crore till November 30 (File)
A Delhi court on Monday granted till December 7 interim bail to Rau's IAS Study Circle CEO Abhishek Gupta and its coordinator Deshpal Singh in a case related to the death of three civil services aspirants in July in the centre's flooded basement.
The judge also directed Abhishek Gupta to deposit Rs 2.5 crore till November 30 with Red Cross Society, saying that as per the lease agreement of the premises, the accused being the lessee and CEO of the institute alone, would responsible for any loss claim, and damages to any person or material.
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The judge noted that Abhishek Gupta and Singh were CEO and coordinator of Rau's IAS Study Circle, respectively, and were in control of its affairs.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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COMMENTS
Case study formats can include traditional print stories, interactive web or social content, data-heavy infographics, professionally shot videos, podcasts, and more. 5. Write your case study. We'll go into more detail later about how exactly to write a case study, including templates and examples. Generally speaking, though, there are a few ...
The five case studies listed below are well-written, well-designed, and incorporate a time-tested structure. 1. Lane Terralever and Pinnacle at Promontory. This case study example from Lane Terralever incorporates images to support the content and effectively uses subheadings to make the piece scannable. 2.
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1. Make it as easy as possible for the client. Just like when asking for reviews, it's important to make the process as clear and easy as possible for the client. When you reach out, ask if you can use their story of achievement as a case study for your business. Make the details as clear as possible, including:
In this article, we explore the concept of a case study, including its writing process, benefits, various types, challenges, and more.. How to write a case study. Understanding how to write a case study is an invaluable skill. You'll need to embrace decision-making - from deciding which customers to feature to designing the best format to make them as engaging as possible.
While, as its name implies, this section comes at the beginning of your case study, write it last. First, craft the rest of your document, then pick the most important bits and compile them into the introductory overview. 2. Explain the problem in question.
To write a case study step by step, start by identifying the case you want to explore and gathering relevant data on the subject. Outline the structure of your case study, then craft an engaging Introduction to set the context. Next, detail the Background and Challenges faced, followed by the Solutions applied.
Case studies are good for describing, comparing, evaluating and understanding different aspects of a research problem. Table of contents. When to do a case study. Step 1: Select a case. Step 2: Build a theoretical framework. Step 3: Collect your data. Step 4: Describe and analyze the case.
1. Draft Structure. đď¸ Your draft should contain at least 4 sections: an introduction; a body where you should include background information, an explanation of why you decided to do this case study, and a presentation of your main findings; a conclusion where you present data; and references. 2. Introduction.
The above information should nicely fit in several paragraphs or 2-3 case study template slides. 2. Explain the Solution. The bulk of your case study copy and presentation slides should focus on the provided solution (s). This is the time to speak at length about how the subject went from before to the glorious after.
4 best format types for a business case study presentation: Problem-solution case study. Before-and-after case study. Success story case study. Interview style case study. Each style has unique strengths, so pick one that aligns best with your story and audience. For a deeper dive into these formats, check out our detailed blog post on case ...
For example, the case study quotes the social media manager and project manager's insights regarding team-wide communication and access before explaining in greater detail. Takeaway: Highlight pain points your business solves for its client, and explore that influence in greater detail. 3. EndeavourX and Figma.
The purpose of a paper in the social sciences designed around a case study is to thoroughly investigate a subject of analysis in order to reveal a new understanding about the research problem and, in so doing, contributing new knowledge to what is already known from previous studies. In applied social sciences disciplines [e.g., education, social work, public administration, etc.], case ...
A case study is a document that focuses on a business problem and provides a clear solution. Marketers use case studies to tell a story about a customer's journey or how a product or service solves a specific issue. Case studies can be used in all levels of business and in many industries. A thorough case study often uses metrics, such as key ...
Case study examples are the best way to learn the basic techniques for writing a great case study on your own. Explore these short case study sample pdfs to gain insights into presenting your research cohesively: For your help, we have also compiled real-life case study examples along with a format that you can refer to while writing your own.
Step 2: Start Collaborating with a Client. With a clear topic in mind, you have to find the best fit for your case study. However, that is not all. First, you must obtain the client's permission. After all, your business story is theirs too. So, craft an email to provide your client with an overview of the case study.
Step 2: Create a theoretical framework. Theoretical frameworks are used to guide the analysis and interpretation of data in a case study. The framework should provide a clear explanation of the key concepts, variables, and relationships that are relevant to the research question. The theoretical framework can be drawn from existing literature ...
Now, all you have to do is write. Here are five simple steps that'll help you better understand how to create a case study that champions your customer and clearly showcases the real-world value of your products or services. 1. Introduce the customer. Set the stage for your case study with an introduction.
Yin (1994) defines case study as an empirical research activity that, by using versatile empirical material gathered in several different ways, examines a specific present-day event or action in a bounded environment. Case study objective is to do intensive research on a specific case, such as individual, group, institute, or community.
The reader cares less about your motivation and more about the results your efforts created. Start off by describing the results that you created and then go into the general detail of your ...
Identify the key problems and issues in the case study. Formulate and include a thesis statement, summarizing the outcome of your analysis in 1-2 sentences. Background. Set the scene: background information, relevant facts, and the most important issues. Demonstrate that you have researched the problems in this case study. Evaluation of the Case
Case studies and client stories are crucial components of any insight company's marketing. They demonstrate your value and expertise, satisfy client curiosity, and build trust. However, creating good client stories is often a challenge. It's not only client confidentiality that causes a problem, sometimes it is hard to get permission even ...
1 INTRODUCTION. A case report or a case series is a detailed narrative documenting a medical issue encountered by one or more patients, intended for medical, scientific, or educational purposes. 1 The significance of recording and disseminating distinctive clinical cases can be traced back to medical professionals in ancient Egypt. 2 Today, case reports (and series) continue to play a crucial ...
Functions involving the most labor hours, task repetitions, and risk of injury are ideal candidates for automation. A clear understanding of where and how automation can benefit the operations is critical to selecting the right solution and ensuring a sound business case is in place. Involve IT early in the conversation.
"This study supports the NICE recommendation that women should be asked, by a non-judgemental and supportive health professional, at all contacts in pregnancy and after birth about their emotional wellbeing and are given the opportunity to respond to these structured questions (the Whooley or the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale)."
Fun fact: Several studies have proven that the use of video content is an invaluable contribution to student learning, in case you were wondering. For example, a study conducted by MIT researchers found that shorter videos (under 6 minutes) are more engaging and that students who watched video lectures with interspersed quizzes retained ...
A Delhi court on Monday granted till December 7 interim bail to Rau's IAS Study Circle CEO Abhishek Gupta and its coordinator Deshpal Singh in a case related to the death of three civil services ...